Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Presuppositions Matter, So Let’s Work Together
Presuppositions Matter, So Let’s Work Together
Dec 24, 2025 8:18 PM

It is truly amazing to encounter Protestants who believe that their views on theology and justice are objective and neutral — as if the Fall did not happen. In a recent discussion about the sacraments, a leader of an international ministry said to me, “If hermeneutics involves being taught to believe a certain theology, then it is not true hermeneutics. Hermeneutics is absolutely neutral.”

After reading ment I wondered, what possible world is he talking about where neutrality actually happens? One of the consequences of Adam and Eve’s transgression against God in the Garden of Eden was a human race whose thinking is now impaired. In the book Wisdom and Wonder, Abraham Kuyper makes the point that while we have not ceased to be rational creatures, because of sin we have “lost the gift of grasping the true context, the proper coherence, [and] the systematic integration of all things.” Because of this aspect of the human condition it seems best, as much as possible, to put one’s presuppositions on the table since there is no such thing as an uninterpreted fact. Disclosure builds trust and solidarity.

One of the stumbling blocks in Protestant evangelicalism is that leaders teach their constituents that their respective positions are “the Biblical” positions when, if fact, they are formed and concluded by particular approaches and perspectives. The implication is that each tribe says that they are “truly” Biblical and those who disagree with them are not Biblical. The fact is every tradition believes that their distinctives are “biblical.” Ignoring our presuppositions often leads to useless quarreling and much wasted time (2 Tim 2; Titus 3). This does not mean that all things are up for debate and difference, but it does challenge us to pay closer attention to those things that the Scriptures are more clear about.

It is truly admirable when institutions put their presuppositions on the table because it provides the best opportunity to find points of agreement that foster solidarity so Christians across munions can work together to fight mon threats and advocate for shared values in the public square. For example, Westminster Theological Seminary is one of the best at fully disclosing their presuppositions by listing their distinctives prominently on their website:

1. Study of Scriptures in the original languages

2. Exegetical theology & redemptive historical/conventional hermeneutics

3. Systematic theology grounded in Biblical theology

4. Presuppositional Apologetics

5. Reformed Confessionalism

6. Christ-centered preaching

7. Biblical Counseling

8. Spiritual formation for ministry in the Church

9. Contextual missiology & urban ministry

10. Presbyterian polity

This is an example of epistemic humility by a school that fully discloses that their understanding of the Christian faith is, start to ing from a particular perspective. Concordia Theological Seminary (St. Louis), explicitly states that it values “Faithfulness to the Scriptures and Confessions — demonstrating the identity of the Seminary as both Lutheran and evangelical, concerned for both the pure and bold proclamation of Christ.” So, throwing random Bible verses in opposition to positions held at either of these schools is an exercise in futility. I could list many more schools demonstrating this level of humility but the point is that they lead with their assumptions and presuppositions. We need more disclosures like this in the Protestant evangelical world. Disclosure allows for more honest and principled engagement about disputable matters and creates the conditions for the best kinds of partnering.

The Manhattan Declaration is a great example of what happens when traditions lead with their respective presuppositions and choose to work together for larger causes. The Manhattan Declaration is a movement of Orthodox, Catholic, and Evangelical Christians for life, marriage, and religious liberty. The Acton Institute is another place where Christians are invited e mitted to their traditions and perspectives in order to address other important issues in the world.

What is alarming is that many leaders in parts of the Protestant evangelical world are unintentionally misleading their constituents by telling them that their perspective is simply “biblical” and neutral. This is naive, and much time is currently being wasted debating issues that will not be settled any time soon because they have not been for hundreds of years. I am not saying these munion discussions are never important, only that many of the differences are about matters that may not be possibly fully clarified in the Scriptures. The question then is, “How do we work together?”

Christians in the West, across multiple traditions, have more mon with each other in an age of secular humanism and religious pluralism than we realize, and it seems that we often trade off working together for the sake of maintaining triumphant tribalism. Let’s put our presuppositions on the table and move forward because the myth of neutrality is distracting us from the larger threats to the kingdom of God.

