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Showing posts with label inspiration. Show all posts
Showing posts with label inspiration. Show all posts

Saturday, November 9, 2024

Dual Authorship of the Bible

 “Unless the Lord builds the house,

                  those who build it labor in vain.”[1]

Who is building in this familiar Psalm? Is the LORD building? Or are people building?

It was 1983. God moved into my life in transforming power. A neighbor invited me to attend his church. It was not long before the Associate Pastor involved me in a Bible Study that was studying foundational truths of Christianity. The study textbook was written by a Dr. Bruce Milne, entitled Know the Truth: A Handbook of Christian Belief. The very first section was on The Final Authorities in Matters of Faith. It covered topics like authority, revelation, and Scripture. Dr Milne gave several theories of inspiration but the one preferred, he named “supervision.” God “supervised” the chosen men who penned the pages of the Bible. I will discuss that later.

The Biblical authors were not hesitant to claim their own authorship. Therefore, Luke could write, “it seemed good to me also, having followed all things closely for some time past, to write an orderly account for you . . ..”[2]  And we also find in the New Testament that many authors were not ashamed to affirm themselves as authors. For example:

a.    “Paul, a servant of Christ Jesus, . . . To all those in Rome.” (Ro 1:1–7).

b.   James, a servant of God and of the Lord Jesus Christ, To the twelve tribes in the  Dispersion:” (Jas 1:1)

c.    “Peter, an apostle of Jesus Christ, To those who are elect exiles.” (1 Pe 1:1)

d.    “I have written something to the church.” (3 Jn 9)

e.    “Jude, a servant of Jesus Christ and brother of James, To those who are called.” (Jud 1).

The Doctrine of Inspiration did not make the human authors robotic, nor was it conducted (for the most part) through word-by-word dictation. Through this miracle, God wrote, and man wrote. Thus, the word that Milne uses, i.e., “supervision” is not a bad word. (I struggle to find a better word, yet I might choose the phrase, “providentially ordained.” I.e., working all things in accordance with His will.) He goes on to explain:

“This theory asserts that in the process of giving to us the Scriptures, God sovereignly supervised and ordered the background, heredity and circumstances of the individual writers; as a result, when they recorded events, meditations or sermons in writing, the words used were consciously the free composition of the authors and at the same time the very Word of God.”[3] [Emphasis mine]

So, from the very beginning of my Christian journey, I believed that God used chosen men to write Scripture. I believed their writings were largely their very own composition, yet at the very same time the very Word of God. I accepted this as a mystery, yet a necessary and essential truth. Milne summarizes: “Their inspired words, therefore, are clearly stamped as ‘theirs’ and address their immediate situation but are also in God’s providence part of his eternal Word to his people in every age.”

Much to my surprise, I didn’t realize that some people didn’t believe that. Opponents to the position that I present in this article will agree that man had a role in the production of Scripture, but they would say that the words “did not originate in man.” Although not entirely bowing to a theory of dictation, they would argue that the work of “inspiration” gave to the writers the God-thoughts. In other words, they prefer to refer to these men as recorders of the Bible, not authors. They’re problem is a misunderstanding of the word “inspiration.” The Biblical word “inspiration” does not mean as it does today. Someone might say, “God inspired me to write these lyrics.”  That is not how the Bible speaks of inspiration. Mounce is helpful here:

θεόπνευστος, “God-breathed,” occurs only here in the Greek Bible, being found rarely in pre-Christian literature. It has generally been translated “inspired,” but the niv translation “God-breathed” accurately reflects the etymology of the compound word (θεός, “God” + πνειν [aorist *πνευ (ς)-], “to breathe” + verbal adjectival ending-τος) and its meaning as asserting the divine origin of Scripture. It denotes not the manner of the inspiration of Scripture but rather its source.[4]  [Emphasis mine]

We could paraphrase 2 Timothy 3:16 accurately by rendering it: “All Scripture is sourced in God.” Of course, the position of this paper affirms that. Paul is not teaching “how” the transmission of Scripture takes place in 2 Timothy 3:16. Likewise, the ESV Study Bible comments: “The term stresses the divine origin and thus the authority of Scripture. Paul does not point to the human authors of Scripture as inspired people but says that the writings themselves (“Scripture,” Gk. graphē, “writing,” which in the NT always refers to biblical writings) are the words spoken (“breathed out”) by God.”[5]

