Preaching truth in a post-truth world

Preaching truth in a post-truth world January 23, 2017

By Matt Sapp

Matt Sapp
Matt Sapp is pastor of Heritage Baptist Church in Canton, Ga.

2016 wasn’t a great year for truth, and the first few weeks of 2017 don’t appear to have offered any improvement. When Stephen Colbert coined the term “truthiness” in 2005, everyone laughed. Few are laughing now.

Colbert used the word to mean understanding something to be true because it “feels” right or because our gut tells us it ought to be true. Truthiness means that facts are secondary to emotion and that wishful thinking somehow has the power to bend the truth. The idea behind truthiness is closely related to confirmation bias, the idea that we are more likely to uncritically accept ideas or opinions as true if they tend to reinforce what we already believe.

During the 2016 presidential election we discovered an electorate primed for confirmation bias and truthiness. Our presidential candidates quickly proved ready to take advantage of the new reality by intentionally seeking to obscure the truth; by muddying the waters about the basic standards of truth; and by constantly calling into question what we previously accepted as reliable sources of truth — in the media, the scientific community and the government — all in an effort to advance their own agendas and to the distinct detriment of our democracy.

Truthiness and confirmation bias are not, of course, only political phenomena. Religious leaders and constituencies fall prey to the same fallacies. In fact, there are few, if any, areas of our lives where basic standards of truth haven’t begun to erode. That’s why we find ourselves liking and re-posting things on Facebook that turn out not to be true — whether about our favorite football teams or our least favorite political candidates.

post truthAll of this leads many to conclude that we are living in a “post-truth” America. In fact, “post-truth” was named the 2016 word of the year by Oxford Dictionaries.

(As an aside, the previous sentence links to an article from The Washington Post. I hesitated to include the link because I know that some who read this article will question whether the Post—one of America’s most respected newspapers—is a trustworthy source of information. My hesitancy to confidently cite a respected news source illustrates both the post-truth world in which we live and its dangers.)

In a post-truth world we seek out and lend credence to only those sources of information that tend to confirm our biases, and we begin to reject the idea that there are any unbiased, objective sources of truth.

When information bubbles and echo chambers become so exclusionary and loud, when confirmation bias and wanting to “feel” right become more important than facts, and when we become so factioned and entrenched in our ideological ghettos, that winning an argument or an election — that power and victory — become more important than truth, then we live firmly in a post-truth society.

To the extent that what I’ve just described is happening, we are in real trouble. And a post-truth society presents a distinct challenge to Christians because we believe that Christ is the truth (John 14:6).

So how does a post-truth world present a challenge to the gospel?

Love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you (Matt 5:44) — those are basic Christian truths. But in a post-truth world people sit in the pews and wonder if those truths “feel” right. Do they line up with what I heard on the radio or TV last week? Do they tend to confirm my biases? Because, if not, in a post-truth world, we are being conditioned to hold those ideas as suspect.

So we start to interpret the truth into something more akin to truthiness. We think, “In some situations loving your enemies means killing them and praying for those who persecute you means praying for God to destroy them.” Doesn’t that “feel” more right, we think? Let’s make that the truth.

The last shall be first. You can’t serve God and money.  Blessed are the peacemakers. “Nice try preacher,” we think, “but that doesn’t feel right.”

“Self-promotion feels better. My gut instinct tells me I can serve two masters. Bomb the hell out of ‘em. Sometimes peace is made at the end of a sword,” we say.

Those ideas “feel” great. And in today’s world, we’re learning that if it feels right, it’s true; and if it doesn’t feel right, it isn’t.

In this way the Sermon on the Mount isn’t outright rejected. It’s just questioned around the edges and reinterpreted until it takes on the form of truthiness, until it becomes something that “feels” right in our gut — and until it becomes something less than true.

And this isn’t something we should just look out for in other people. We are all at risk of falling prey to this tendency in a post-truth world. Truthiness is powerfully alluring.

So how do we preach truth in a post-truth world?

First, we should preach the truth calmly and persistently, prayerfully and deliberately, and intentionally, so that we guard ourselves against a drift toward truthiness.

Second, we shouldn’t preach the truth only reactively — the truth must be more than simply a response to every “post-truth” flare up.

Instead, with courage and dignity and diligence we should preach proactively that humility is a virtue and meekness a strength. That looking out for the other person and caring for the downtrodden are their own rewards. That all of God’s children are equal in the eyes of God.

In a post-truth world we should confidently proclaim that there is such a thing as truth, that it has a unique and unrivaled power, and that it wins in the end.

No amount of post-truth yelling or anger or violence or money or intimidation or religious chest-thumping or political browbeating can keep truth down. The truth will out. It will come to light.

Truth is like yeast in the dough or the faith of a mustard seed — and, like Shakespeare’s Hermia, though it be but little, it is fierce! So truth doesn’t need us to defend it. But it does need us to let it out into the world; it does need to be insistently and persistently proclaimed.

The truth doesn’t have to “feel” right. It is right. It doesn’t have to shout to win an argument. And, as hard as it may be for us to understand, it doesn’t have to win every day, every battle, every election or even every decade. Our faith teaches us that it’s already won the war.

There’s another thing truth has done. It has set us free (John 8:32) — free to be right, even if it doesn’t always “feel” right.

Matt Sapp serves as the pastor of Heritage Baptist Church in Canton, Ga. 


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