Wednesday, March 17, 2021

Experience as the evidence underlying faith

"Now faith is the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen."  Hebrews 11:1

For now, all I'll say about "things hoped for" is that they are inherently subjective: they change, often quickly, within us as individuals, and of course they differ greatly between us as individuals.

"Things not seen" are different.  That phrase seems objective (at least to those of us blessed with eyesight).  "Things not seen" can be inferred to mean things impossible to perceive and, so, things at best imagined and perhaps only taught but not understood. 

Another way to understand “things not seen” – that they are just invisible things – opens the door to experience as evidence.   Even the late Christopher Hitchens – an atheist who said, “what can be asserted without evidence can be dismissed without evidence” – accepted human experience as evidence: “I think everybody has had the experience at some point when they feel that there's more to life than just matter.”  Hitchens believed, famously, that experience is different from faith: “To 'choose' dogma and faith over doubt and experience is to throw out the ripening vintage and to reach greedily for the Kool-Aid.”  He was speaking of blind faith.  Faith is not blind – indeed, is best found – when it is based on one’s own experience.

What people experience cannot be seen.  Except for somatic markers like heartrate and brain activity, what we experience cannot be detected, let alone seen, using a magnifying glass, telescope, microscope, EEG machine, lie detector, or any other device.  Yet experiences, physical and emotional and even in dreams, are real.  Joy, grief, relief, fear, triumph, pain, fatigue, hunger, thirst, frustration, guilt, temptation, ecstasy, conviction, intuition, curiosity, yearning, peace, love and hate and imagination – our own and others' – are all real.  Many experiences are familiar to all of us and can be evoked by others – not just by artists, leaders, and poets.  But experiences are inherently personal, not objectively discernible in any detail – and usually hard even to describe with precision.

What I call the spirit within each person is such an experience.  That shared spirit – which I call the Holy Spirit – is the realm of invisible, unmeasurable, personal experiences of “more to life than just matter.”  It is intuition, conscience, compassion, connection, devotion, judgment.  In its most familiar and important aspect, the Holy Spirit is love – an experience honored by Hitchens thus: “A life that partakes even a little of friendship, love, irony, humor, parenthood, literature, and music, and the chance to take part in battles for the liberation of others cannot be called 'meaningless'.”

To call faith "the evidence of things not seen" is not to assert that people should substitute anyone else’s experiences for their own.  It is to equate faith with honoring one’s own experience.