But but the reader will say, “That is fine, but what about 2 Peter 1:21, “For no prophecy was ever produced by the will of man, but men spoke from God as they were carried along by the Holy Spirit.” Surely this passage will confirm that Biblical authors simply wrote what God moved them to write. It was not original to them. I respond by calling us to a careful reading of the text.

a.   The subject (v.16) is the making known to the reader, the power and coming of the Lord Jesus Christ. In short Peter is writing about the Second Coming of Christ.

b.   Peter uses the Transfiguration as a prelude or anticipation of this Return (ESV Study Bible).

c.   The Return of Christ is certain, even as it was certain that Peter experienced the glory of Christ on Mount Transfiguration. Yet the prophetic truths about Christ and His return are more certain than Peter’s experience.

d.   Peter affirms Old Testament prophecies about Christ’s return by his statement in v.21.

e.   Peter is assuring that all the Scriptural prophecies about Christ’s return were not produced by someone’s personal notions but in fact were given to them by the Holy Spirit.

We note then that 2 Peter 1:21 is not a general statement on the authorship of Scripture. It is affirming that no human being of their own origin or volition could predict the Coming of the Lord. Those prophecies could only exist because of the pheromenoi of the Spirit — bringing, bearing work of the Spirit on the human author. So, back to my argument. The text of the Bible is for the most part[6] “wholly” belonging to the human author and “wholly belonging to God.”[7]

This mystical dynamic that occurs in the creation of holy Scriptures is not unlike the mystical union between the two natures of Christ. It is well known that for much of the first three hundred years of Church history, believers were engrossed in shaping and describing this Union of Christ, correcting and refuting error. The tendency was to make one Nature of Christ superior to the other or misrepresent one of the natures. The same can be true about the mystical authorship of the Bible. There will be those who make too much of the human effort and those who make too little of it by overshadowing it with Divine authorship. Warfield, I think strikes the balance that is needed (Notice the sounds of Nicene in this quote.):

“The human and divine factors in inspiration are conceived of as flowing confluently and harmoniously to the production of a common product. And the two elements are conceived of in the Scriptures as the inseparable constituents of one single and uncompounded product. Of every word of Scripture is it to be affirmed, in turn, that it is God's word and that it is man's word. All the qualities of divinity and of humanity are to be sought and may be found in every portion and element of the Scripture. While, on the other hand, no quality inconsistent with either divinity or humanity can be found in any portion or element of Scripture.”[8]

Warfield constrains us to think this through carefully. There is nothing contrarian or inconsistent with the Human/Divine authorship reality. They are distinct yet inseparable. Every word originates from both and can be found throughout Scripture. They are at no time inconsistent with each other. This is profound. The well-known theologian A.H. Strong will affirm that you can never look at Scripture, anywhere as “merely human” or “merely divine.”[9]   Strong will then make this provocative statement: “Inspiration, therefore, did not remove, but rather pressed into its own service, all the personal peculiarities of the writers, together with their defects of culture and literary style.”[10]  Grudem expands,

“In cases where the ordinary human personality and writing style of the author were prominently involved, as seems the case with the major part of Scripture, all that we are able to say is that God’s providential oversight and direction of the life of each author was such that their personalities, their backgrounds and training, their abilities to evaluate events in the world around them, their access to historical data, their judgment with regard to the accuracy of information, and their individual circumstances when they wrote, were all exactly what God wanted them to be, so that when they actually came to the point of putting pen to paper, the words were fully their own words but also fully the words that God wanted them to write, words that God would also claim as his own.”[11] [Emphasis mine]

Charles Hodge builds on that when he writes, “Moreover, as inspiration did not involve the suspension or suppression of the human faculties, so neither did it interfere with the free exercise of the distinctive mental characteristics of the individual. If a Hebrew was inspired, he spake Hebrew; if a Greek, he spake Greek; if an educated man, he spoke as a man of culture; if uneducated, he spoke as such a man is wont to speak. If his mind was logical, he reasoned, as Paul did; if emotional and contemplative, he wrote as John wrote. All this is involved in the fact that God uses his instruments according to their nature. The sacred writers impressed their peculiarities on their several productions as plainly as though they were the subjects of no extraordinary influence.”[12]

God yet used and providentially superintended every aspect of the human authorship with Divine purpose. They were authors of literature such that their personalities, culture, language, abilities were all incorporated so that their authorship was a true reality. I even will go as far as to say along with Lewis: “There is a . . . sense in which the Bible, since it is after all literature, cannot properly be read except as literature; and the different parts of it as the different sorts of literature they are.”[13]

