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Absolute, or present truth?


By Tim Dunston
Type
the words “present truth” into your browser.  Hit the search button.
What do you find? Nothing particularly stimulating.  I certainly didn’t
find what I expected. It took me nearly half an hour of searching to
find real quotes about present truth. Instead, the first things that
pop up are discussions that are anything but present: pages full of
semantics, proof-texting, 19th-century prostletyzing. It’s a sad
reality that the greatest doctrinal defense against fundamentalism is a
phrase fundamentalists use more than anyone.
Crack open a copy of Adventist Fundamental Beliefs, you won’t
even see a mention of  Present Truth in the body of the text. It’s been
pushed as far into oblivion as it can be, only a token reference to the
fact that our fundamental beliefs are not really set in stone, or
muttered ex cathedra, but instead decided upon by the larger church. In
other words, what we believe, officially, came originally through
dialogue. But that seems to be conveniently forgotten, at least by
mainstream Adventism.
Our Adventist pioneers were terrified by the very notion of a
written creed. They knew that a movement could only keep functioning
with the dynamism of a movement if it stayed present. They founded a
movement on that notion, built a church on its very foundation. A
foundation that was adaptable, its structure evolvable, like DNA,
always ready to express genes to flourish in the current environment.
Yet, in spite of our efforts we are left wasted, both sides,
liberal and conservative, having forgotten the beauty of truth that is
present.
Present truth is not the newest key sent from heaven to
crack the biblical code. Rather, in the words of our resident prophet
“present truth is present truth, and not future truth, and that…Word
as a lamp shines brightly where we stand, and not so plainly on the
path in the distance.”
We would do well to remember those words. They are an
admission of our humanity, and at the same time, God’s divinity. It’s
madness to assume that finite human beings have ever had the whole
story regarding God and this world. We will always be learning, always
discovering that some things we thought we knew, we didn’t. When we
interact with something larger than self, we will always be learning,
our views and opinions changing. That’s what it means to be human.
We’re anything but static, in fact, we are some of the most dynamic
creatures on this earth.

And when we admit our humanity, we can begin to learn to be
present to each other, and in that presence, reveal the most beautiful
truth of church. That, in spite of our differences, our quarrels, our
hidden agendas–we worship a God who is present for us, and in that
presence, we learn what it is to love.

Within the context of relationship, our fundamentals take on a
very different shape. No longer are they seen as a means of keeping
out, of increasing distance; instead, what we are really about, the
reason we all keep coming back, keep giving, keep believing, is to be
closer to one another and closer to God. If our fundamentals don’t
accomplish that for us–don’t help us accomplish that, it may be time
to see what truth we find here and now, to see what binds you and me
together, and us to God. What does the lamp of truth illuminate for you
today?
Tim Dunston recently graduated from Walla Walla College where he sang with the Messengers.

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