Concerning Revelation and the Bible
4/96, soc.religion.christian: Reply to Hedgehog
- In a recent post, I asked Darryl Ochsner: "What
does it mean to say
- that a collection of documents as rich and diverse as
those found in the
- Bible claims to be the Word of God?" To which Hedgehog
replied:
>Why does a single author vs a multiple authorship change
any of the
- >issues? Let's say that I write a book all by myself
(i.e. no human
- >collaborators). Isn't it still possible that a) none
of it is inspired
- >by God b) that some but not all is inspired by God
c) that every word of
- >it was inspired by God? I just don't see how the
multiple authors of the
- >Bible disprove its inspiration. Perhaps Mr. Talbott
would care to expand
- >on this issue.
Thanks for your comment and for your question, Hedgehog.
I quite agree
- with your statement of the three possibilities in a),
b), and c), but you
- have, I think, misunderstood my question. I was not asking
what it might
- mean to say that the Bible is the Word of God,
and I certainly had no
- intention of trying to "disprove its inspiration."
Merely asking a
- question could hardly disprove anything. I was
asking instead what it
- might mean to say that the Bible as a whole claims
to be the Word of
- God. What would it mean to say that the Bible as a whole
claims anything
- whatsoever?
For any collection of texts and sources, one possibility
is that, despite
- multiple authors and voices, God has inspired every word
of every
- utterance in the collection (assuming, of course, that
we have given
- sense to the idea of inspiration). But if a rich and
diverse collection
- of texts is put together and one of the texts claims
inspiration for
- itself, in what sense has the collection as a whole claimed
inspiration?
- And if text A claims inspiration for texts B, C, and
D, but does not
- claim inspiration for itself, the same question arises
again: In what
- sense has the collection as a whole claimed inspiration
for itself? You
- see the point. If you have a rich variety of texts and
sources, one
- possibility, as you point out yourself, is that God has
inspired some of
- them in a special way but not all of them. So what would
it mean to
- say that the collection as a whole claims inspiration
for itself? What
- text or source speaks for the collection as a whole,
particularly if the
- collection is put together well after the individual
pieces were written?
- More specifically, what text in the Bible speaks for
the Bible as a
- whole?
-Tom
10/9/96, Society of Christian Philosophers: Reply
to Steve Cowan
- Hello Steve. Fancy meeting you in this discussion group!
I trust that
- all is well and, in particular, that your dissertation
is going well. At
- the risk of getting myself sucked into a discussion that
I have little
- time to pursue right now, I thought I would raise a couple
of questions.
In response to Wes, you recently wrote:
> Of course, Paul and I would deny your second premise,
to wit, that God is
- > unjust if he imputes Adam's sin to newborms. Appeal
to your so-called
- > intuitions all you want. We have Scripture---the
sure and certain Word of
- > God which must, by definition, overrule and correct
our intuitions.
I presume that by "Scripture" you mean the collection
of writings
- contained in the Bible (as opposed, for example, to the
Qur'an). So here
- are my questions.
(1) Where in the Bible do you find the claim that God imputes
Adam's sin
- to newborn babies?
(2) If the Bible did include such a claim and did insist
upon the
- justice of such imputation, why would you regard it as
more reliable in
- this matter than Wes' intuitions?
I fully appreciate that you may already have addressed such
questions
- previously. If so, then you might just direct me to where
you have
- addressed them, or you might send me an e-mail copy.
Thanks.
-Tom
10/15/96, Society of Christian Philosophers: Reply
to Steve Cowan
- I recently put to Steve Cowan the following two questions:
> > (1) Where in the Bible do you find the claim that God imputes
Adam's
- > > sin [or guilt] to newborn babies?
- > >
- > > (2) If the Bible did include such a claim and
did insist upon the
- > > justice of such imputation, why would you regard
it as more reliable
- > > in this matter than Wes' intuitions?
In my most recent post on inherited guilt, I took up Steve's reply to the
- first question, but not his reply to the second. So here
I propose to
- take up his reply to the second. Steve wrote:
> I certainly agree with Wes that our moral intuitions are important
guides
- > for judging moral issues. But, they are not infallible.
The Scriptures
- > themselves tell us that the heart is deceitful above
all things. We are
- > especially incompetent when it comes to assessing
our own moral worth.
- > So, if we have good reason to believe that the bible
is the Word of God
- > (and I think we do), and this word informs us of
our capacity for
- > self-deceit and the fallibility of our intuitions,
then our intuitions
- > must take a backseat to the teaching of Scripture.
