It has become a strange and unfortunate commonplace that one must have faith in faith—faith, that is, in the ability to commit oneself to truths that transcend rational justification—not only out of respect for faith’s intrinsic (if futile) beauty, but also as a means to the truth. Confronted with inadequate evidence for the deeper truths of life, one must conjure up a commitment to ideas for which the subjective act of faith can be the only ground, and one must believe not only in the content of faith but in the faith-act itself.Read the rest here.
Tuesday, August 7, 2012
Against Faith in Faith
My essay, "Against Faith in Faith" has appeared in First Things "On the Square." Here is an excerpt:
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