Most conservative Christians believe the Biblical
statement, which I am in too much of a hurry to look up right now, that “the
fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom.” Most agnostics and humanists
would vigorously reject this statement. But maybe it is, in a way, true. If so,
how?
Conservative Christians really do mean “fear.” And by
fear of the Lord, they mean that we should be afraid, very afraid, that if we
question so much as the tiniest point of doctrine that they assert about the Lord we will go to Hell. The
fear of disagreeing with any of the self-appointed spokespeople of God is
supposed to be the basis of all wisdom. In particular, they seem to believe
that we should be afraid to question anything that the great God Donald Trump
asserts.
But they have it wrong in two ways. First, I think they
misunderstand “fear,” giving it a modern English interpretation. They think it
means that we should be very, very afraid of asking questions such as “How do
you know that thing that you assert?” But instead I believe that “fear” means awe and wonder. One can have a great deal of technical knowledge about the
natural world, but unless one feels awe and wonder then the natural world is
not God’s creation but is just a pile of resources for rich Republicans to make
money off of. Most scientists I know—and I know a lot of them—feel awe and
wonder at the cosmos that we are privileged to investigate. It is we, the
scientists and anyone else who feels awe and wonder, are the ones who truly
fear the Lord.
Second, the Biblical statement says the fear of the Lord
is the beginning of wisdom, not the
entirety of it or the end of it. Conservative Christians think that your
unthinking acceptance of their assertions about the Lord is the entirety and
the end of wisdom. If you worship Donald Trump, then you’re all set for the
world today and for the hereafter.
I do not accept traditional Christian doctrines, not
because I don’t like them, but because I do not know what they mean. Son of
God? Define son, and define God. I don’t know what those terms mean in
Christian doctrine. But I do have the fear of the Lord as the beginning of my
wisdom: I feel awe at the universe, and I use that as my starting point for
learning more about it, from my own research and investigations by others.
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