ARTICLE

Post-Truth, The Word Of The Year: Feelings Have Replaced Facts

News Image By John Stonestreet/Breakpoint.org November 28, 2016
Share this article:

The Christian satire website, Babylon Bee, has had a lot of great headlines. One of my favorites so far: "Progressive Evangelical Leaders Meet to Affirm Doctrine of 'Sola Feels.'" 

Adherents to this imaginary creed believe that "things that make us feel bad...are wrong. The things that give us all the happy feels...are true, right, and good." Now of course, the scary part about satire is how closely it often mirrors reality.

On a related note, Oxford Dictionaries has released its 2016 word of the year: "Post-truth," which they define as "relating to or denoting circumstances in which objective facts are less influential in shaping public opinion than appeals to emotion and personal belief."


I can hardly think of a better description of where we are right now as a culture. In fact, for those of us who've spent years calling out what has now become called "the dictatorship of relativism," it's tempting to say, "welcome to the party, guys!"

But the concept of "post-truth" is a bit different from garden variety relativism. It doesn't discount the existence of truth. Rather, a post-truth society is one in which truth takes a back seat to emotion--where feelings effectively replace facts. And that's exactly what we've seen over the course of this year's election.

For example, the melt-down among what many are calling the "snowflakes" on college campuses over President-elect Trump is the most obvious example. Despite exit polls showing that a huge percentage of eligible millennial voters stayed home on Election Day, many of these students just can't handle the outcome. 

Their schools are sending letters of condolences, canceling exams, even offering hot chocolate and hugs from administrators. Faced with a reality that contradicts what they feel should have happened, many just can't cope.

A post-truth culture also leads us to equate disagreement with hatred. Loving me means agreeing with me. And as many conservative speakers who've been chased from university campuses by angry students can tell you, when feelings are equated with a person's identity and even reality, contradicting those feelings is the same as attacking the person.

The post-truth culture can also lead us to ignore reality altogether. I've made it clear on BreakPoint that I find some of our next president's past words, especially about racial minorities and women, troubling, to say the least. 

But in this post-truth, post-fact, post-reality environment, many have hijacked legitimate concerns in order to play the victim. Just look at the panicked reaction from gay and lesbian activists, who are behaving as if Donald Trump plans to persecute their community.


But there are no facts to support this hysteria. If anything, our next president has been far friendlier to the LGBT agenda than I'm comfortable with, even calling the Supreme Court's Obergefell ruling "settled law." 

Trump hasn't committed to protecting the bakers, florists, photographers, and others who've been hounded for not participating in same-sex weddings. But all these facts don't matter when so many feel that the president-elect threatens their way of life.

And of course, post-truth culture dominates Facebook and Twitter feeds. Just look at the epidemic of fake news that marred this election. Even Christians too often fall for completely fabricated headlines and hoaxes, largely because they validate our feelings.

So where does all this leave us? Well, the Bible has plenty to say on the subject of truth. 

In fact, we follow the One Who is the Way, the Truth, and the Life, Who came into the world to testify to the truth, a truth which--He told His disciples--would set them free. Truth must govern our emotions, not the other way around.

The 2016 word of the year doesn't bode well for our culture. We must insist on prioritizing facts before emotions.

The "doctrine" of "sola feels" is supposed to be a joke. So let's make sure it stays that way.

Originally published at Breakpoint.org - reposted with permission.




Other News

January 08, 2026Iran, Israel And The United States All Say That They Are Ready For War

Things are getting very tense in the Middle East. The Islamic radicals that are ruling Iran believe that the United States and Israel int...

January 08, 2026When Christian Leaders Fall - How Should We Respond?

For decades, Philip Yancey was one of the most trusted voices in American Christianity. His books on grace, doubt, suffering, and faith in...

January 08, 2026A Warning For Parents - How To Lose Your Child To Gender Activists

A gut-wrenching column published in the Telegraph highlights a uniquely post-modern parental nightmare: "My son took gender-changing hormo...

January 08, 2026Has Time Finally Run Out For Tehran’s Islamist Tyrants?

For the past 16 years, the world has continued to ask the same question with respect to the Islamist regime in Iran: Is it finally time fo...

January 07, 2026A Tale Of Two Celebrity Christians & Lessons For All Of Us

Celebrity conversions grab headlines because they force us to look beyond the spotlight and into the deeper questions of faith, sincerity,...

January 07, 20261,000 Tasks In A Day: Why Agile Robots Will Reshape Work And War

It wasn't flashy. But it may be one of the most important moments in modern robotics. Most robotics breakthroughs improve precision or spe...

January 07, 2026After The Silence: Why Venezuelan Christians See Hope After Maduro

If Venezuela is to rise from the ruins of authoritarian socialism, it will not be rebuilt by slogans or strongmen. It will be rebuilt by f...

Get Breaking News