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William Lolli's avatar

I have found a great deal of value in this essay as an additive resource for my own self-perspectives’ evolution.

As a Christian believer over the past 50 years, I have had to make multiple framework-adjustments to my understanding of my belief system. I must say that changing “the fact to align with the belief” has not been an option, as it is impracticable. Non sequiturs prevent ongoing inculcations.

Adding new cognitions to bridge the gap has usually come from the same spring of misalignments which share space with trying to change facts. This doesn’t work too well either.

That leaves changing my beliefs to fit the facts. And, yes, there is a cost, but in the case of my Christianity, there hasn’t been a change in identity, rather an enhancement of it. Saying I was wrong gains any ground that would have been lost by thinking I was right.

Most Christian fundamentalists I know place a huge value on being right. I learned that lesson the hard way when I once confronted a translator of the NIV version of the Bible on a passage in Isaiah where the translator demonstrated five different interpretations of the same passage, and I raised my hand and demanded to know “Which one was right?”

He smiled, looked at me squarely and replied, “They ALL are…”

Lesson learned. I had no reputation to lose and I had no emotion to jeopardize; but my world view expanded at little cost of aligning my beliefs to the facts.

Thanks for this essay.

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