Hi again Dicky,
No problem. Actually I’m not sure that when you examine the claim it’s even a half truth?
Here for example: “Protestant liberalism and conservative evangelicalism both make reason or rationality the epistemological center of their universe, thereby replacing God as the center. Of course they both deny this, but it is at the heart of their foundationalist epistemology.” is the straw man on which it seems to rest. Rationalists it seems to me don’t “replace God as the centre” at all, because the character of the positions are qualitatively different. “God” is said to be the absolute, be all and end all definitive truth of the matter – epistemically, it’s a claim of certainty. Rationalism on the other hand doesn’t claim to go to the centre of anything – it’s probabilistic. Indeed it’s that very rationalism that says we have no way to eliminate the possibility of an unknown unknown, and nor therefore to discount that that we’re not just, say, bits of junk code in a giant computer game.
I’m not sure I’d even claim rationalism as “neutral” either – rather it’s all we have that provides a working model that enables us to navigate the world we appear to occupy with solutions we call provisionally at least “true”. All that may of course be entirely false and so our rationalism is telling us only one possible story (or “narrative”) but the problem with other narratives it seems to me is that they provide no alternative method to distinguish themselves from just guessing.
In other words, it’s just an argument from ignorance – “you have no way of knowing that rationalism leads to certainty” – when rationalism claims no such thing and at best all it gives you for the alternative truth narratives is a “might be”.
Well summed up! Moreover, the things the post-liberals appear to take on trust as their starting point seem to a certain degree arbitrary, if your quoted material is a good guide. For instance:
Postliberal theology is typically characterized by a very high Christology (Jesus is very God/very man – 2 natures, one essence). It is Trinitarian, thus it affirms the creeds and the bodily resurrection of Jesus – in contrast to typical liberals who reject miracles.
Why accept this? Why not the Arian view? or any other unorthodox view? Do they automatically accept the authority of the Pope? Might as well start believing in Aboriginal Dreamtime and the role of Tickalick the Frog in the Flood.
All sounds a bit of a despairing stance in the face of complexity. In my native Norfolk, they'd probably say "Wha bugger, yew gotta start somewhere hincha?" On the other hand, if you can smuggle in a few references to Wittgenstein, and talk about "Language Games", some people may think you're talking wonderfully.
One line in your quote did have some sort of resonance, though:
In the end, Postliberal theologians typically call people to take up their cross and actually follow Jesus.
Which is okay as far as it goes, but does that extend to telling people that the End is just round the corner, and if they're not careful they'll burn?
P.S.
I think your post also covered the matter which NS found so contentious:
But, again, this assumes that rationality is the only form of knowing, which is simply not true. Anyone who has been in love or been a parent knows that there is a kind of knowing, or a knowledge that goes far beyond what is rationally explainable.
Firstly, I wouldn't assert that rationality is the only form of knowing, and as NS says, "being in love" is a debatable example of 'another form of knowing'. What 'knowing God' might be - when you've already decided that he's a Trinity, and that Jesus was God Incarnate
without knowing these matters as truths
I'll leave it to any passing "post-liberals" to explain.