The fundamental areas that set the course of one’s worldview are theology and anthropology—how one answers the questions of who is God and who is man. But there is a question that stands in the road well before we can even get to either of these two, and Pilate famously asked it in the Praetorium: “What is Truth?” Unfortunately, for him, he was scoffing and not interested in an answer because he thought there was none. So, he spit out the question and abruptly terminated the dialogue. Had he waited, Jesus might have repeated the most profound answer that this question could ever receive: “I…am the Truth.” And in that simple response we find everything necessary to answer what Philosophers and our culture cannot—even though it is our most crucial question…even though the very essence of life hangs upon it.
There are many who might craft an answer concerning who God is or who man is. But if you believe that truth is merely a social construct, then your answers will be nothing more than a cultural opinion. If you believe that truth is generated within the heart of man, then your answers will be nothing more than a personal opinion. If you believe that truth is relative, then, in the wisdom of the Cheshire Cat, any answer will do. If all truth is genuinely relative, then the word becomes meaningless and either all roads lead to truth or no road lead to truth—pick your poison.
This leaves us in the surreal world where no one really has anything of value to say to anyone else because it is all essentially inconsequential rubbish…one random opinion in a sea of random opinions.
But if we were to take the simple words of Jesus and contemplate them for even the slightest of moments, it would be clear He was proclaiming that Truth can neither be the construct of a culture nor the imaginations of the heart. If Jesus said that He was the Truth, then Truth finds its genesis in the very nature and character of God. It cannot be relative, but must be absolute. It cannot be finite or fickle, but must be eternal and immutable. It cannot be irrational or contradictory, but must be logical and consistent.
Why? Because if Jesus said that “He was the Truth”, then the source of truth is bound up in His essence…an essence that is eternal and unchanging. It cannot, therefore, spring up from the whim or heart of man. It must be something holy and transcendent.
If a culture, like ours, declares that there is no absolute truth, then it has essentially declared that there is no God. And that, ultimately, is what the battle against Truth is really all about. It seeks two ends:
This allows us to achieve our ultimate objective:
to do what we want to do without guilt or condemnation or constraint.
A biblical worldview would argue that this position—that everyone can be their own source of truth—is not only logically absurd, but if it were actually lived out in the reality of life around us, all would become pure chaos. That is why every culture that starts down this path will eventually end up with some form of pervasive and ubiquitous central government, or power, that must, of necessity, rise to bring some semblance of order.
Instead, we would argue that there is a real reality and an absolute truth that corresponds to that reality. Truth is, essentially, what is really real.
And there isn’t anything more real, more eternal and unchangingly real, than the character and nature of God. It is here that we not only find the essence of Truth, but we find its ultimate source…and find it expressed in both the creation of God and in the words He has communicated to us.
GO DEEPER:
Nature of Truth
Truth is Reality
Cosmic Battle
Relativism
Postmodernism
Egoism
The Case for Absolute Truth
Logical fallacies
The feminization of men in the absence of Truth
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