As I continue to provide an
apologetic for the traditional Christian belief about Scripture as over
against, let’s call him Ted to respect his request not to be called by name, my
detractor, I want to be clear that if the reader thinks we are going to provide
the sort of argument Ted thinks he needs to change his mind, then he or she
will be sorely disappointed. I told Ted at the beginning of our discourse over
at Cannon Fodder that our basic disagreement was at the level of worldview.
Specifically, my belief about the nature of Scripture and Ted’s belief about
the nature of Scripture are radically contradictory. Ted has repeatedly argued
that Scripture is not the Word of
God, that it is not authoritative,
that it is not binding, and that it
is not inerrant. Ted argues that a
person’s view on the nature of Scripture cannot rise above the level of
opinion. It is all a matter of interpretation and since it is a matter of
interpretation, there can be no final word on the subject. Now, it is not my
purpose to write a defense of Scripture. I provided a previous post to that
end. It is my intent to criticize Ted’s line of reasoning, his method of
argumentation if you will.
First of all, we are gong to work
with the definition of knowledge as justified true belief. We say that a person
possesses knowledge when they hold a belief x,
that they have good reason for believing x,
and that x happens to be the case.
Notice that if Ted is correct in his understanding of interpretation, he cannot
know anything at all. The best he can do is form an opinion. Opinions, at least
in this context, are not authoritative. Hence, God does not have these sorts of
opinions. In order for Ted to refute traditional Christianity, he will have to
do better than give us his opinion. Second, Ted wishes to make claims about
whether or not other people possess knowledge. For instance, he says that I
cannot know God’s position on Luke’s belief that Adam was a historical person. To
what does Ted appeal in order to substantiate his claim? After all, if
everything is a matter of opinion and interpretation, so too is this view. And
if this statement by Ted is nothing more than Ted’s opinion based on his own
fallible interpretation, then why should I bother to pay any attention to what
he says? Does Ted possess knowledge that all human opinions are just human
opinions and that none of them ever rise to the level of knowledge? Would not
such a position require omniscience? I suspect Ted would deny that he makes
this claim even though this is the logical end of his argument.
Now, Ted believes that the
Scriptures are not the Word of God. Ted’s belief is based on his claim that
Bible never claims to be the Word of God. Is it the case that the Bible is not
the Word of God? Does Ted demonstrate justified true belief?
The key to Ted’s claim to knowledge
is in the second proposition: “Ted’s belief that the Bible is not the
Word of God” is based on his view that the Bible does not make this literal claim
about itself. Is this a good reason for Ted’s belief? Does the Bible have to
say that it is the Word of God in order for me to believe that it is the Word
of God? I do not know how such a proposition can be defended. Does Ted have to
claim to be a man in order for someone to believe he is a man? Does my wife
have to claim to be my wife before I believe that she is my wife? Does a dog
have to claim that it is a dog in order for me to believe it is a dog? Are
there other reasons that would justify my belief that the Bible is the Word of
God? I think I have given those reasons. The Bible communicates with presumed
final authority. The authors of Scripture refer to other parts of Scripture as
the Word of God and binding. Jesus’ own position lends itself to this view.
Ancient Judaism and historic Christianity have both held this view of
Scripture. The history of the Bible itself demonstrates that at the very least,
the Jewish and Christian authors, and leaders throughout the centuries testify
to this belief. But more than that, the regenerating work of the Holy Spirit on
Christian beliefs lead us to conclude that the holy Scripture is the Word of
God, binding, authoritative, inspired by God, and inerrant. Christianity as a
system affirms the Bible is the Word of God. Christianity also affirms that
only the supernatural work of the Holy Spirit can open human understanding to
know this truth. Finally, Christianity affirms the belief that the Bible is the
Word of God is a faith position.
The conclusion is that Ted’s reason
for rejecting the belief that the Bible is the Word of God is simply not
plausible. It follows then that Ted’s reason for his belief is not a good
reason. Since knowledge requires good reason for the belief, we can conclude
that Ted cannot possible know that the Bible is not the word of God because his
knowledge claim involves insufficient reasons. What we end up with is that Ted
believes that the Bible is not the X. But his reason for believing that the
Bible is not X is logically implausible. Additionally, it is actually not the
case that the Bible is not X. Hence, Ted’s claim to knowledge in this case
turns out to be a logically indefensible argument. I should also mention that
Ted’s claim that I nor anyone else can know that the Bible is the Word of God
is even more of a epistemological and logical blunder than his claim that it is
not the Word of God. The reasons are obvious and I will not get into them here.
How could Ted know what someone else knows?
The Nature of God
Ted also argues against the
traditional view of God’s righteous nature. Ted claims that the actions of OT
Israel, where children were killed are immoral. The Christian God, Ted claims,
is a loving God and He would never participate in such conduct. First of all,
Ted provides no argument for how he knows this about the Christian God. Remember
the requirements for true knowledge. Ted must believe that God is X; he must
have good reasons for believing that God is X; and X must actually be the case.
But when pressed about his claims, Ted provides no objective reasons
whatsoever. All he gives us are his own opinions about what God is like. The
basis of Ted’s opinions is not objectively grounded in knowledge about God but
rather, Ted’s feelings or sense of what God must be like. Ted may want to quote
the New Testament in order to support his view. But if he does, he will have to
explain to us why his fallible interpretation should be preferred over two
millennia of Church history and scholarship. Secondly, Ted will have to explain
why he thinks Scripture is unreliable in other places but reliable when it
comes to this or that isolated text that describes God as loving. An example of
God’s wrath is displayed in Acts 5 when Ananias and Sapphira were both executed
by God for lying. Here we have two people who sold their property and gave half
of it to the Church. Couldn’t God have overlooked a little vanity? After all,
to give half is more than generous. Yet, God killed both of them. Ted may
retort that this story should be taken as myth. But Luke gives us no reason to
think that the story is anything but actual history. We are not entitled to relegate historical
narrative to myth just because we don’t like how the narrative depicts God.
