J
JiminyCricket
Guest
wordonfire.org/Written-Word/articles-commentaries/June-2014-(1)/Bill-Maher-and-Not-Understanding-Either-Faith-or-t.aspx
A friend of mine posted the above article and when I got to the third paragraph I became very frustrated. He suggested I post my response here. It was specifically this passage that threw me:
“Real faith is not infra-rational but rather supra-rational, that is to say, not below reason but above reason and inclusive of it. “
Father Barron is attempting attempting to defend the rationality of Faith by describing it as ‘supra-rational’. This doesn’t make any sense to me. First of all, Faith does defy rationality. We all know this, this is why we’ve all struggled with faith from time to time. If it were completely rational then we wouldn’t call it faith, we’d call it a plausible hypothesis and there wouldn’t be any need for apologists to write articles like these. Even if you accept St. Thomas Aquinas cosmological argument for a first cause, there is still a huge gap between the big bang and the virgin birth and resurrection. A god of the first cause gap doesn’t get you a virgin birth. Virgins do not give birth. This is but one of several extraordinary claims made in the apostles creed. To believe these claims without very good evidence is not rational. So what does Father Barron actually mean by supra-rational?
“It is beyond reason precisely because it is a response to the God who has revealed himself, and God is, by definition, beyond our capacity to grasp, to see, fully to understand. “
It’s beyond reason to believe in something that…has revealed itself (how?)…but is also impossible to see (no evidence), or understand (defying reason)? No, I strongly disagree. To call something ‘beyond reason’ you need to first achieve reason, and then go further somehow.
In fairness, it appears that theoretical physicists do this all the time. They discover from evidence that certain forces must exist, they develop mathematical models that may fill the gap. But here’s the critical difference: they then look for evidence to support and disprove their hypothesis. That’s one critical element of rationality: an active, inquiring self-doubt. The other critical element is that they never assume anything is unknowable. An axiom like ‘God is unknowable’ ends the conversation for rationality.
The only way I can make sense of Father Barron’s argument that Faith is supra-rational is to imagine that what he actually means is Faith is more important than reason. It’s clearly more important to him. Father Barron is trying to reclaim reason for the faithful, but is unable to conjure a rational argument for doing so. This leads me to the question I came here to ask: Why is he bothering? Isn’t the value of Faith largely due to it being a struggle? Didn’t Jesus say something like: “you need only believe in me and you will be saved”? If this belief were rational, wouldn’t he have been able to say “you need only think about it for a minute, and consider the evidence…”? I’m not saying this to be a wise-***. It seems obvious to me that if the claims of the apostles creed were mundanely rational, you (the faithful) wouldn’t need it any more. You wouldn’t feel the swell of solidarity chanting the apostles creed at mass. You wouldn’t struggle with your Faith and pray and go through a heart-wrenching confession and come out on the other side feeling stronger in your Faith. That experience is real, and I don’t doubt that it has real value for many people. I am here, a defender of reason on an apologists forum asking the question: do you have a better argument for the rationality of the Catholic Faith than Father Barron, or is your Faith, as a lived experience, simply more important to you than the less mystical experience of rational inquiry?
A friend of mine posted the above article and when I got to the third paragraph I became very frustrated. He suggested I post my response here. It was specifically this passage that threw me:
“Real faith is not infra-rational but rather supra-rational, that is to say, not below reason but above reason and inclusive of it. “
Father Barron is attempting attempting to defend the rationality of Faith by describing it as ‘supra-rational’. This doesn’t make any sense to me. First of all, Faith does defy rationality. We all know this, this is why we’ve all struggled with faith from time to time. If it were completely rational then we wouldn’t call it faith, we’d call it a plausible hypothesis and there wouldn’t be any need for apologists to write articles like these. Even if you accept St. Thomas Aquinas cosmological argument for a first cause, there is still a huge gap between the big bang and the virgin birth and resurrection. A god of the first cause gap doesn’t get you a virgin birth. Virgins do not give birth. This is but one of several extraordinary claims made in the apostles creed. To believe these claims without very good evidence is not rational. So what does Father Barron actually mean by supra-rational?
“It is beyond reason precisely because it is a response to the God who has revealed himself, and God is, by definition, beyond our capacity to grasp, to see, fully to understand. “
It’s beyond reason to believe in something that…has revealed itself (how?)…but is also impossible to see (no evidence), or understand (defying reason)? No, I strongly disagree. To call something ‘beyond reason’ you need to first achieve reason, and then go further somehow.
In fairness, it appears that theoretical physicists do this all the time. They discover from evidence that certain forces must exist, they develop mathematical models that may fill the gap. But here’s the critical difference: they then look for evidence to support and disprove their hypothesis. That’s one critical element of rationality: an active, inquiring self-doubt. The other critical element is that they never assume anything is unknowable. An axiom like ‘God is unknowable’ ends the conversation for rationality.
The only way I can make sense of Father Barron’s argument that Faith is supra-rational is to imagine that what he actually means is Faith is more important than reason. It’s clearly more important to him. Father Barron is trying to reclaim reason for the faithful, but is unable to conjure a rational argument for doing so. This leads me to the question I came here to ask: Why is he bothering? Isn’t the value of Faith largely due to it being a struggle? Didn’t Jesus say something like: “you need only believe in me and you will be saved”? If this belief were rational, wouldn’t he have been able to say “you need only think about it for a minute, and consider the evidence…”? I’m not saying this to be a wise-***. It seems obvious to me that if the claims of the apostles creed were mundanely rational, you (the faithful) wouldn’t need it any more. You wouldn’t feel the swell of solidarity chanting the apostles creed at mass. You wouldn’t struggle with your Faith and pray and go through a heart-wrenching confession and come out on the other side feeling stronger in your Faith. That experience is real, and I don’t doubt that it has real value for many people. I am here, a defender of reason on an apologists forum asking the question: do you have a better argument for the rationality of the Catholic Faith than Father Barron, or is your Faith, as a lived experience, simply more important to you than the less mystical experience of rational inquiry?