Because the Bible is given to us by Human/Divine authorship and we are careful not to deny the human part, we therefore realize that if we do not read the Bible as literature, we will not understand God’s inspired Word. To be clear, the human author, the historical and cultural context, the genre, the language, the sentence structure, the syntax, the flow of thought, and so on, all contribute to proper interpretation and understanding. To dismiss the literary structure of the Biblical authors will in the end mar the truth of Divine authorship. The Bible teaches that it is directly and sovereignly inspired by God and is therefore to be submitted to in how He has inspired it. “If we acknowledge its authority, we must bow to it at this point too: in its dual claim that it is God’s inspired Word and that we should approach it with reverence and submission. To take another view is to stand in opposition to clear biblical teaching.[14]  [Emphasis mine]

The Bible student, the preacher, the teacher, the author, will then carefully engage with the human author, looking to understand his personality, the cultural, historical context that he is writing in and his own purpose for composing his literature. His grammar, his style, his sentence structure, his flow of logic and so on become essential to the interpreter. At the same time, this student will recognize that the human author is not ever inconsistent with other authors, that what he writes is free from error and he carries the very words of God in all their authority, sufficiency, and power.




[1] The Holy Bible: English Standard Version (Ps 127:1). (2016). Crossway Bibles.

[2] The Holy Bible: English Standard Version (Lk 1:3). (2016). Crossway Bibles.

[3] Milne, Bruce, Know the Truth, InterVarsity Press, 2012

[4] Mounce, W. D. (2000). Pastoral Epistles (Vol. 46, pp. 565–566). Word, Incorporated.

[5] Crossway Bibles. (2008). The ESV Study Bible (p. 2342). Crossway Bibles.

[6] I write “for the most part” because in some cases, God Himself to the author to write something, e.g., Moses in Exodus, or John in Revelation. These examples are few. Most of Scripture comes from the human author and Divine author.

[7] Frame, J. M. (2006). Salvation belongs to the Lord: an introduction to systematic theology (p. 66). P&R Publishing.

[9] Strong, A. H. (1907). Systematic theology (p. 212-213). American Baptist Publication Society.

[10] Ibid,

[11] Grudem, W. A. (2004). Systematic theology: an introduction to biblical doctrine (p. 81). Inter-Varsity Press; Zondervan Pub. House.

[12] Hodge, C. (1997). Systematic theology (Vol. 1, p. 157). Logos Research Systems, Inc.

[13] https://www.cslewisinstitute.org/resources/c-s-lewis-on-holy-scripture/

[14] Milne, Bruce, Know the Truth, InterVarsity Press, 2012

Thursday, February 21, 2013

1 Clement Chapters XLVI - LIX

First Epistle to the Corinthians

 Clement of Rome

Chapters XLVI – LIX
 

As noted by Ross Amy, this Epistle of Clement is really an exhortation or a sermon.  His sermon is to confront the sedition in Corinth.  He shows the congregation the tragedy of envy and what it does to relationships. He points out the blessings that came to the saints of the past that sought to obey Christ and also mimic Christ in these areas of relationships. He reminds his listeners that Christ is returning; and there comes with that resurrection and judgment. True faith ought to be evidenced by peace and love.

Clement’s approach is to point out the true order that Christ has established for the church. Implied is his warning that those who rise up in rebellion and rebelling against Christ.
 
The sadness of this situation is that it seems to be more grievous than what Paul dealt with in his First Letter to Corinth.  (Clement surely believed that this letter of Paul was inspired: “Truly, under the inspiration of the Spirit.”[1]).  It was grievous because the dispute even reached the broader community.  Whenever the reputation of Christ is marred it is a indignity.  Clement then calls for a return to a state of brotherly love[2] and repentance[3].   He points to the love of Moses who was willing to intercede with God for the preservation of Israel (Exodus 32).  He appeals to us to live out this ethic:

 “If on my account sedition and disagreement and schisms have arisen, I will depart, I will go away whithersoever ye desire, and I will do whatever the majority commands; only let the flock of Christ live on terms of peace with the presbyters set over it.”[4]
 
He provides examples of such love both from an Apocryphal story of Judith; and of the Old Testament example of Esther  who was prepared to die to preserve her people.  He calls those who are acting in seditious ways to submit to correction and submit to the Church:
 

“Ye therefore, who laid the foundation of this sedition, submit yourselves to the presbyters, and receive correction so as to repent, bending the knees of your hearts. Learn to be subject, laying aside the proud and arrogant self-confidence of your tongue. For it is better for you that ye should occupy a humble but honourable place in the flock of Christ, than that, being highly exalted, ye should be cast out from the hope of His people.”[5]

 Clement concludes this exhortation with a blessing and a hope to hear that things have gone well.

