Sociolinguistics is the study of the effect of any and all aspects of society, including cultural norms, expectations, and context, on the way language is used.
Thought can be defined as a conclusion that we come to, but it doesn’t just include the end result, it includes the process by which we came to that conclusion. It would be like saying that not only is the view at the end of the hike the point, but also the journey to get to that view is just as important. I think its also important that our thoughts are affected by our environment, childhood, belief system, ethics and past to name a few. We can’t simply assume that we can come to an objective understanding just because it is labeled so or even because of the ‘thought’ we have inherited is proven. Thoughts evolve. The meaning of the words involved in the thought process change as we learn new things about that thought. In terms of theology, if we assume the words that have been inherited don’t change or don’t need to change than we assume that those words can only be relevant in their ancient context and solely modernised for our understanding. In this framework words than can only make sense with the historical framework in place. If we depend on the historical framework to dictate the evolution of the words we have borrowed than only history can tell us what it should mean.
For example, if we use the word salvation and coerce others along with ourselves that it can only be understood in an inherited theology than it becomes a false-dichotomy. It doesn’t allow the reality that even within that historical framework there were authors who had intentions, environments, childhoods, pasts and even enemies with which to contend with– if they were trying to offer a objective point of view. For example, Paul talks about salvation in terms of Jesus who he believed was the Christ. And so his idea of salvation is framed around this one concept. The authors in the Old Testament saw salvation as a circumstantial and as an annual practice. These are examples of how a word can evolve over thousands of years. If we post-modernise salvation now in terms of a lot of the different interpretations of salvation, than maybe a new rendering is that salvation is something that is enacted by a self-less act of sacrificial love, and that in and of itself is not only circumstantial but also alludes to the reality that we have a responsibility to assist the progress of verbal evolution.
That if we don’t allow space for different interpretations than we become the very victims of change that we say we don’t want to be. That if we leave words where they were originally used than we say that they are only relevant in those moments. Soren Kierkegaard espoused himself to subjective reason as posed by one blogger who said this:
We have to realize that we see the world through our own eyes. Even when we try to see the world through the eyes of another (ex: this is what some television commercials try to do) it is ultimately tainted by the inescapable reality that we are first and foremost subjective beings. The closest we can come to objective truth is ‘subjectivey-objective’ truth. Truth that is tainted. I also think its dangerous to simply assume that subjective truth is any less valuable of what we might define objective truth as. When we objectify anything, we are seeking to create a perfect plumbline with which to measure against our ideas of what we think is and what we think should be. It seems that a lot of our objectifying is another way to allow justification to defend our own understanding of God, the bible, truth and so much more. When maybe another option is to see that all of our subjective versions of truth and thought hold some intrinsic truth to them.
And that objective truth, if it exists, finds itself hidden in God.
And so, as we come to realize the innate limitations to our words and their meanings, may we come to realize that they barely touch the objective that we seem to want to personify in God. Objective truth isn’t the enemy, our treatment of it with others, is. We are the limited purveyors of objective truth. That isn’t a bad thing. I think we might feel powerless when we can’t define the objective because for some the objective becomes the plumbline with which to judge others by. It seems then that our need for objective truth and thought might stem from a need to be in control of our world and maybe even those around us (there are a lot of other reasons, I am sure).
We have to be willing to let go of our gnostic approaches to God and allow space for the mystical to speak. That God is beyond our understanding, words and thoughts and sometimes like Elijah we wait for the silence to speak to us. The more we recognize the limitations to our words, the less we feel the need to use theology as a weapon to prove everyone else wrong. The more we recognize that revealed truth is already influenced by being subjective beings is the moment we accept that truth is bigger than one concept. The better we learn to embrace the unknown the better the uknown can help change us.



















