As my friend Davey knows all too well, I have moments of doubt—moments when I’m sure that philosophy and theology are useless “abstractions” that should be tossed out the nearest window. But no, he assures me, that is not how you should see things. And after a little while, I come around to realizing that yes, I have again forgotten that there is a time and a place for everything, even mere thoughts.
And yet I still struggle. If the goal is to live well, just how does thinking play into that? I ask this because I know from experience the dangers of overthinking. I’ve often found it easy to be consumed by existential questions and forget about the real world.
Well, here’s a quote from James Jordan that answers this question very well. From the Introduction to The Liturgy Trap:
Christian worship … is not a technique for obtaining grace, but is a response to truth. That means that worship must always be governed by truth. It means that worship is under law, under the gracious regulation of the Holy Scriptures. True worship must develop out of rigorous truth and be a response to that truth. (page xiii)
To make this statement broader, replace “worship” with “love”:
Christian love is not a technique for obtaining grace, but is a response to truth. That means that love must always be governed by truth. It means that love is under law, under the gracious regulation of the Holy Scriptures. True love must develop out of rigorous truth and be a response to that truth.
This is, I believe, a wonderful and yet simple way of explaining “the unity of word and deed” (to borrow Davey’s phrase). After all, if we do not have the truth (that which sets us free), how can we live or live well?