Biases, Public Education, and the Bible
The only time you truly look at something without the screen of your bias is the first time. Once you’ve made up your mind, that bias forever colors your thinking. It’s possible to change your bias, but it’s hard.
A bias is the way you look at things. Think of glasses. If you have rose-colored glasses, everything has a rose-colored tint. The analogy of changing biases doesn’t quite extend fully to glasses, though, because it’s easier to change glasses than to change biases. But I hope you get the point; everything looks different through your bias.
Here’s something to think about:
You take a monkey who’s never seen balls or color (or at least red and green), and set two balls in front of him, a red ball and a green ball. This is the moment of decision. Which will he choose? He looks back and forth from one to the other, indecisive. Each are presented to him equally. Finally he chooses the red ball. Next, five green balls and a red ball are presented to him. It’s automatic, he chooses the red one, no matter there are more green ones.
Like so it is with issues, facts, and biases. Say the initial red and green balls were issues. The monkey chose one side. Say the additional balls are facts. Though there are more facts for the green side than the red, the bias leans towards the red.
Why do you think public education is so “important”? Because if they can get their opinion in your kid first, your kid is biased to their bias. If they are teaching untrue things, your kid is biased to their untrue bias, and will most likely stick to that bias no matter how many facts are shown them. (By reading this, I’m sure you can see my bias!)
The problem comes in when people read the Bible with a biased view. Everybody does, including me, because we all have biases. That is the problem. The solution is to put on God’s bias. When Jesus was talking to the people, He didn’t talk in worldly terms. He talked in Godly terms. From God’s perspective, the only one that matters. The Pharisees tried to understand it with their understanding, and it didn’t work. If we try to understand the Bible with our 21st century perspective, it doesn’t work. It wasn’t meant to be understood by people’s perspectives at all. It was meant to be understood from God’s perspective. God’s perspective is radically different from ours. His perspective doesn’t make sense to us in our sin-drenched view of things (though we should continually seek to have His perspective on things), but you know what? That’s ok. I, for one, am glad I don’t understand God because if I did, He would be a pretty small God indeed.
January 24th, 2008 at 5:00 pm
I’m not trying to attack Christianity or anything, I’m just curious - but why would the Bible be for God’s perspective if He wanted humans to read it? And if humans aren’t meant to understand it, then why do they try to reach that point of God’s perspective?
January 24th, 2008 at 11:18 pm
So I guess what you’re saying is, we can’t interpret the Bible however we want, just because what we already know leads us to form our opinions in a biased direction. ?
I’m not sure I’m getting the whole “perspective” thing, though.
Jesus did speak in worldy* terms that his audience could understand. That’s what parables were, no? God’s perspective told in an earthly* way so that human minds could draw a parallel.
“It wasn’t meant to be understood by people’s perspectives at all. It was meant to be understood from God’s perspective.”
Thinking out loud here, my first reaction would be to contradict that. I mean, the Bible was written for people. You could say that we can drop our bias and see it the way God sees it because of the Spirit living inside us, but where does that leave non-believers? Was it not written for them, too, that they might believe? But they don’t have God’s perspective.
Though I’m pretty sure what you’re getting at here is how we interpret things, and how we obey in faith even when it makes no sense.
**shrugs**
Just thinking out loud, Annelue! I figure that’s more interesting of a comment than a smile and a “hey nice post!”
Which it was ;-) A nice post, I mean. Good thinkin’. I like being provoked to use my mind every now and then. Provoked in a good way. Not a bad way. Maybe prod would have been a better word….
**rabbit trails off into the distance**….
* NOT as in carnal. ;-)
January 27th, 2008 at 7:26 pm
Ha! I hadn’t noticed Kaylee’s comment. We said the same thing!
January 28th, 2008 at 3:27 pm
The Bible isn’t FOR God’s perspective; it’s FROM God’s perspective. Everything the Bible says is from a Godly view, not a worldly. When God says through Paul love isn’t about YOU it’s about OTHERS, that isn’t a worldly perspective, that’s a Godly perspective. That doesn’t make sense to us, as humans. We think we should GET everything, not GIVE everything.
You’re right. If you look at the Bible as a non-believer who isn’t being called by God, it won’t make sense. If you’re a non-believer who’s looking at the Bible for answers, for something bigger than yourself, you’re going to find them and Him.
That’s exactly what the parables were for. Read John 8 (or more specifically, John 8:37-47).
It IS possible to understand some of the Bible. However, it ISN’T possible to understand God, or the reasons why He does things sometimes.
January 28th, 2008 at 10:39 pm
Good splainin’.
This “devil’s advocate” thing is fun!
January 29th, 2008 at 10:18 am
LOL Thanks
You…you…little something-or-other! LOL
January 30th, 2008 at 10:22 am
Yeah, it’s pretty much impossible to be un-biased about anything. That doesn’t necessarily make your bias wrong, but it does make your bias, a bias.
January 30th, 2008 at 10:26 am
Yeah, that’s also true!
January 30th, 2008 at 12:02 pm
totally OT, but your new look rocks. ;-)
I’m loving the whole thing.
January 30th, 2008 at 12:24 pm
lol! Thanks
February 3rd, 2008 at 12:55 am
You should update O:-)
February 8th, 2008 at 6:17 pm
Ditto Benjie!
February 9th, 2008 at 6:49 pm
This is a great post. Thanks for stating the not-so-recognized obvious. I think a lot of times we don’t realize it because of our biased states.