Experiential Faith
Our faith isn’t intellectual;
it is experiential. We don’t know about God, we
know Him. At the University of Chicago Divinity School,
each year they have what is called “Baptist Day.”
It is a day when the school invites all the Baptists
in the area to the school because they want the Baptist
dollars to keep coming in.
On this day each one is to bring a lunch to be eaten
outdoors in a grassy picnic area. Every “Baptist
Day” the school would invite one of the greatest
minds to lecture in the theological education center.
One year they invited Dr. Paul Tillich. Dr. Tillich
spoke for two-and-a-half hours proving that the resurrection
of Jesus was false. He quoted scholar after scholar
and book after book. He concluded that since there was
no such thing as the historical resurrection, the religious
tradition of the Church was groundless, emotional mumbo-jumbo,
because it was based on a relationship with a risen
Jesus, who, in fact, never rose from the dead in any
literal sense. He then asked if there were any questions.
After about 30 seconds, an old preacher with a head
of short-cropped, woolly white hair stood up in the
back of the auditorium. “Docta Tillich, I got
one question,” he said as all eyes turned toward
him. He reached into his lunch sack and pulled out an
apple and began eating it. “Docta Tillich (crunch,
munch), my question is a simple one (crunch, munch).
Now, I ain’t never read them books you read (crunch,
munch), and I can’t recite the Scriptures in the
original Greek (crunch, munch). I don’t know nothin’
about Niebuhr and Heidegger (crunch, munch).”
He finished the apple. “All I wanna know is: This
apple I just ate—was it bitter or sweet?”
Dr. Tillich paused for a moment and answered in exemplary
scholarly fashion: “I cannot possibly answer that
question, for I haven’t tasted your apple.”
The white-haired preacher dropped the apple core into
his crumpled paper bag, looked up at Dr. Tillich and
said calmly, “Neither have you tasted my Jesus.”
The 1,000-plus in attendance could not contain themselves.
The auditorium erupted with applause and cheers. Dr.
Tillich thanked his audience and promptly left the platform.
“Taste and see that the Lord is good: blessed
is the man that trusts in him” (Psalm 34:8). It
has been well said, “The man with an experience
is not at the mercy of a man with an argument.”
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