The value of opinion in...
Illustration
Object:
The value of "opinion" in our society has been so corrupted as to have taken on sinful
proportions. Opinions have become our personal gods or, more accurately, the proof that
we are our own gods. They signify our autonomy, a massive leveling of all convictions,
the abandonment of all standards, the elimination of truth....
Once, a few years ago at a youth convention, a lovely young lady came earnestly to talk with me. She asked me what I thought about a certain matter of sexual ethics. I answered her with the most careful biblical reading and ethical nuancing I had gained in years of training.
She responded, "Well, I just wanted to know your opinion."
"That wasn't my opinion," I replied. "If I had given you my opinion, it would have been the opposite because I really would like to escape these biblical truths and say what pleases everybody. I tried to tell you as faithfully as I could what all my studies have discerned God is saying. That's much more sound, more reliable, more eternally true than my measly opinion."
She looked at me in shock. How could anyone question the importance of personal opinion? How could anyone give an answer different from her own private feelings? Is there really such a thing as public truth?
Yes, there is. And truth's name is God.
(From Marva Dawn, Talking the Walk: Letting Christian Language Live Again [Grand Rapids: Brazos, 2005], p. 83)
Once, a few years ago at a youth convention, a lovely young lady came earnestly to talk with me. She asked me what I thought about a certain matter of sexual ethics. I answered her with the most careful biblical reading and ethical nuancing I had gained in years of training.
She responded, "Well, I just wanted to know your opinion."
"That wasn't my opinion," I replied. "If I had given you my opinion, it would have been the opposite because I really would like to escape these biblical truths and say what pleases everybody. I tried to tell you as faithfully as I could what all my studies have discerned God is saying. That's much more sound, more reliable, more eternally true than my measly opinion."
She looked at me in shock. How could anyone question the importance of personal opinion? How could anyone give an answer different from her own private feelings? Is there really such a thing as public truth?
Yes, there is. And truth's name is God.
(From Marva Dawn, Talking the Walk: Letting Christian Language Live Again [Grand Rapids: Brazos, 2005], p. 83)
