Archive for January, 2007

more on scripture

Thursday, January 25th, 2007

Zoomtard has a response to my last post on scripture here.

Zoomy says:

I would disagree when he says Wright doesn’t role-model or elaborate practical steps for applying his model to the actual text of the Bible. I would argue that Wright’s career has been marked by book after book after freaking book until there are now almost 50 in print where he interprets Scripture against the backdrop of the model he proposes.

This is a fair point although it must be said that I was really commenting about the particular article of Wright’s that I linked to, as opposed to his entire career. I do feel Wright is actively trying to be true to his hermeneutical ideas in his writings.

In response to the rest of Zoomy’s post, I think I mainly agree. The real strength of Wright’s proposal is that it shifts us away from Enlightenment-oriented ways of viewing truth, &c. It forces us to view the authority of scripture in a way divorced from ideas we’ve swallowed whole from the age of reason. In so doing it we may well learn to allow for more diversity of interpretation.

Actually, the mere realisation that our interpretation of scripture is exactly that — interpretation — should allow us to hold our views lightly and should force us to concede that true scriptural interpretation takes place only in the context of the entire body of Christ, where each person and each group shows humility with regard to the interpretations of other people and other groups. This can happen whether or not people take narrative seriously or not.

All this being said, I do think we should take narrative seriously.

I’m not really disagreeing with anyone here. You see, the only point I’m making is that before we propose any models of viewing scripture we need one vital ingredient — humility. True Christian humility should mean that — even among those who view scripture as being, ultimately, a receptacle for propositional truth — diversity will be tolerated, encouraged and viewed as necessary. Humility is not a by-product of Wright’s model, it is necessary to make it effective. I felt that Jayber and Zoomy were talking as if the ability to tolerate diversity of interpretation was a by-product of Wright’s model. I am probably wrong in reading them that way. Also — it probably is the case that even if there’s not a causal relationship, there probably still is a correlation between earnestly trying to implement Wright’s model and humbly submitting your improvisation to be changed and enhanced by the improvisations of others.

So, we all agree now, yes? Group hug?

Later in his post, Zoomy highlights the fact that really makes Wright’s proposal so exciting and interesting:

The other great thing about Wright’s framework is that Scripture does not come to us as propositional truth. Even where it does, for example in the Pauline letters, it is set within the ongoing story of the missionary journeys. An advantage for Wright is that his model does bear a closer resembelance [sic] to what Scripture actually is, which is what we’d expect from a good, decent, honest, sane Critical Realist like he is.

I think I affirmed this in my last post, but it’s good to hear it said again. Wright’s plea is that we need to take Scripture seriously in the form that it has been given to us. For too long our view of scripture (and much else besides) has been hampered by our rationalistic, modernistic enlightenment inheritances. If we truly allowed the Spirit to produce Christlike humility and ‘if our dispute was based in aesthetics instead of [enlightenment-style, reason wirshipping] dogma’ (Zoomy, interpolation mine) then things in our little corner of Christendom could be very different indeed.

Lewis on Calvinism

Sunday, January 21st, 2007

Over at Together for the Gospel Mark Dever has posted a great quote from C.S. Lewis on the topic of Calvinism which reminds me of what an absolute legend Clive Staples really was:

I take it as a first principle that we must not interpret any one part of Scripture so that it contradicts other parts . . . The real inter-relation between God’s omnipotence and Man’s freedom is something we can’t find out. Looking at the Sheep & the Goats every man can be quite sure that every kind act he does will be accepted by Christ. Yet, equally, we all do feel sure that all the good in us comes from Grace. We have to leave it at that. I find the best plan is to take the Calvinist view of my own virtues and other people’s vices; and the other view of my own vices and other peoples virtues. But tho’ there is much to be puzzled about, there is nothing to be worried about. It is plain from Scripture that, in whatever sense the Pauline doctrine is true, it is not true in any sense which excludes its (apparent) opposite. You know what Luther said: ‘Do you doubt if you are chosen? Then say your prayers and you may conclude that you are.’

on scripture

Wednesday, January 17th, 2007

I’m back!

A few months ago I printed this article by N.T. Wright entitled How Can The Bible Be Authoritative? and put it into by bag, excited to get it home and pop into my mental toaster until well-browned. Of course, I only got around to reading it a week or so ago . I was still mulling over it (I still am!) when I was pleasantly surprised with posts by both Jaybercrow and Zoomtard on the matter (Zoomy also has an older post here).

Both Jayber and Zoomy are both positively bubbly about Wright’s article. This is a common phenomenon among those of us who while away the wee hours, our spouse sleeping soundly by our side, contemplating what it would be like to steal Bishop Wright’s brain and use it as our own.

There is much fantastic discussion in Wright’s article about the nature of authority (and specifically, the sort of authority God exercises and more specifically the sort of authority he exercises through scripture) which by itself should make the article required reading.

