Tutelage in Faith - Cade Wood

     First of all, does anyone else think tutelage is a funny word or is that just me?

     Anyhoo, I enjoyed this read. I thought Kant's take on enlightenment and almost the viewpoint of the world being enlightened as a whole was very fascinating. However, I want to focus more on the definition of tutelage and the role it plays in a specific part of our lives as opposed to our lives as a whole. Kant defines tutelage as a man's inability to make use of his understandings without the help of another. This makes me think somewhat of the church. Often times, Christians have a habit of just hearing a sermon from a well-respected pastor, or even a random one they don't know anything about, and believing it as complete truth. In most cases, the sermons pastors preach are truthful; although in other cases, things they say may be watered down, some things may be left out, and some things may just be completely twisted and out of context. Because of this, we as believers should not only be knowledgeable enough to understand if a pastor is preaching something incorrectly but to also have the desire to biblically "fact-check", if you will, what the pastor says. 
     By no means am I saying one should not trust their pastor, nor am I saying the need to know everything about the bible to make sure their pastor is preaching the truth. What I am saying, however, is that as Christians we should have at the very minimum a basic understanding of scripture that comes from our own studies of the bible, as well as the ability to decern if the truth is being taught. 


I commented on Gray's and Addison's posts. 

Comments

Gray Moore said…
I too thought about the relation to Christianity as a whole but you explained it so well! Not even I could have summarized it like that. Overall, good blog post Cade!
Breanna Poole said…
I enjoyed how you connected the idea of Kant's definition of tutelage to Christian sermons. I agree with you absolutely, as I often find myself worried that someone might make a misstep and not take a second to consider what they really believe before joining a church or deciding to listen to certain people. While everyone should take the step toward being closer to God, they should do so with the knowledge that just because another Christian, even a Pastor, says something about God or the Bible it doesn't make it true. The only truth we know comes from the Bible and our reading of it, not what someone else understands it to mean or says it means.
Anna Gay said…
I completely agree with you Cade! As humans, if we hear a story we usually will go back to the source to make sure that is what really happened before believing. As christians, that same principle should apply, even more so in my opinion. I love Kant's definition of tutelage because as strange as the word is, there is such truth in that definition! Great job!
Cody Ercizer said…
I agree that that it is so important to understand the scripture for ourselves. To blindly accept every word from a teacher/pastor without checking there facts is a disservice to both them and yourself. And being able to critically call someone out is an important quality.