 As to issues of authority, Clement rests heavily on Scripture which he readily acknowledges as inspired by the Holy Spirit.  He quotes from other sources including the Apocrypha but gives no evidence of its inspiration.  This is an argument from silence, I admit.  He clearly sees the authority of the church residing in presbyters of which I have shown elsewhere is synonymous with elders, bishops, and pastors.

 


[1] Schaff, Philip (2009-06-08). Ante-Nicene Fathers Volume 1 - Enhanced Version (Early Church Fathers) (Kindle Locations 1289-1290). Christian Classics Ethereal Library. Kindle Edition.
[2] “Ye see, beloved, how great and wonderful a thing is love, and that there is no declaring its perfection.” -  Schaff, Philip (2009-06-08). Ante-Nicene Fathers Volume 1 - Enhanced Version (Early Church Fathers) (Kindle Location 1344). Christian Classics Ethereal Library. Kindle Edition.
[3] Ibid, (Kindle Locations 1382-1383).
[4] Ibid, (Kindle Locations 1423-1425).
[5] Ibid, (Kindle Locations 1496-1500).

Thursday, February 14, 2013

1 Clement Chapters I - XV




First Epistle to the Corinthians
Clement of Rome

Chapters I - XV

Clement starts this letter with these words:

The Church of God which sojourns at Rome, to the Church of God sojourning at Corinth, to them that are called and sanctified by the will of God, through our Lord Jesus Christ: Grace unto you, and peace, from Almighty God through Jesus Christ, be multiplied.

I am struck by how Pauline his introduction is.  For example in Paul's letter to the same church, he writes in 1 Corinthians 1:1–3 (ESV)

1 Paul, called by the will of God to be an apostle of Christ Jesus, and our brother Sosthenes, 2 To the church of God that is in Corinth, to those sanctified in Christ Jesus, called to be saints together with all those who in every place call upon the name of our Lord Jesus Christ, both their Lord and ours: 3 Grace to you and peace from God our Father and the Lord Jesus Christ.

Another observation I have is that 1 Clement also mimics the Letter to the Hebrews in writing style.  It is too obvious as Clement continues to exhort the church through the "Let us" formula that the writer to the Hebrews also employs. "Clement is more like Hebrews than any other New Testament book. This is true, both with regard to his frequency of usage (next to the Psalms, he uses Hebrews by citation and allusion more frequently than any other book of Scripture, Old or New Testament),and with regard to the nature of the two works."[1]

As with Paul it seems that Clement is responding to questions or concerns from the Corinthian congregation. (in turning our attention to the points respecting which you consulted us."[2]   As noted before in this Blog, there seems to be a condition whereby some people are acting subversive to the leadership of the congregation.   Again in a similar way that Paul addressed churches, Clement commences his letter with words of commendation but comes to the point:

"So the worthless rose up against the honoured, those of no reputation against such as were renowned, the foolish against the wise, the young against those advanced in years."[3]

Clement's approach to this sedition is to point out to the church the tragedy of envy and what it does to relationships.  From Cain and Abel, even through to his contemporary era, he dramatically illustrates the devastation that arises from envy and jealousy.   Following true Apostolic fashion he calls for repentance.  Again referring back to the Scriptures, Clement points out the blessings that came to the saints of the past that sought to obey Christ in these areas of relationships.

Clement calls for the church to walk in humility. " By this precept and by these rules let us establish ourselves, that we walk with all humility in obedience to His holy words."[4]  This humility is evidenced by obedience to God rather than the unrepentant and the disloyal.   It is evidence also, according to Clement, by those who genuinely "cultivate peace" in contrast to those who pretend.  In the chapters that follow, Clement will start with look at our greatest example of humility, obedience and peace: the Lord Jesus Christ.

The Use of Scripture[5].

