Wednesday, 5 September 2018

Postmodernism: depressed even when physical needs are met



Made some notes from the first four chapters of Preaching to a Postmodern World, by Graham Johnston. Although I know Postmodernism is a rebound against Modernism, I never actually read up books about Postmodernism. Was initially planning to skim through the book because my aunt had just died and I have to fly overseas which means having one week less to work on my assignments at Morling and stuff, but found the book more interesting than I expected! A good book to get! Understanding some of this also help me understand a bit better why so many people are depressed in the Developed World even though our physical needs are relatively well met.

Modernity cannot adequately deal with one basic question: “Tell me who I am?”[1]
Postmodernism leaves preachers with two burdens: Reach the listener, a fellow human being, with the message of Christ, and at the same time uphold the Word of God, faithfully and with integrity.[2]
“The world sees a Christianity that is angrily defensive. Everyone knows what we are against: relativism, abortion and homosexuality, but few know what we are for, besides traditional values. Largely lost to the world’s eyes is a Christian spirit of mercy and love, not to mention and appreciation for the mystical character of God.” Filiatreau.[3]

Hallmarks of postmodern people:
·       They’re reacting to modernity and all its tenets.
·       They reject objective truth.
·       They’re sceptical and suspicious of authority.
·       They’re like missing persons in search of a self and identity.
·       They’ve blurred morality and are into whatever’s expedient.
·       They continue to search for the transcendent.
·       They’re living in a media world unlike any other.
·       They’ll engage in the knowing smirk.
·       They’re on a quest for community.
·       They live in a very material world.[4]

“The native people of the Americas insist that 1992 marks the anniversary of 500 years not of glorious discovery but of cruelty, lies, oppression, genocide and the wanton rape of what was truly a paradise.” Middleton and Walsh.[5]
The people who had no voice, the indigenous Americans viewed the same event with a completely different interpretation. The truth according to postmodernity has a way of being told so that it benefits those in power. As a result, there’s now a reversal.[6]
Of interesting note is that there are already views being put forward that the Jewish holocaust of WWII either did not take place or was embellished way beyond the recognised figures. What’s most fascinating is that so many actual survivors still exist, along with extensive documentation in film and artefacts. How can anyone refuse to believe the seemingly irrefutable evidence? This is a symptom of postmodern scepticism, the age of the conspiracy theory. “Do not believe what they tell you.” (Whoever they happen to be..)[7]

In relation to preaching, postmodern people will tend to perceive the preacher as voicing a personal viewpoint. When it comes to religious authority, many people used to view Christianity as having monopolised choice seats on the bus of Western society, while other world religions, particularly Buddhism, Hinduism and Islam, had been bullied into sitting at the rear. But this is no longer the case. Today Christians are experiencing a backlash. “Christianity has the floor long enough,” many postmodern people are saying. The more Christians argue that the nation’s heritage of belief rests in Jesus, the more resentment they create.[8]

As the world has developed into a global village, suspicion toward authority has deepened. Joseph Campbell’s argued in his book The Power of Myth that all religious faith evolved from myth and storytelling within cultures, and therefore all beliefs are inherently the same, none any better or worse than others. Instead of despising minor discrepancies and celebrating their distinctiveness, people everywhere are called to recognise the commonality of belief and be free to enjoy their faith in the various cultural expressions evidenced in the world today.[9]

The same suspicion of authority also translates into a detest for institutions.[10]

Postmodernity grew out of the deconstruction movement, which put forth that meaning in language was not objectively understood and that interpretation was highly subjective. The identity crisis flows not only from others’ changing perception of a person but also from the uncertainty of one’s own self-perception.[11] Postmodernity is a consumer's age, where people will relish options. Plurality demands these options in which all choices share equal footing. Because there’s no centre, no clear target, there exists a need for a variety of possibilities on the parameter of life. We have the freedom to become whoever we wish, yet without a certainty of knowing who we really are. Adrift at sea, every person will seek out something, some reference point to give life some meaning.[12]