[product sku=”1197-1196CP”]

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
The Life You (Don’t) Want: Oprah’s Tour for the Self-Centered
Oprah Winfrey recently announced her first-ever cross-country tour, “The Life You Want,” which will feature Oprah “like you’ve never seen,” in addition to talks from a series of “hand-picked” gurus, including Iyanla Vanzant, Deepak Chopra, Elizabeth Gilbert, and former pastor Rob Bell. “It’s about living the life you want,”Oprah explains, “because a great percentage of the population is living a life that their mother wanted, that their husband wanted, that they thought or heard they wanted…Start embracing the life that...
It’s ‘Equal Pay Day:’ Celebrating An Economic Myth
By Presidential Proclamation, today is “Equal Pay Day,” a day meant to draw attention to the “fact” that women still aren’t getting paid the same as men. No matter how hard we try, we just can’t seem to catch up. 77 cents on the dollar – that’s where we ladies are sitting and stagnating. Except it’s a myth. In today’s Wall Street Journal, Mark J. Perry and Andrew G. Biggs tear this disparity issue apart. It’s not simply a matter...
Religious Left Wants to Keep Fossil Fuels in the Ground – Forever
Ever-anxious to put another corporate head on a pike, religious proxy shareholders are boasting that their efforts landed them the big daddy of them all – ExxonMobil. Religious investor group As You Sow pats itself on the back that the pany bowed to its pressure to reveal hydraulic fracturing (fracking) risks. According to the Wall Street Journal’s Daniel Gilbert: Exxon Mobil Corp. agreed to publicly disclose more details on the risks of hydraulic fracturing of oil and gas wells, reversing...
Radio Free Acton: A Catechism for Business
What is the end – the goal – of business anyway? Is it to merely maximize a profit or to do good, or some balance between the two? And what exactly does it mean for a business to “do good”? And if I happen to be a person of deep religious faith, do I have to check my faith at the boardroom door? What influence should my faith have on the exchanges I engage in day to day, and what...
Liberals Acting Illiberally
“Liberal: not bound by traditional ways or beliefs.” A “liberal” then, would be a person who is open-minded, ready to listen to another point of view. “I’m not bound to any traditions; I’m open-minded. I am liberal.” Yet, recently, liberals are showing they are as close-minded as the “conservatives” they claim have it all wrong. For instance, Mozilla’s Brendan Eich was forced out as pany’s leader (despite pany’s strong stance on tolerance) because he had contributed to a pro-traditional marriage...
Hidden No More: Exposing Human Trafficking in West Michigan
On March 28th, the Acton Institute hosted an important event for our munity. Hidden No More: Exposing Human Trafficking in West Michiganbrought together representatives from Michigan’s state government and munity activists to shine a light on the very real and growing problem of human trafficking in West Michigan (and beyond). The event was organized by Acton’s own Elise Hilton(who as written extensively on the subject of human trafficking here on the PowerBog), and featured a panel consisting of Chief Deputy...
Supreme Court Delivers Setback to Free Speech and Religious Liberty
“This ruling is more in the spirit of Nero Caesar than in the spirit of Thomas Jefferson,” said Russell D. Moore. “This is damaging not only to the conscience rights of Christians, but to all citizens.” Moore, the president of the Ethics & Religious Liberty Commission, was responding to the U.S. Supreme Court’s refusal to rule on a case involving Elane Photography and its owners Jonathan and Elaine Huguenin. According to the Alliance Defending Freedom (ADF), Elaine received an email...
7 Figures: Wages and Employment in America
[Note: This is the first post in ‘7 Figures’, a new, occasional series highlighting data and information from a variety of surveys and reports.] The U.S. Department of Labor recently released data from the Occupational Employment Statistics program, which provides employment and wage estimates by area and by industry for wage and salary workers in hundreds of occupation groups in America. Here are seven figures based on the report: 1. Retail salespersons and cashiers were the occupations with the largest...
City Of Grand Rapids Selectively Releases Public Information Regarding Acton’s Tax Status
Michigan Capitol Confidential (CapCon) is reporting today that the city of Grand Rapids, Mich., is selectively releasing what should be public information regarding Acton Institute’s tax status in an on-going dispute between Acton and the city. Grand Rapids city officials gave detailed information about a tax dispute involving the Acton Institute to a select reporter, but not to the nonprofit fighting to prove it is a charitable organization, according to documents received through a Freedom of Information Act request. In...
The ‘Transformational Quartet’ of Christian Stewardship
“Christian discipleship is nothing less than conformity to Christ—as individual believers and as munities,” writes Charlie Self in Flourishing Churches and Communities, CLP’s Pentecostal primer on faith, work, and economics. “The very life of God is in us.” Most of us have heard the Great Commandment and the Great Commission in their basic forms, but understanding the relationship between the two and living out bined imperative can be difficult to wrap our minds around. How do we love the Lord...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved