Confessor
Puritan Board Senior
The elephant in the room here is a term that I have used before that I will define--numinous: the experience of feeling the presence of something wholly other. I realize that the term is popular among liberals, the neo-orthodox, and Anglo-Catholics, but I think it needs to be considered in Reformed circles as well.
I would argue that for every Christian, there is, at times, this feeling of the numinous that signals God's presence in a unique way and leaves no room for doubt.
Never even heard the word before. Thanks.
Although I would certainly say that we can have numinous experiences, I would yet say that humans cannot describe them, not because of some objective indescribability, but because of our finitude and present inability to do so. So in that case, truth is still propositional as far as human apprehension goes. We would be able to describe numinous experiences if we had significantly more knowledge.
Of course, there's still a difference between, for instance, feeling happy and having cognizance of the proposition "I am happy." But in that case you do not need to resort to numinous experiences, just to any example of emotion.