Postmodern morality:
·       We no longer know how to discern good from bad. Our new moral measuring stick may as well be “Do unto others what is expedient,” because where we, as a society, once excluded moral self-confidence, we now seem more muddled in self-doubt. Good and right are merely social constructions; each individual is left to create a formulation of what morally acceptable. It’s as if twenty-first-century society protests, “Who’s to say what’s morally right for me?”[13]
·       Love yourself: Everyone ‘does what is right in his or her own eyes.’
·       Do unto others as you wish: Morality, like religion, is a matter of desire. I have a right to my desires. No one has the right to criticise my desires and my choices.[14] A carryover effect of postmodern ambiguity is a blurring of all lines and distinctions, including gender.
·       Do unto others… oh whatever: Moral indifference. Postmoderns think some aspects of morality have become such nonissues, they’re considered hardly worth discussing.[15] Eg. any challenge to certain moral issues like sexual infidelity may elicit a response along the lines of “it’s just sex… what’s the big deal?” Postmodern people are more likely to be spontaneous in their decision making, often ignoring the consequences of their choices. This is why people may prove reluctant to make long-term commitments. They want to keep their options open in case something better should come along or if the situation changes.[16]

The search for transcendence:
·       The quest for wholeness: Postmodernity embraces a wider perspective of reality, taking into account the spiritual and intuitive aspects of human existence. As a result the New Age movement’s grown, along with it an embrace of the supernatural often expressed in an anti-intellectual manner with crystals, palm readings, star signs, psychics and the like. That means preachers today must tap into the cravings for reconnectedness of the spiritual and physical existences. Preachers must help listeners re-grasp the spiritual that is all around us and restore a sense of wholeness.
·       It’s not nice to fool mother nature: Jurassic Park stands as a contemporary Frankenstein. Nature, in her wisdom has chosen to eliminate dinosaurs. It is only the arrogance of the scientists who dare attempt to undo what nature has done. The postmodern view is to appreciate wisdom as well as the beauty of nature.[17]
·       Our mother who art in nature, hallowed be thy name: Many postmoderns worship nature as a sacred goddess.
·       Livin’ large, baby: In the search for the transcendent, people will be encouraged to experience as much of life as possible. Only the brave push the boundaries. The avenues to more life could well take the form of experimentation with drug uses, a counterculture existence, extreme sports, or sexual encounters of all kinds.[18] The closest many postmodern people will ever come to a transcendent, supernatural experience is through sexual encounters or recreational drugs. “There is no fear in love” (1John 4:18). Will churches in postmodern times respond in fear or with compassion as people search in all the wrong places? Will preachers have a voice to be heard in their pursuit of something greater than themselves?[19]

The media mad world:
·       The world has moved from a print culture to a media culture. Media now dominates the way in which people think and discuss ideals publicly.[20]
·       Movies like Blade Runner raises a moral dilemma: Who is to say that an artificial being is any less real than a human being? Many people would suggest the same concerning the world one creates on a TV or movie screen or in a “virtual reality” computer-operated game. Who is to say that this “reality” is any less real, since what people call reality is merely a social construct anyway? The world of TV screen and cyberspace no longer replicates reality, but creates its own.[21]

Facing the knowing smirk:
·       Postmodern culture has learned not to take itself too seriously. For instance, the song “Love and Marriage” written by Frank Sinatra in the 50s is now the theme song for Married with Children and has become an anthem to marriages gone wrong, a mocking parody that suggests love and marriage are damaged goods.[22]
·       The ironic vs the Heroic: Postmodernity is the age not of the heroic but of the ironic. It’s an age when the antihero rules with such icons as Kurt Cobain, Madonna etc. Since life has no objective meaning, this is perceived as one cosmic joke with no punch line.
·       Retro: When the future dries up: In relation to fashion and music, “retro” is bringing back in style a taste from the past. They thrive on the reinventing of former conventions. For example the hit movies of the 90s, The Avengers, Mission Impossible etc are all based on TV shows of the 50s-70s.[23] History is viewed as nothing more than a style.[24]

Questing for community:
·       The Enlightenment, Reformation etc had brought to the rise of the individual. Postmodernity hasn’t jettisoned the value of the individual; however, a deep longing for community has begun to surface.
·       As people search for what’s transcendent, most will encounter the meaning in and through relationships.[25]
·       As a group immersed into computers and technological gadgetry, the effect is an increased desire to be more attached to nature but in a similar fashion, a craving for meaningful relationships.
·       The breakdown of the nuclear family brings about a desire for acceptance and belonging which stems from the loneliness and alienation of splintered family attachments.
·       Subcultures represent pockets of people finding acceptance and security through the formation of communities, a place to belong. The postmodernist ideology has undermined the very principle of a unified national culture and has driven individuals to find their identities in subcultures.
·       Postmodernity comes with a generation that has grown up in broken homes, being lied to by politicians and deceived by church and community leaders. The church makes bold claims but rarely delivers on its own message of love, reconciliation and compassion. For today’s listeners, nothing is more distasteful than empty ritual divorced from everyday living.[26]

