Saturday, February 12, 2011

The Folly of “The Fortress” or a pitfall of the allegory

Dr. Kevin Bauder has recently posted an article (you may find it on your own, I care not to link to it) which is at certain levels a bit entertaining. He has chosen to write this article in an allegorical style. This is the style which John Bunyan used when he wrote, The Pilgrim’s Progress. An allegorical approach to writing can be quite picturesque, as Dr. Bauder has shown in his article. It is quite easy to conjure up a mental picture as you read his article.
There is a pitfall, though, to writing allegory. The author must clearly articulate the meaning of the characters. An “apology” must be written so that the readers have a proper understanding of what the author is intending to convey in the allegory. Otherwise, the reader is left to his own devices to give understanding to what is written. This is very much like the chaos that the Israelites had during the period of the Judges when, “everyone did that which was right in his own eyes.” Going back to Bunyan’s work, he wrote a poetic apology for The Pilgrim’s Progress, and it usually forms kind of a preface to the book. If a reader reads the book for the first time without having read the apology, he is left with a mind full of questions as to the intent of Bunyan for a host of events and people portrayed.
Dr. Bauder has left us to speculation with his allegory. Now maybe this is on purpose, so that he has plausible deniability when readers start placing their own interpretations to the characters and events portrayed. He can quickly say “no” to any number of interpretations and all interpretations, since he has not articulated what the real interpretation is. Or maybe it is for his own enjoyment, when people bring their own meanings to it and blast away because of their perceived ideas as to what he means. He can sit back and enjoy the fireworks display. Which brings me to calling this whole thing a folly (a lack of understanding, sense, or rational conduct), since we have not the real meaning presented to us, then we really have no meaning being given to us.
Now, I have sent a message to Dr. Bauder requesting that he give an apology for his article. We will have to wait to see if he is so inclined to do so. My own reading of the article and understanding of it is a bit disturbing. I see a continued effort by the writer to distort, redefine, and revise the history of Fundamentalism as he has done in a couple of series of articles recently. But then, who am I to properly understand his allegorical method? To use a phrase from one of his fellow professors at the seminary of which Dr. Bauder is the president, I am just a “pastor of a pretty small church.” I could very well have missed the mark in my interpretation of his article. Since I could be off in my understanding, I am left to neither condemn outright nor condone the message of the article. I do, in one sense, condemn the article because it is a useless piece of writing without its apology to properly understand what the writer wishes to articulate. It is somewhat like what Paul speaks of to the Corinthian church about speaking a foreign language in church. If no one there understands the language spoken and there is no one to interpret, then it is of no profit to the congregation.
For those who stop by and read my articles, I trust that you will read with discernment. We could jump to conclusions about Dr. Bauder and this article which are not founded upon the truth he wishes to express in the article, so I would encourage you not to engage with comments concerning those conclusions jumped to since we don’t really know what he means.

4 comments:

Lou Martuneac said...

Brian:

The author must clearly articulate the meaning of the characters. An ‘apology’ must be written so that the readers have a proper understanding of what the author is intending to convey in the allegory.

This is so true and a responsible writer would have included the apology. What Bauder did here and IMO has no intention of offering the apology for is not much different he did when wrote that Fundamentalists and Evangelicals “believe, preach and defend the [same] Gospel.”

Bauder knows full well hat the Gospel of the evangelicals is the Lordship Salvation interpretation, which hundreds of fundamental pastors and teachers reject as a false Gospel. Dr. Ernest Pickering rejected LS and wrote a review and critique of MacArthur's first edition of TGATJ. Pickering noted that MacArthur had “changed the terms of the Gospel.”

The truth is that most Calvinistic men in Fundamental circles would agree with LS as the evangelicals do. Bauder however, knows that there is no universal agreement. His was a gross misrepresentation and he knew it when he wrote it.

I answered that serious misrepresentation and called his attention to it. I suggested clarification and/or retraction. He responded that he had received my contact about this, but of course he never made any clarification whatsoever.

All that to say that there is little to no chance that Bauder will offer any sort of clarification, the apology you’ve called for.


LM

PS: I have a major article posting tomorrow at my blog. It will address the actions of one of the star personalities of the so-called conservative evangelicals.

Brian said...

Thanks for stopping by, Lou. I am not holding my breath waiting for a statement from Dr. Bauder. If he offers no apology, then his article is of little value to no value to assist anyone except himself; because the moment someone declares what they think it means and voices their opposition to his assessment he can deny that theirs was the proper interpretation and we are left nowhere.

Brian said...

For those following my blog and this article in particular. To date there has been no reply to my inquiry with Dr. Bauder and there has been no posting of an "apology" for his article as I spoke of in my article.

Lou Martuneac said...

There will be none. The only time Kevin Bauder ever pulled back from any statement (I know of) is when he ignorantly inferred on line that a homosexual actor's house be fire-bombed. A national newspaper picked it up, the Feds stepped in and he had to delete the blog (his first) he had at that time over it. Of course, his angry YF fans excused him by stating it as merely “Bauderian hyperbole.”

FWIW, as I noted above, he posted a serious, known misrepresentation last year when he posted that evangelicals and fundamentalists, “believe, preach and defend the [same] gospel.” He knows that is a serious misnomer. I called him on it privately and publicly and he will not edit, explain or eliminate that serious misrepresentation. See Do Fundamentalists & Evangelicals, “Believe, Preach and Defend the [Same] Gospel?

IMO, based on his track record, it is not in his nature or character to acknowledge any personal missteps and/or misrepresentations.


Lou