Hello again, Steve:
The difficulty I have with the above paragraph is two-fold. First, the
- question I have asked does not concern the reliability
of our intuitions
- in general, nor does it concern our competence in "assessing
our own
- moral worth"; it concerns only the reliability of
Wes' specific
- intuition--the widespread intuition--that it would be
unjust to impute
- the guilt of Adam's sin to newborn infants. So if Paul
did teach such a
- doctrine, as I have already argued he did not, then the
question we would
- have to consider is this: Why should we regard Paul's
teaching in this
- matter as more reliable than Wes' intuition? Or put it
this way: Why
- not regard Wes' intuition as a more reliable source of
revelation than
- Paul in this matter? (How about "Prophet Wes"?
It has kind of a nice
- ring to it, doesn't it?)
Second, consider more closely your statement that "if we have good
reason
- to believe that the Bible is the Word of God (and I think
we do) . . .,"
- then our intuitions must take a back seat to the teaching
of Scripture."
- Isn't that merely redundant? If we have good reason to
believe that
- Paul's teaching on some matter is more reliable than
Wes' intuition, then
- indeed Wes' intuition must take a back seat, so to speak,
to this
- teaching. But by the same token, if we have good reason
(as I think we
- do) to believe that Wes' intuition (on the matter in
question) is more
- reliable than anyone's teaching, whether it be Paul's
or anyone else's,
- that God justly imputes guilt to newborn babies, then
such teaching must
- take a back seat, so to speak, to Wes' intuition. In
short, if two
- propositions are logically inconsistent, then any grounds
for accepting
- one are indeed grounds for rejecting the other. But that's
a bloody
- truism and does nothing to help us decide which is more
reliable: Paul's
- (alleged) teaching that God justly imputes Adam's guilt
to newborn
- babies, or Wes' intuition that he does not.
Now I'm not going to ask, as I believe Wes already has, why you
believe
- that the Bible is the (inerrant) Word of God. Whatever
your reasons,
- they are no doubt many and complex. What I do wonder
about, however, I
- can perhaps best explain this way. For my own part, I
would reject the
- authority of any author, whether it be Paul or anyone
else, who declared
- that God has commanded us to torture babies for our own
pleasure. I find
- it impossible to imagine, in other words, any historical
consideration,
- however miraculous or seemingly wondrous, that would
convince me of the
- divinely inspired character of such a teaching. And I
wonder whether you
- would feel as I do about this particular matter. If not,
then I must
- ask: What conceivable sort of historical consideration
would convince
- you that such teaching is divinely inspired? But if,
as I suspect, you
- would feel the same as I do in the matter of torturing
babies, then I
- must also ask: Are you not here relying on your own moral
intuitions,
- even as Wes and I might rely on ours when we reject the
supposed teaching
- that God imputes guilt to newborn babies, restricts his
mercy to a chosen
- few, and (even worse than a command to torture babies)
predestines some
- persons to eternal perdition?
-Tom
10/31/96, Society of Christian Philosophers: Reply
to Steve Cowan
- Hi Steve,
I'm writing to introduce you to a (mythical) hiking buddy of mine, an
- old-timer whom I shall call Jake. I thought you might
like to meet Jake
- because he absolutely agrees with you on the matter of
biblical
- inerrancy; indeed, he is utterly impatient with my own
view that the
- doctrine of inerrancy is theologically useless. But though
Jake agrees
- with you on the matter of inerrancy, he also agrees with
me on the matter
- of inherited guilt; he is no less impatient with "the
blasphemous idea,"
- as he would call it, that infants are born guilty than
he is with the
- idea of a fallible Bible. So I thought it might be fun
to get his
- reaction to some of your own appeals to the inerrancy
of Scripture,
- particularly as you have made them in support of an idea
that he rejects,
- namely that of inherited guilt.
The first passage I showed him was the following, where you claim that
- Wes' intuitions must take a back seat to the teaching
of Scripture. You
- wrote:
> I certainly agree with Wes that our moral intuitions are important
- > guides for judging moral issues. But, they are not
infallible. The
- > Scriptures themselves tell us that the heart is
deceitful above all
- > things. We are especially incompetent when it comes
to assessing our
- > own moral worth. So, if we have good reason to believe
that the bible
- > is the Word of God (and I think we do), and this
word informs us of our
- > capacity for self-deceit and the fallibility of
our intuitions, then
- > our intuitions must take a backseat to the teaching
of Scripture.
I'm sorry to report, however, that Jake was unimpressed. "Look,"
he
- said, his voice becoming shrill, "the moral law
written on our heart and
- expressed in some of our most basic moral intuitions
is also a revelation
- from God, and it is no less infallible than the Bible.