Living in the material world:
·       The postmodern dilemma: Technological advances will not get us home, so we are left to our own devices to find a way.[27] “Gone are the optimism and confident expectation that everything will get better, and that disease and human failings will be overcome. In its place we have a disillusion with all that is modern and a search for another framework of life. There is a loss of certainty, and in its place there is a scepticism and cynicism about life, each other and the future.”[28] “So the only world is today – now. Time is just a series of ‘now’ events that have no order or meaning. They are essentially chaotic.”[29]
·       Who says money can’t buy happiness? Those of us living in modern times seem to want it both ways: If life is about “livin’ large,” the best way to go about it is with money and freedom from any responsibilities of employment. The great dream of travelling the world, fine cars, fancy restaurants, basically “livin’ large,” is dangled like a carrot before millions of willing participants each day.
·       Johnston observes that “as bible communicators, your task is not a simple one – it’s to bring God’s truth to bear upon a people who are searching for, yet uncertain of, truth and falsehood; of people open, but sceptical, and livin’ large while running on empty.”[30]

Rules for engagement:
·       Inevitably every preacher will be required to proclaim godly truths that are counterculture, principles that run against the grain of general society. That is the nature of following Christ.
·       Effective preaching is not necessarily the preaching that gets results, but it should be understood in terms of brining the listener to a clear appreciation of the biblical message.[31]
·       “People are not blank slates on which we write our messages. People are a pulsating bundle of attitudes, values, prejudices, experience, feelings, thoughts, sensations and aspirations. They are active, not passive, even when they are listening.”[32]
·       In the postmodern context, where authority is suspect and people mistrust those in power, what makes the difference as to whether one listens or tunes out is the perceived attitude of the preacher. “Does the speaker care about me? Or “Can I trust what I am about to hear?” If people perceive the preacher as lording it over them or as somehow speaking down to them from an exalted position, this will be an obstacle to the message.[33]
·       Dealing with the biblical concept of sin may be one of the greatest challenges to twenty-first-century preaching. In the current cultural climate, sin and guilt are no longer an issue or have been recalibrated beyond any spiritual recognition. The problem has moved and is now becoming “How can I feel good about myself?” This shift from sin to self-image reflects a move, not just in society but in the church. We have replaced a fundamentally theological perspective with a psychological approach to life and the world. Sadly, much of what passes as biblical preaching is nothing more than pop psychology wrapped in poor exegesis.[34]
·       Connecting through a human need as a need as the starting point of one’s sermon is only the first half of the process.[35]
·       Life experiences provide a means of establishing both interest and relevance. The sphere that represents the life of the speaker must touch the sphere that represents the life of the listener.[36]
·       To connect, a preacher needs to involve listeners in the learning. They need to show more of their own process in going through the Word to uncover these gleaned truths, so that the listeners discover the truths for themselves as opposed to having ideas dropped in their lab.
·       It’s about creating an atmosphere of trust, vulnerability and commonality from which people might hear what God’s Spirit would say to them.[37]

Challenging listeners:
·       The Mormons have a two-year missionary internship which requires door-to-door confrontations, which is one of the least effective means of outreach. Why continue? Because statistics show that after these missionaries have suffered daily abuse for their beliefs over a two-year period, there’s every likelihood the candidates will remain Mormons for life. The more opposition people encounter, the more entrenched they can become in their own belief systems.[38]
·       Since postmodern people live by sound bites of information on a large number of subjects, they’ll expect that you be widely informed as well. Today’s preaching needs to demonstrate a scope of understanding and interact critically in the areas of sociology, psychology, current events and pop culture.[39]
·       Be more apologetic: Biblical preaching that grapples with doubts, unpacks Christian assumptions, and contemplates the unbelief of the sceptic. On the surface, postmodernity questions everything, but in reality, all belief or disbelief rests upon something. The preacher’s task is to understand the common ground of belief and unbelief in order to engage the postmodern listener effectively.[40] Sometimes a non-Christian may say to a Christian, “The problem with you Christians is you judge everything.” However, the non-Christian failed to appreciate that he/she too makes judgments and discern right from wrong. Everyone possess concepts of right and wrong, but some lacks the insight into their own moral framework. So being apologetic also involves unpacking ideas and exposing the framework of people’s thinking.[41]
·       Encourage accountability: Much of today’s preaching can lack purpose. People hear a message without being directed to act in any measurable, practical or tangible way. Preaching should move the listeners beyond a sense of feeling uncomfortable or guilty to a point of decisive action.[42]


