And what is your definition of truth?
Ignoring all my other on point observations of your position that go without a response as you continue to move the goal posts each time...
Truth is what the Triune God knows, as all truth is the God's truth, since God is the metaphysical foundation of all that is true. Hence,
truth should equal, represent, and match the way things really are, that is, reality. That is,
truth corresponds to objective reality—what God says it is—not opinion.
Reality is the way things really are—for God so declared our reality—independent of human subjective experience and man-made conventions. This reality does not rule out the need for subjective application of truth in one's life. In other words,
truth is discovered, not invented.
I am not implying that man knows all truth perfectly or does not have to work very hard at comprehending it. Furthermore,
anyone denying the reality of truth has made a self-defeating statement.
What we know is directly connected to God's revelation. We can exercise our God-given rational capacities, through empirical observation, including science, and from understanding and reflecting upon God's unique propositional revelation—Scripture. Whether one is a
rationalist (priority to reason) or an
empiricist (priority to the five senses), we can trust
properly functioning senses or reasoning minds because God serves as the necessary epistemological ground of both.
At this point we may ask, "
What is knowledge?"
Knowledge is properly justified true belief.
Examine the statement in reverse.
belief - No one can
know something unless he or she believes it. For example, we cannot
know Jesus is Lord unless we believe it.
true - We can only
know things that are true. A person may think he knows something to be true, but, in fact, be wrong. Or a person may know of something false that is indeed false. But this person can only actually and authentically know something if it is indeed true.
justified - We can believe something to be true—that is in fact true—but this would not constitute knowledge if it lacks a proper justification. For example, a wild guess that ends up being correct would not be knowledge, for knowledge involves some sort of confirmation or evidence, that is, proper justification. Here I speak of what philosophers call
foundationalism. From foundationalism, we may claim that beliefs that stand on their own without appealing to other convictions for justification are called
properly basic beliefs. Beliefs are
properly basic when they are either self-evident (true on the face of it), logically necessary, inescapable, or incorrigible (expressing an immediate state of consciousness).
So we can state that
knowledge means believing what is true with proper justification. We must further state that human reason cannot reveal anything, but it can defend what has been revealed by the
Truth-Maker, the Triune God.
Despite the preceding we must recognize that man's knowledge is limited and affected by sin. Our
noetic (cognitive and/or belief forming) faculties are to some degree impaired by sin and thus, so is our intelligence and rationality. This is a debated topic among theologians, some arguing that the noetic effects of sin relate moreso to our moral nature than our cognitive. While sin impacts us for the worse, it is still warranted to claim that the laws of logic (principles of correct reasoning) are not impacted. This means to me that these laws remain cognitively necessary, ontologically real, and irrefutable. Again, I caution here that I am not advocating that the laws of logic can bring about a proper relationship with God. Indeed, we require God's grace to soften our hearts, illuminate our minds, and incline our wills to believe.
We are finite creatures, so unlike God, we have limitations in our essence, our being, with regard to knowledge and rational comprehension. This means that
pure rationalism (all things can be discovered through human reasoning and logic)
is impossible.
We may know things, but we cannot know things as God knows things.
Despite the claims of some believers with good intentions of defending the faith, who argue that faith is a "
leap", I claim there are four reasons supporting that our faith involves knowledge and is compatible with reason.
(1) There is an objective source and foundation for knowledge, reason, and rationality—a personal and rational Triune God.
(2) Christian truth claims do not violate the basic laws and principles of reason.
(3) Scripture teaches us to seek knowledge, wisdom, understanding, and the values of discernment, testing, and reflection are promoted in Scripture.
(4) The truths of our faith also correspond to and are supported by evidence, facts, and reason.
AMR