Apr 1, 2025
Each person's life journey includes intense wrestles with the
matter of "authority." When we are young, we are in a position in
which we must defer to another's authority in order to survive. As
we grow, we soon become self-conscious, taking into account how we
are viewed by others. And in order to fit in, we will often defer
our own authority to that of the group. At first it will be to our
immediate friends and acquaintances. Heidegger noticed that we give
away our authority to larger, more diffuse cultures and societies,
referring to it as "the tyranny of the they."
In our maturation processes, we hopefully will come to understand
these pressures on us and begin to form a firm sense of our own
self and can more easily walk our particular path without relying
on others for the final word about what we should do and
think.
Our religious lives bring extra complications with regard to
authority. When we view certain texts or particular leaders as
spiritually and ethically authoritative, it becomes even harder to
stand our ground because we worry that we might be upsetting God
should we stray from its or their directives.
This podcast discusses our views of God and how these are typically
quite influential when it comes to whether we yield our authority
to these texts and people. Do we view God as completely "other,"
external to us, and distant, or can we allow ourselves to believe
that God is a part of us, intimately caring, compassionate, and
ever encouraging us Godward? If the former, we are more likely to
allow authority figures more sway, perhaps complete sway, over our
thoughts and actions. If the latter, we can typically differentiate
from these others and begin to trust our own experiences over their
interpretations and directives. Certainly, these will align with
each other at times, but when they don't, we will follow our own
light.
LDF host Dan Wotherspoon is joined by board
members Mark Crego and Terri
Petersen in a li