A Thinking Reed

"Man is but a reed, the most feeble thing in nature, but he is a thinking reed" – Blaise Pascal

Wrestling with the Bible

Via Lynn, a post written from a Jewish perspective on interpreting the Torah/Bible:

Those of us who study seriously, and those of us who do not reject the plain facts of history, are forced to acknowledge that the Bible as we know it is a complicated amalgamation of texts, edited and organized by imperfect human beings, frequently in the service of imperfect human purposes. It is a huge collection of books, containing a great range of perspectives, a great range of agendas, which frequently contradict one another.

One response to this is to say that if Torah bears the marks of the hands of human beings, if it cannot be said to be an inerrant divine document, then there is no point at all, and all interpretations are arbitrary. Another is to argue that, contradictions and gruesome horrors aside, the Bible is nonetheless the perfect and infallible word of God. Perhaps those who believe the latter are willing to believe that God is a hypocrite; more likely, they’re willing to turn a blind eye to difficult passages, willing to excuse themselves from the obligation of study, willing to quote passages to others when it’s convenient but not willing to struggle with difficult passages themselves.

But there is a third response: We can accept that the Torah has been edited and organized by human beings, and is therefore incomplete and imperfect — and we can simultaneously hold that the Torah contains the word of God, and that study can allow us to contemplate and draw closer to God.

The author disclaims any application of this to Christianity, but I’m inclined to agree with several of her commenters that it’s very relevant.

Even though it was obviously written over a much shorter period of time, the New Testament contains multiple perspectives on the meaning of Jesus, not all of them obviously compatible. It further says things that seem to contradict some of what we now know (or believe). Add to this the fact that Christians include the “Hebrew Bible” among sacred scripture and you’ve got a big, unwieldy collection of literature bursting with different (though related) takes on who God is and what God is up to.

I think everyone, whether they admit it or not, has a “canon within the canon” that they use to interpret and prioritize other parts of the Bible. For Luther, the Bible was the manger in which Christ lay, and Christ was the key to understanding scripture. He found the message of God’s grace most forcefully set forth in Romans and the Gospel of John, among other places, and used this as a yardstick of sorts for making discriminations (including his notorious judgment that the Epistle of James was a “letter of straw”). This moves us away from seeing the authority of the Bible in some textual property like innerrancy and toward seeing it as belonging to the message (and, maybe, the fruits this message produces in people’s lives?). There’s obviously a kind of hermeneutic circle here, but not necessarily a vicious one. After all, the Bible as we know it owes its existence to the church, which itself is a creature of the proclamation of the Gospel.

Personally, the more I read the Bible, the more I rejoice in the different perspectives there. It’s liberating to let go of the impulse to organize it into some architectonic theological structure where every book and passage finds its neatly assigned place. The real Bible (as opposed to the mythical Bible that’s often used as a theological or political bludgeon) is a lot messier and more interesting than that. Recognizing this can allow for an ongoing dialogue or dialectic where different parts of the Bible challenge and provoke us, instead of being absorbed Borg-style into a predigested theology. At the same time, though, the core proclamation of God’s grace and liberation in Jesus can provide assurance that the God we encounter in Scripture is one who is for us and whom we can trust, even in the midst of passages that are baffling, challenging, or even offensive.

6 responses to “Wrestling with the Bible”

  1. I once heard about a State legislator in Texas who, when asked about whether some school districts should be required to have all-Spanish instruction for immigrant Hispanic populations, commented, “If English is good enough for our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ, it’s good enough for us.” This kind of ignorance about the text comes directly out of the unthinking concession that it is the “inerrant word of God.” I don’t mean to argue that it’s not. Rather, I mean that the text has a lot of meaning wrapped up in its messiness (as you put it), to the effect that we are forced to think long and hard about both its “message” and how we read. The New Testament compilers in the ancient ecumenical councils obviously didn’t have a problem with messiness, otherwise they would have paraphrased the four gospel accounts into one, or just settled for a Creed or a Handbook, and they certainly would never have let Romans and James, or Ephesians and Hebrews, remain in the same canon. And that’s just the New Testament…. Blah, blah.

    Anyway, “resistance is futile.”

  2. So, you think/believe that the Bible is “literature;” whose to blame turning It into literature?

    d.

  3. Hi Dave,

    Thanks for commenting.

    The Bible is indisputably “literature” in Webster’s sense of “writings in prose or verse; especially: writings having excellence of form or expression and expressing ideas of permanent or universal interest.”

  4. I suppose so, if you trust Webster to be the arbiter of quality writing; however, Webster changes with the changing meaning of words.

    If the meaning of God’s word changes, then there is no consistency through the ages and confusion results. In two important passages (Old and New Testament), the Author says, “Don’t add to or take away…” Changing the meaning of the words would do that (add to/take away) and the changers of the meaning(s) are in danger.

    Do you trust Webster or the Author of His word?

  5. Don’t you think don’t add or take away is different from “don’t interpret”?

    I would think that if there’s no interpretation of the Scriptures, then the role of teachers in the church is superfluous, obsolete, or unbiblical. Every time a teacher stands before the congregation and says, “This means this,” unless he is claiming to prophesy, he is merely interpreting for your benefit.

    In this way it could be said that teachers must treat the Scriptures as literature if they are going to teach and not merely read the written words aloud.

    Have I misunderstood something? 🙂

  6. 2Pe 1:20 Knowing this first, that no prophecy of the scripture is of any private interpretation.

    Does this mean that “public” interpretation is OK (like what so-called teachers do)? Or is He pointing us in the direction of His word: comparing scripture with scripture.

    If the LORD used His Holy Spirit to prompt the writers, wouldn’t it be “logical” to infer that He’s the One Who knows what He means and He placed (hid) His meaning in His word so that we (kings) could search out the matter? What better Instructor/Leader/Mentor could there be than His Word.

    His Bible is, after all, a complex parable…not something simply read and understood. The Bereans had it right: searching the scriptures daily.

    2Ti 3:16 All scripture is given by inspiration of God, and is profitable for doctrine, for reproof, for correction, for instruction in righteousness: 2Ti 3:17 That the man of God may be perfect, throughly furnished unto all good works.

    The so-called “teachers” of this day are nothing but lazy bums; oh, they do lots of work, research other “researchers,” and say lots of words but searching the scriptures doesn’t enter their minds except insofar as to “get an idea” for a sermon or another book to write or pass off some interpretation.

    I’m not sorry for them either; I’m sorry for those who are beguiled thereby and don’t do their own homework. With all of the tools available (specifically, concordances), no one who claims to be a “Christian” can think that some “teacher” has the answer/a partial answer or whatever answer.

    Maybe I’m so harsh that it’s comical.

    d.

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