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The Threat of Literalism

No, not liberalism (I don’t ordinarily consider that a concern) – I’m troubled by literalism.

Literalism is the belief, the philosophy, the attitude that truth can only be found in exactness and certainty.  Literalism is an obsession (and it is an obsession) with what is actual, literal, with the “letter of the law,” with the need to nail down (sometimes, literally) what is true and not true and then defending that “truth” at all costs.  It’s a way of being and believing that seeks to maintain a tight “hold” on reality.   It’s a way of being that is suspicious (maybe paranoid) of anything that smacks of analogy or metaphor, of anything that leaves open the possibility of multiple meanings, of plurality, because for the literalist, for example, there can only be one interpretation of a text – whether it’s a religious text (such as the Koran or the Bible) or a secular text (like the U. S. Constitution) – only one meaning, only one way to be and one way to believe in this world.

So, why is literalism such a threat?  Because, quite simply, the literalist bent undergirds and stands behind the many expressions of fundamentalism (religious and otherwise) unleashing its toxic effluence throughout the contemporary public square.  The unmitigated fact is that reality is infinitely more complicated and complex than fundamentalists will acknowledge, actually more than they are free to admit.  Fundamentalism, especially the religious variety, is the very opposite of freedom.  It’s a form of bondage.  It’s a defense reaction against the ever-increasing intricacies and challenges of the contemporary world.   Fundamentalism might be viewed, as one commentator has said, as a refusal to see beyond the vested and small certainties that do more to hold off the unknown, than give answers.  As a result, fundamentalism and its bedfellow literalism have inflicted untold most damage against the very world they say they care most about and try to defend and preserve, the world of religious faith.

James Hollis, Jungian analyst and writer, suggests that literalism is actually a form of religious blasphemy because it seeks to concretize (nail down, define) and absolutize the core experience of the Holy, of God – a God, if God, who cannot be controlled or defined; a God, as theologian Karl Barth (1886-1968) insisted, who was Wholly Other, a God who remains ultimately a mystery.  And a mystery is not the same thing as a puzzle (which can be solved); a mystery is always enigmatic and is therefore inherently unknowable.  The German theologian Gerhard Tersteegen (1697-1769) reminded us, "A God comprehended is no God." Even for Christians who confess that Jesus Christ is the fullest revelation of God the world has ever known or will know (as I do), this does not mean Christians are free to say we have an exhaustive knowledge of God.  Humility of knowledge is essential whenever we attempt to make truth claims.  Thinking we comprehend the truth is a fantasy.  I’m not saying the truth doesn’t exist or that it’s completely inaccessible; it just means we need to remember that our “hold” on it is always elusive.

Hollis, whose writings I admire and enormously respect, even argues that literalism is a kind of psychopathology in need of deep healing (redemption?).  From his many years as a psychotherapist he has come to see that a way to gauge mental health and emotional maturity is the degree to which one is able to tolerate what he calls the triple A’s – ambiguity, ambivalence, and anxiety.  The ability to hold these in tension – and not escape into literalism and fundamentalism, into strategies of avoidance – is a way to test our psychic strength. I can certainly resonate with this.  The literalists (of all varieties) I have known and know (and love) have difficulty tolerating ambiguity, ambivalence, and anxiety.  They use their faith or their political ideology to bolster themselves against, hide themselves from the triple A’s that define the human condition. 

Writing twenty-five hundred years ago, the Greek philosopher Protagoras (c. 490-420 BCE) might provide wise counsel to our troubled, conflicted age, and offer some hope: “Concerning the gods,” he wrote, “I have no means of knowing whether they exist or not, nor of what form they are; for there are many obstacles to such knowledge, including the obscurity of the subject and the shortness of human life.”  We could all use a little more humility and intellectual honesty like his in the public square.

Aliza Worthington

9:41 am on Wednesday, February 15, 2012

Darn it. I hate it when someone else writes the post I wish I had written.