So how can one
- infallible revelation take a back seat to another? And
we also have, by
- the way, an infallible revelation in nature. You know
that; you've led
- backpacks into the wilderness! Indeed, if the moral law
and the
- teachings of nature were not also infallible revelations,
then neither
- would Paul be an infallible authority, for it is Paul
who declared that
- God himself, the very God who cannot lie and did not
lie in the Bible,
- has written his law on our hearts and has revealed himself
in nature."
"Hmm," I gulped. "But isn't Steve right about the human
heart being
- terribly deceitful? Our minds are finite and our judgments
fallible;
- surely there is no dispute about that. And isn't it possible
that our
- sinful nature has also corrupted our reasoning about
justice?"
"Yes, of course. Mr. Cowan is quite right about that. We have an
- infallible revelation in nature, but our reasoning is
so screwed up that
- we don't always interpret it right. And similarly for
the revelation of
- the moral law. It is sometimes hard to know whether our
present under-
- standing of its precepts, not to mention our efforts
at applying them to
- specific situations, accurately reflect the infallible
revelation within;
- that's why we need a set of procedures to make these
infallible precepts
- clear to ourselves and to make sure that our overall
interpretation of
- them is consistent.
"But it is no different," he continued, "with the Bible.
Isn't it just
- as hard to know whether our present understanding
of biblical truth
- accurately reflects the infallible revelation that God
has provided?--and
- isn't that why, once again, we need a set of procedures
to make biblical
- doctrines clear to ourselves and to make sure that our
overall interpre-
- tation of them is consistent? I mean, look at the bewildering
variety of
- interpretations that exist. Every sect or denomination,
every epoch,
- every culture seems to have a quite different interpretation
of even very
- basic doctrines. The Western Church, for example, thinks
it finds a
- substitutionary theory of Christ's atonement in the New
Testament, but
- the Eastern Church is just as confident that no such
doctrine exists
- there. Thank God, our most basic moral intuitions seem
to be more stable
- (and more widely shared) than that!"
At this point, Jake paused for a moment. "Look at this!" he exclaimed
- suddenly, with a look of triumph on his face, his hand
shaking as he
- pointed to the following passage:
> We have, IMO, overwhelming reason to accept the Scriptures as divine
- > revelation, and no reason to believe that Wes' intuition
(which is not
- > and has not been universally shared by the human
race) is certainly
- > true. So, I win! ;-)
"See, that's just what I mean. Mr. Cowan is comparing apples and
- oranges. I know, you think that's okay: Apples and oranges
are both
- examples of fruit; they both have seeds; and they have
a lot else in
- common as well. But you know what I mean. Mr. Cowan is
comparing Wes'
- intuition, as he now grasps and interprets it, with some
idealized
- conception of Scripture. One could just as easily compare
Mr. Cowan's
- *interpretation* of a doctrine he thinks he finds in
Scripture--like the
- idea of inherited guilt--with some idealized conception
of the revela-
- tion written on Wes' heart. And then one could argue
as follows: `We
- have overwhelming reason (included everything Mr. Cowan
would say on
- behalf of the Bible) to believe that the moral law written
on Wes' heart
- is a divine revelation, and no reason to believe that
Mr. Cowan's
- interpretation of Paul (which is but one of many) is
certainly true. So
- you win, Mr. Talbert."
Once again Jake paused, and I thought he might be finished. But he
- wasn't. His face suddenly reddened as he blurted out,
"The main thing is
- that all this talk about the deceitful human heart cuts
in two direc-
- tions. You showed me one of Mr. Wes' posts, and I have
no doubt that
- this man's heart is very deceitful indeed! But why suppose
that Mr.
- Cowan's heart is so pristine pure? Sure, he seems like
an exceptionally
- honest and sincere young feller. But if Mr. Wes' deceitful
heart could
- distort his understanding of justice, why couldn't Mr.
Cowan's deceitful
- heart--or perhaps the deceitful hearts of those from
whom he learned his
- theology--distort his understanding of Scripture? Look
at history, for
- God's sake. Over the years, deceitful human beings have
appealed to the
- Bible in defense of slavery, racism, the exploitation
of women, the
- burning at the stake of young women (charged with witchcraft),
the murder
- of heretics, and even protracted torture. I'll bet you
that human deceit
- has done a lot more to distort and undermine a proper
interpretation of
- the Bible than it has to distort and undermine our most
basic intuitions
- about justice. And besides....."
Just then the telephone rang, which is probably a good thing because Jake
- was starting to repeat himself, and he was called away
to do some
- campaigning on behalf of the environment. I was therefore
unable to
- press him on the theological usefulness of an infallible
text. But in
- any event, as you can see, Jake is no ordinary hiker.
So Steve, meet
- Jake; and Jake, meet Steve. Now have at it guys!
-Tom