Indiana Jones takes a "leap of faith" |
For many Christians, that scene is a vaguely disturbing one. On the one
hand, it is a moment of triumph. It seems to lend credence to the importance of
religious faith. Then again, it portrays faith as being a mindless exercise.
Indiana Jones is an intellectual, rational college professor who is interested
in the Grail primarily as an historical artifact. His leap of faith goes
against everything he stands for.
This reveals a tension that has existed in the church for centuries. Is
faith in Christ a surrender of the intellect? Is godly wisdom in complete
opposition to what Scripture calls “worldly wisdom”? There are many that
question whether the Christian should even expose himself to teaching that is
not consistent with the Word of God.
For example, it is a frightening prospect
for many Christian parents to consider sending their children to a secular
college where the Christian faith is often ridiculed or condemned. Still others
want their children to be challenged by a secular education. They consider it
part of the Christian’s missionary mandate to confront secular culture with
their very presence. In their mind, the tendency of Christians to separate
themselves from secular environments leads to an isolationist mentality that
fails to reach the lost for Christ.
In the movie Indy had to make a literal leap of faith. When he stepped
into the “void” in order to reach the Grail, he was unable to see the pathway
to the Grail, but his “blind faith” was rewarded when it turned out that the
pathway was hidden by the optical illusion. He did what most people would
consider suicidal. But is this a true picture of religious faith?
Consider for a moment the sermons that you have heard on
faith: what examples of “faith” are used as illustrations? Our “faith” in flying
in an aircraft without seeing the pilot? Or maybe our “faith” in trusting banks
to keep our money safe? Or even our faith in electricity flowing at the touch
of a switch? That’s not faith! That’s trust, an entirely different colored animal altogether.
When Peter
got out of the boat and walked on the surface of the lake, he did something that was ultimately beyond human reason.
He was a fisherman, he knew the properties of water,
had probably even seen friends drown in the stuff. When Abraham left all the
“comforts’ of home and set out for a destination unknown, you can “bet your
bottom dollar” that many of his friends thought he was a few sand dunes short
of a beach.
The very nature of faith demands that we
go from belief in the tangible to seeing with entirely different vision. Helen
Keller (who became blind as the result of a childhood fever, then went deaf)
was once asked if she would like to get her vision back. She said no, because
then she would have to believe what she saw!
Faith is imagination in action; it’s the guarantee
that when we step off the cliff, God has already built the bridge! Faith is
human reason with divine wings. Its impossibility dressed in work clothes. We can “believe” a fallible human when they
promise to do something for us, but usually we struggle accepting the infallible
promises of the Creator. Faith is a challenge, were it not so it would simply be an exercise in the ordinary.
We don’t have to surrender our reasoning facilities; we
just have to bring them into line with the greatest reasoning power in the
universe. We upgrade from Reasoning Version 1.01 to Version Infinite!
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1 comment:
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