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Brian Villanueva's avatar

I categorize Christians into "oaks" and "palm trees".

The fundamentalists (oaks) are certain of the Bible (Protestants) or the Church (Catholics). They don't question any of it and so they have no doubts. Examples would be the Young Earthers (in the Protestant world) or the Latin mass folks (in the Catholic one).

However, for some people, this sort of "blind faith" is not enough. They have doubts and want tools to work through them. They want theology and science, and philosophy, and history together. These are the palm trees.

Why those names? Because when a storm comes, the oak looks strong. Its faith is rock solid. It won't move in response to that storm at all. No doubts! The oak can stand up to most of the circumstances and storms of life, but if it starts to fail, if any doubt seeps in, it will be pushed over. The faith of an oak is incredibly strong, but with enough wind in the right place, it will end up on the ground. And those disciplines like philosophy and history create weaknesses that the wind can exploit; better to stay focused on the Bible.

Meanwhile, the palm looks weak. It's waving all over the place, being bent and tossed by the forces of the world. It has lots of doubts. But it also has this amazing superpower, as it bends, it gets stronger. Philosophy and history and science may challenge the palm's faith, but it rolls with those challenges, and integrates them to make itself stronger. Doubts don't weaken it; they strengthen it. (At least to a point, even a palm can break.)

The oak says: "if you have doubts, your faith is weak. Pray harder."

The palm says: "If you don't have doubts, you're picture of God is probably too small."

I am the worship leader at my blue-collar, evangelical church, so I am surrounded by oaks. But I am a palm. I teach and study philosophy. (I once had a church board member tell me that reading Plato would destroy my soul. He's an oak, of course. I love him dearly as a brother in Christ, but I can't have a serious theology discussion with him.)

I've also taught my kids to be palms. One of them really wants to be an oak, but she's going to college next year and I need her to have some palm characteristics. Universities are places with lots of spiritual winds.

It isn't that one way is better, rather each way is suited to particular people. It sounds like you're a palm too, Aaron.

One of the weird things is that both palms and oaks seem to like C.S. Lewis.

PS: Ironically, I detest real palm trees. (Not the metaphorical ones here, the IRL ones.)

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