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Patricia Anne Collins

10:59 am on Wednesday, February 15, 2012

This is a very helpful posting. It is a broad intellectual approach to a topic that we all need to read, and hear and apply. I will share this with some of my colleagues, especially in my Faith Journey Group. Thank you, Ken

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David Hutton

11:04 am on Wednesday, February 15, 2012

I'm certainly not a Bible scholar, but in my limited Bible study one thing I'm sure of is that the truth is rarely as simple as what's on the surface. The "fun part" is in the discussing and reading other scholars. Thanks for starting this discussion, Ken.

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Vickie Lord

11:26 am on Wednesday, February 15, 2012

What a wonderful post! The longer I live, the more I see that 'everyone has a piece of the truth' (Gandhi), and that the world is ever so much more complicated than I ever thought. I found comfort in a certain fundamentalism of thought in my younger days, but have come to see that there is no black and white, no one way to see any position in a discussion, and that everyone is doing the best they can to deal with the anxiety of modern life, its ambiguity and their own ambivalence.

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Ron Gunderson

12:01 pm on Wednesday, February 15, 2012

The challenge - and intellectual fun - of being on a personal faith journey is to continually question and endlessly search for "truth". Even though unattainable, for me the quest is the reward!
Thanks for your words of encouragement.

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Kate

1:10 pm on Wednesday, February 15, 2012

This can be applied to SO many facets of life! Religion, for sure, but also to so many other issues. It's so wonderful to realize that when you can admit that you don't know everything (or could even *gasp* be wrong), the more you are then able to learn. What a great post!

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Craig Hornig

12:07 am on Thursday, February 16, 2012

Your message deserves a wide audience! Yes! To tolerate the Triple A's of ambiguity, anxiety, and ambivalence. May I posit we also embrace three other A's: acceptance, agape (compassionate love) and amnesty. With humility, may we grant ourselves, and one another, peace.

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Tina Pritchard

8:44 am on Thursday, February 16, 2012

This post so wonderfully challenges the categorical thinking that oversimplifies many literal and fundamentalist tenets. I like the way you released God and the Bible from simple categories. The more I learn, the less I know.
Tina Pritchard

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Scott Roe

12:44 pm on Thursday, February 16, 2012

Brilliant! Absolutely brilliant. If only we who call ourselves Christ followers could humbly come to this realization - we would get a taste of what it means to live free. Well done!

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Chris

10:26 pm on Thursday, February 16, 2012

Since I don't choose to take this article literally, I instead prefer it to mean literalism is in fact a good thing. This is plausible since any statement is open to multiple interpretations, correct?

Humility cuts both ways. We can be very certain (at times) of our uncertainty. Yes there are many shades of grey, but people should not be afraid to call black as black and white as white. Some things allow for multiple interpretations but some do not. Yes, we do not see perfectly. We see through a glass darkly, per the apostle Paul. But humility and good sense require us to admit that even that statement has an intended, specific understanding. Otherwise I can take it to mean that we actually see things very clearly, which (I feel quite certain) is not the intent of the author.

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James Devlin

10:43 am on Friday, February 17, 2012

Ken, thanks for bringing clarity to a subtle but pervasive challenge in modern society - it is one that permeates not just religion but politics and business, too!

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Tony

12:33 pm on Saturday, February 18, 2012

Well said indeed; Brother Ken and very thought provoking...

I find it intriguing that with all the hipe and millions of $'s spent to attract our attentions during the recent Super Bowl the commercials that consistently seem to garner the mass appeal in my mind are one's that focus on; children (think E Trade) and animals (think Budweiser and bag of chips this year).

Why, you might ask?

In my mind, because as it Jesus says 'to find God you must have the mind of a child'; both children and animals are to me as close at you get to what I'll call 'ego-less' beings and so we people, both the Literalists and the Humblists all seem to a least agree on some level; even if some of us don't now why...

Brother Tony
MROP 2011 Rolling Ridge WV, USA

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