In the course of the article Wright offers a critique of the usual evangelical views of scripture and then attempts to offer a solution. His critique is based on two main complaints. Firstly, despite the fact that the Bible, or at least large chunks of it, has been given to us in the form of story/narrative, evangelicals have refused to recognise this and have instead treated the stories as source material for the construction of a list of “timeless truths”. This having been accomplished, these truths — largely freed from the shackles of narrative — are declared to be authoritative. In this way we, in a sense, accuse God of giving us the wrong sort of book and work hard, in effect, at producing the sort of book God should have given us in the first place (a manual for life, or a systematic theology, or whatever). Wright’s second (and, to an extent, underlying) complaint is that evangelicals have, by and large, refused to recognise that such efforts to extract timeless truths from scripture involves the act of interpretation, viz. more often than not it is not “the” set of timeless truths evangelicals proclaim to be authoritative but “our” set of truths — conditioned by our cultural positioning, our tradition, our prejudices, our hermeneutical biases, &c.

Wright offers an alternative way to view the way in which scripture might function as authoritative. Here is Jayber’s summary of it:

He [Wright] asks us to imagine that someone discovers a lost Shakespeare play, but that the fifth and final act has been lost. Rather than have someone write a fifth act, the existing parts are given to highly trained, sensitive and experienced Shakespearian actors, who are asked to immerse themselves in the story, and then work out a fifth act for themselves. You can see where this is going:

“The first four acts, existing as they did, would be the undoubted ‘authority’ for the task in hand. That is, anyone could properly object to the new improvisation on the grounds that some character was now behaving inconsistently, or that some sub-plot or theme… had not reached its proper conclusion. This authority of the first four acts would not consist – could not consist! – in an implicit command that the actors should repeat the earlier parts of the play over and over again. It would consist in the fact of an as yet unfinished drama, containing its own impetus and forward movement, which demanded to be concluded in an appropriate manner. It would require of the actors a free and responsible entering into the story…”

Wright suggests that in the Bible we have been given the first four acts of the Story (Creation, Fall, Israel, Jesus), as well as hints as to how it will end. Our job is to immerse ourselves in the Story, and then improvise the fifth act in the power of the Spirit. Simple!

This is an interesting proposition, one which I am unwilling to pronounce much judgement on until I have thought over it much more carefully. Wright is a man to be grappled with, not dismissed. To make the situation more difficult, Wright refrains from giving too much detail as to what the practical hermeneutical implications of this way of viewing scripture’s authority might be. However, there is one element I want to write about now, hoping to prompt some discussion.

Leaving aside whether or not I agree with his conclusions, I think I can wholeheartedly agree with Wright on both of his premisses. Much of Scripture comes to us as narrative. This fact must be taken seriously. We cannot treat scripture like “an unsorted edition of Calvin’s Institutes”. Furthermore, the role of the interpretive act in the process of our reason reading scripture and producing “timeless truth” must be acknowledged, and mere interpretation (i.e. doctrine) can never be given the place of authority reserved for scripture. We cannot “use the phrase ‘authority of scripture’ when they mean the authority of evangelical, or Protestant, theology” and we cannot make the “assumption … that we (evangelicals, or Protestants) are the ones who know and believe what the Bible is saying.” The proper place for hermeneutics is within the body of Christ — this includes all who believe and have faith in Christ and call upon his name. Scripture becomes authoritative only in the context of dialogue within the entire corporate body of Christ as a whole.

However, it would be wrong to say that a solution to the problem of premiss number one (which is what Wright’s suggestion is) is also necessarily a solution to the problem of premiss number 2. Now, Jayber (and Zoomy too, or so it seems to me from his older post) seem to think that Wright’s solution to problem one does in fact constitute a solution to problem two. Thus Jayber says:

“Crucially, you can challenge my improvisation if it seems to be in discord with the first four acts, if it is not in harmony with the whole flow and direction and spirit of the Story.”

But, my chances of challenging Jayber’s “improvisation” are no better than my chances of challenging his assertion of a “timeless truth” he has culled from scripture. They depend entirely on his (that is, Jayber’s) character — it seems to me my chances of entering into dialogue with Jayber are equal in each case. The problem is this – the act of deciding what constitutes an improvisation in accord with the first four acts of God’s great big cosmic west end musical is really equivalent to the act of deciding what timeless truths are contained within scripture. Each involves “interpretation”, the exercise of ones hermeneutics, each is bound to be influenced by ones presuppositions, &c. Wright’s proposal really doesn’t or so it seems to me at present, release us from the pressure of being hermeneutically responsible, it merely exchanges “acceptable improvisations” for “acceptable truths” in our dogmatic systems. Of course, this may be a good thing (it might, for one thing, allow us to forget about our dogmas and actually live out our truth in the final act) but I don’t feel it really solves the (second) problem.

Zoomy says “Often, authority has meant, ‘our interpretation’ and instead of it being used as a measuring rod against which to moderate our own community, it has been used as a weapon to beat up other communities”, and he’s right. However, I don’t feel Wright’s proposal really rectifies this, although it may perhaps push us in the right direction toward a more body-oriented view of the interpretation of scripture which might solve the problem.

What does everybody else think?

oops

Wednesday, January 3rd, 2007

Obviously, when I said “I will remember to take some pictures …” in my last post I really meant to say “I will completely forget my camera”. That was obvious to everybody, right? I wouldn’t want to cause any confusion.

Rome was nice. I’d show you some pictures to prove that but, …