Bibliography:

Johnston, Graham. Preaching to a Postmodern World: A Guide to Reaching Twenty-first Century Listeners. Grand Rapids: Baker Books, 2001.

Filiatreau, Mark. “‘Good News’ or ‘Old News’.” Regeneration Quarterly Winter (1995): 1.

Middleton, Richard J. and Brian J. Walsh. Truth Is Stranger than It Used to Be. Downers Grove: InterVarsity Press, 1995.

Cook, David. Blind Alley Beliefs. Leicester: InterVarsity Press, 1996.

Mackay, Hugh. Why Don’t People Listen? Sydney: Pan Macmillan, 1994.




[1] Graham Johnston, Preaching to a Postmodern World: A Guide to Reaching Twenty-first Century Listeners (Grand Rapids: Baker Books, 2001), 14.
[2] Johnston, Preaching to a Postmodern World, 18.
[3] Mark Filiatreau, “‘Good News’ or ‘Old News’,” Regeneration Quarterly Winter (1995): 1.
[4] Johnston, Preaching to a Postmodern World, 26.
[5] Richard J. Middleton, and Brian J. Walsh. Truth Is Stranger than It Used to Be (Downers Grove: InterVarsity Press, 1995), 10.
[6] Johnston, Preaching to a Postmodern World, 32.
[7] Johnston, Preaching to a Postmodern World, 33.
[8] Johnston, Preaching to a Postmodern World, 34.
[9] Johnston, Preaching to a Postmodern World, 35.
[10] Johnston, Preaching to a Postmodern World, 36.
[11] Johnston, Preaching to a Postmodern World, 37.
[12] Johnston, Preaching to a Postmodern World, 39.
[13] Johnston, Preaching to a Postmodern World, 40.
[14] Johnston, Preaching to a Postmodern World, 41.
[15] Johnston, Preaching to a Postmodern World, 42.
[16] Johnston, Preaching to a Postmodern World, 43.
[17] Johnston, Preaching to a Postmodern World, 45.
[18] Johnston, Preaching to a Postmodern World, 46.
[19] Johnston, Preaching to a Postmodern World, 47.
[20] Johnston, Preaching to a Postmodern World, 48.
[21] Johnston, Preaching to a Postmodern World, 50.
[22] Johnston, Preaching to a Postmodern World, 51.
[23] Johnston, Preaching to a Postmodern World, 52.
[24] Johnston, Preaching to a Postmodern World, 53.
[25] Johnston, Preaching to a Postmodern World, 54.
[26] Johnston, Preaching to a Postmodern World, 55.
[27] Johnston, Preaching to a Postmodern World, 56.
[28] David Cook, Blind Alley Beliefs (Leicester: InterVarsity Press, 1996), 12.
[29] Johnston, Preaching to a Postmodern World, 57.
[30] Johnston, Preaching to a Postmodern World, 59.
[31] Johnston, Preaching to a Postmodern World, 62.
[32] Hugh Mackay, Why Don’t People Listen? (Sydney: Pan Macmillan, 1994), 11.
[33] Johnston, Preaching to a Postmodern World, 69.
[34] Johnston, Preaching to a Postmodern World, 71.
[35] Johnston, Preaching to a Postmodern World, 72.
[36] Johnston, Preaching to a Postmodern World, 73.
[37] Johnston, Preaching to a Postmodern World, 75.
[38] Johnston, Preaching to a Postmodern World, 77.
[39] Johnston, Preaching to a Postmodern World, 80.
[40] Johnston, Preaching to a Postmodern World, 82.
[41] Johnston, Preaching to a Postmodern World, 83.
[42] Johnston, Preaching to a Postmodern World, 85.

No comments:

Post a Comment