In Clement's words of affirmation to the Corinthians he writes this: "[You were] Content with the provision which God had made for you, and carefully attending to His words, ye were inwardly filled with His doctrine, and His sufferings were before your eyes."[6]  [Emphasis is mine.]  Likewise when he exhorts the church to humility he writes, "Let us act according to that which is written (for the Holy Spirit saith . . .).[7]  Here he quotes Jeremiah and Paul:

·         Jeremiah 9:23–24 (ESV)  23 Thus says the Lord: “Let not the wise man boast in his wisdom, let not the mighty man boast in his might, let not the rich man boast in his riches, 24 but let him who boasts boast in this, that he understands and knows me, that I am the Lord who practices steadfast love, justice, and righteousness in the earth. For in these things I delight, declares the Lord.”
·         1 Corinthians 1:31 (ESV)  31 so that, as it is written, “Let the one who boasts, boast in the Lord.”
·         2 Corinthians 10:17 (ESV)  17 “Let the one who boasts, boast in the Lord.”

"No other Apostolic Father cites or alludes to Scripture as frequently as 1 Clement does, nor does he follow the pattern of New Testament usage as Clement does. Also, no author in the New Testament cites the Old Testament as extensively (as far as the amount of material from any one passage is concerned), nor as frequently, as Clement does. Romans cites the Old Testament only 65 times, compared to 105 times for Clement."[8]

It is obvious, to this point, that Clement believes that the Scriptures are inspired of God, authoritative and relevant.  His massive use of referring to Scripture implies that he probably did not assume that he was writing inspired text so he uses Scripture to shore up (if you will) or bolster his arguments.  The text that Clement follows appears to be the Septuagint.  From time to time Drs Roberts and Donaldson annotate Clement's quotation as from the Septuagint but not consistent with the Hebrew text.

"He had no doubt learned the use of the Septuagint, in which his knowledge of the Greek tongue soon rendered him an adept. His copy of that version, however, does not always agree with the Received Text, as the reader will perceive"[9]  (A. Cleveland Coxe, D.D.).

One other hermeneutical note has to do with an insertion of a unique use of allegory.  In Chapter XII, Clement brings in the testimony of Rahab.   Recalling the story of Rahab from Joshua 2, Clement implies that the red sign the woman used to identify her house to the attacking Israelites, thus bringing her safety was a pre-cursor or sign of the redeeming blood of Christ. He writes:

"And thus they made it manifest that redemption should flow through the blood of the Lord to all them that believe and hope in God."[10]  

As correct it is that the shedding of Christ's blood brought redemption to all who believed, it appears fanciful hermeneutics to draw such a thought from the red ribbon of Rahab.  This may present a hint of an allegorical interpretation that proves to be a concern.

Another observation about Clement's work within these first chapters is his use apocryphal  literature.  In Chapter VII we read, "Let us turn to every age that has passed, and learn that, from generation to generation, the Lord has granted a place of repentance to all such as would be converted unto Him."[11] It could be noted that the phrase "a place of repentance" may originate in the apocryphal book of the Wisdom of Solomon ("But executing thy judgments upon them by little and little, thou gavest them place of repentance, not being ignorant that they were a naughty generation, and that their malice was bred in them, and that their cogitation would never be changed.)[12]   There is no evidence at this point whether Clement viewed these books as inspired, but his use of them at least attests to some value.

Conclusion
So Clement employs a massive amount of Scripture; he clearly follows a style of approach that is apostolic in nature; he makes use of material outside of Scripture including the Apocrypha; and he imports an allegorical interpretative method that is suspect, in my opinion.

 



[1] http://www.westernseminary.edu/papers/Faculty/DeYoung/1CLEMENT99paper.pdf
[2] Schaff, Philip (2009-06-08). Ante-Nicene Fathers Volume 1 - Enhanced Version (Early Church Fathers) (Kindle Locations 234-235). Christian Classics Ethereal Library. Kindle Edition.
[3] Ibid, (Kindle Locations 289-290).
[4] Ibid, (Kindle Locations 515-516).
[5] By "Scripture" I mean the Protestant Canon of Scripture.
[6] Schaff, Philip (2009-06-08). Ante-Nicene Fathers Volume 1 - Enhanced Version (Early Church Fathers) (Kindle Locations 255-257). Christian Classics Ethereal Library. Kindle Edition.
[7] Ibid, (Kindle Locations 509-512).
[8] http://www.westernseminary.edu/papers/Faculty/DeYoung/1CLEMENT99paper.pdf
[9] Schaff, Philip (2009-06-08). Ante-Nicene Fathers Volume 1 - Enhanced Version (Early Church Fathers) (Kindle Locations 102-112). Christian Classics Ethereal Library. Kindle Edition.
[10] Ibid, (Kindle Locations 498-499).
[11] Ibid, (Kindle Locations 392-393).
[12] The Apocrypha: King James Version. 1995 (Wis 12:10). Bellingham, WA: Logos Research Systems, Inc.