"You don't start with your theology and then do exegesis"

From an interview with Ben Witherington (hat tip to Ben himself):

my view is that everything has to be sifted by the word of God and so theology is a second order task. You don’t start with your theology and then do exegesis, you start with exegesis and you construct or deconstruct a theology as necessary.

I wish all theologians, also biblical studies experts and Bible translators, held firm to this principle.

On a quite different issue, it is interesting that Witherington thinks that

Luke wrote the Pastoral epistles for Paul but Paul was still alive so he is the voice behind the writing but the style, grammar, syntax and vocabulary is closer to Luke-Acts then it is to the earlier Pauline documents.

Why do Christians adhere to 16th and 17th century doctrine?

Andrew of Theo Geek is intrigued by Westminster Theological Seminary’s recent suspension of Peter Enns, allegedly because his book Inspiration and Incarnation violates the Westminster Confession. It took a little digging to confirm the status of this confession at the seminary, before I found a Faculty Pledge which Enns is presumably suspected of breaking, which includes:

I do solemnly declare, in the presence of God, and of the Trustees and Faculty of this Seminary, that … I do solemnly and ex animo adopt, receive, and subscribe to the Westminster Confession of Faith and Catechisms in the form in which they were adopted by this Seminary in the year of our Lord 1936, as the confession of my faith …

See also this description of the “Westminster Standards”.

Andrew writes:

It intrigues me because I just can’t fathom the sanity of adhering to a creedal statement written in 1642. In 1642 they barely understood Koine Greek, biblical scholarship was only in its infancy, they had next to no understanding of the customs, practices and thinking of ancient world, and they had very few of the writings of the early church Fathers that we now have. For almost every conceivable reason there is evidence to think that people trying to interpret the bible in 1642 could have made serious errors. Indeed, the majority of scholars today would say they did.

As Jim West has rather surprisingly argued, the seminary has the right to hold its own standards, and to cease to employ those who adhere to them. But is the seminary right to insist on such standards? I note also Westminster student Arthur Boulet‘s comment on Jim’s post, pointing out that

The reality of the situation is that there is no official finding that Enns is outside of the confessional boundaries of Westminster Seminary.

But this post is not so much about Enns’ personal situation as about the principle of Christians and Christian organisations using as doctrinal standards in the 21st century confessions of faith and statements of doctrine dating from the 16th or 17th century. While this period was indeed marked by a great flowering of biblical and theological scholarship, especially relative to the intellectual stagnation of the late Middle Ages, Andrew has a strong case that these 16th and 17th century divines could not have matched the biblical understanding of modern scholars.

Of course one might answer that Andrew’s parallel with the development of science is an inappropriate one because theology and biblical studies are inevitably anchored in the past events of the biblical period. But the 16th century is not that much closer to the ancient world than we are today, and it is easy to show that any advantages the people of that time might have had from being a little closer to ancient events is outweighed by the greater understanding of the past we have now from discoveries of ancient texts and indeed whole ancient civilisations which were unknown in the 17th century.

I am with Andrew when he writes:

It frustrates me that colleges actually exist who adhere to such doctrinal statements and see it as their duty to churn out students who believe such things. Such indoctrination results in a massive amount of bias, propaganda and apologetics contaminating scholarship. Modern interpretations and theories end up judged on their conformance with seventeenth century doctrinal statements! I have learned to steer clear of such biased ‘scholarship’. … In practice this seems to mean avoiding completely reading ‘scholarship’ produced by anyone in the Reformed or Presbyterian traditions, and careful filtering of Anglican, Catholic and Lutheran writings.

In my experience this is an issue not just with colleges but with entire denominations, including denominations like newfrontiers which deny being denominations. They hold as their standards of belief, formally or informally, the teachings of men (almost never women), making these teachings in practice if not in theory the arbiters of Scripture. It was for similarly exalting their sectarian teaching over the Word of God that Jesus accused the Pharisees with the words:

You have let go of the commands of God and are holding on to human traditions.

Mark 7:8 (TNIV)

Now before anyone wonders, I have not gone nearly as far as Andrew in “abandon[ing] the doctrinal teachings of my childhood church”. Indeed I could personally accept large parts of the Westminster Confession, although not others parts such as the one about predestination. That, however, is not the point. The point is the way that many Christians are living in the early modern period and not noticing that the world has moved on, and so has God, and they should not be stuck in a past age, however good.

I suppose it is for similar reasons that so many Christians continue to value the King James Bible, and continue to argue as even Suzanne McCarthy does that it is

the premiere Bible for academic and literary reference.

I suppose one might equally ask why Christians adhere to the 4th and 5th century statements of doctrine known as the Creeds. But that is another question for another day …

The books are burning …

ElShaddai has tagged me with a new meme which seems appropriate for 1st April:

Books are scarce in the world. They are illegal in some provinces. They are not easily replaced if not impossible to replace if lost in many if not most circumstances. If you can replace a book or buy one it is usually through the black market at astronomical costs that you cannot afford. Yet you have been able to maintain one of the best collections in the world. If your entire library was about to burn up (think of the firefighters in Fahrenheit 451 invading your home) and you could only have one* book to take with you other than the bible, what would that be and why?

Simple Rules
Answer the question. Offer one quote that resonates with you. Tag five people whose response is of genuine interest to you and inform him or her that they have been tagged. Cheers!

*And it cannot be an entire series of something, that’s cheating.

Nathan Stitt has already chosen The Lord of the Rings. I shall cry “Foul!” about this because it is really three books bound together as one, and because I didn’t get the chance to choose it myself. Well, I could do, because the rules don’t say I can’t copy others’ good choices, and my edition is not the same as his but a cheap paperback. So I will try to be a bit more creative.

Let’s look at the scenario. It is not the “Desert Island Discs” one for which I might want to choose a big book which I could reread again and again as I waited, bored, for rescue. Anyway on the desert island I would also have the Bible and Shakespeare, and there is enough there to dispel boredom.

In the world of this meme there is unlikely to be boredom as I would surely be politically active trying to overthrow this repressive government – or in jail where I probably wouldn’t be allowed to take the book. And, as Doug suggested, the complete works of Shakespeare might also be disqualified as “an entire series of something”. (Would I be allowed only part of the complete works as a series which is not entire?)

So my choice would have to be something valuable, perhaps even irreplaceable, rather than something I would actually want to read all the time. That makes for a difficult choice. I might have to choose something like ӘРӘБ ВӘ ФАРС СӨЗЛӘРИ ЛҮҒӘТИ simply for its rarity, and its irreplaceability for my Bible translation work which could otherwise continue mostly with the texts in my computer, but as this is a monolingual dictionary in a language few of my readers will understand there is not much point in me providing a quote from it.

So where does this leave me? If I am to post tonight I will do so without actually naming a book or quoting anything. But I do just have time to tag a few people: the blogger formerly known as Lingamish; Suzanne McCarthy, who can’t choose KJV or a Latin Bible translation; Eddie Arthur, but I won’t let him choose his own dissertation; Henry Neufeld, and I suppose I shouldn’t let him take a book he publishes; and in honour of a post Confessions of a Jaded Reader which is on his RSS feed but no longer on his blog, Tim Chesterton. I hope they are all reading this blog and so will know that they have been tagged.