Ted says that it is immoral for God
to send a 16 year-old boy to hell just because the boy sinned for 3-4 years.
Now, this is an example straight out of Rob Bell. This is emergent nonsense. By
thinking along such lines, Ted reveals a gross misunderstanding of God’s
righteous nature as well as the nature of sin. Sin is behavior contrary to the
perfect holy nature of an infinite God. Temporal punishment would never satisfy
the nature of an infinitely righteous God. Additionally, Revelation 21:8
confines all men who were guilty of rejecting God in this life to eternal
damnation and this is without respect to their age.
The Nature of Man
Ted has also denied that men are
born sinners. Paul explicitly refutes this view in Romans 5:12-21. Ted’s view
of sin does not comport with Paul’s teaching on Sin or on Jesus teaching on the
necessity to be born again. David clearly said he was formed in sin in his
mother’s womb. Men are not good people that make pretty bad mistakes from time
to time. We are wicked people who engage in grossly wicked conduct from birth.
But for grace, no man would ever submit his life to the holy God of Scripture.
Ted denies that men hate God yet when the God revealed in Scripture is
described to Ted; it is not hard to see how Ted feels about Him. He is an
immoral monster unworthy of worship.
The Nature of Language
Another interesting move by Ted in
his effort to eradicate historic Christian orthodoxy is his attempt to assign
the biblical texts to that of the products of men, natural works with no
supernatural components. Moreover, Ted claims that the OT historical narrative
is really best understood as myth rather than Jewish men like Moses writing
under the influence and control of the Holy Spirit to produce exactly what God
wanted written. Why does Ted believe this? He claims that since all the other
ANE narratives contain myth, so too must the Jewish religious texts. Once
again, we have to ask if this argument is logically cohesive. Upon examination
we discover that it is not. It commits the genetic fallacy, and that, in a very
loose way. It is simply wrong to think that because writers from this era
utilized myth as a literary device, that the Hebrew writers like Moses must
have used it as well. Why should we believe this? Remember true knowledge is
defined as follows: one believes X; one has good reasons for believing X, and X
happens to be the case. Does Ted have good reasons for thinking that the Hebrew
writers wrote just like every other ANE writer? What is the connection? Why is
Scripture classified with those documents when it is clearly unique? Moreover,
is all the material from the ANE mythic in nature? Are there details that are
intended to be literal historical records? The problem for Ted is that he does
not like the behavior of God on the one hand, the miracles on the other, and
then, Ted’s idol of modern science that serves as his sole authority for what
he will and will not believe. As it turns out, the argument that the OT is
filled with myth or legend is based on an overly loose view of how ANE writers
approached history on the one hand and, more importantly, it completely ignores
the unique character of the sacred Scripture on the other hand.
For example, when we compare the
Genesis creation account with the Enuma Elish, we observe a number of very
significant differences. First, the Babylonians gods are identified with nature
while the God of Genesis is separate from all of creation. The gods of Babylon
depend on magical incantations while the God of Genesis is viewed as powerful
within Himself. The God of Genesis is one while the Babylonian gods are many.
The creation account in Genesis is orderly and structured while the Babylonian
account takes place through intense conflict and warfare. These are just a few
significant differences. In addition, the Enuma Elish was written somewhere
around the 18th to the 12th century while Moses wrote
Genesis around the 15th century. Given the context of Moses’ life,
it is simply a position of rank unbelief to think that he would have borrowed
from such a pagan polytheistic source.
In summary
Ted’s doctrine on Scripture is
based on his own indefensible claim that the Bible must claim to be the Word of
God. Now, I believe the Scriptures actually do make that claim and they make it
clearly. But for the sake of argument we shall be satisfied with debunking
Ted’s method of argumentation.
Ted’s doctrine of God is based on
his own philosophy as opposed to God’s own divine self-disclosure. He thinks he
picks Christ over the God of the OT when all he has done is make the revelation
for both completely unreliable, at least within his system.
Ted’s claim that men are not born
sinners and that they do not hate God is a matter of outright contradiction to
the teaching of Scripture on the subject. 1 Corinthians 1-2, Romans 1-3, 8 are
all clear about this. Finally, Ted’s philosophy of language literally leads to
skepticism. Based on Ted’s own view of true knowledge, no one could really know
anything with any authority whatsoever. And if they could, then Ted’s entire
argument reduces to nonsense. Ted’s entire approach is consistent with that of
the emergent Church. They stand for nothing, or so they think, and question
everything.
Ted’s position on the nature of Scripture, God, humanity, and language are each non-Christian positions. Ted’s argument is an argument from unbelief. Whatever Jesus Ted claims to love, it is not the Jesus who was brutally crucified today, 2,000 years ago to satisfy the wrath of a righteous God so that we might have life and have it more abundantly.
Ted’s position on the nature of Scripture, God, humanity, and language are each non-Christian positions. Ted’s argument is an argument from unbelief. Whatever Jesus Ted claims to love, it is not the Jesus who was brutally crucified today, 2,000 years ago to satisfy the wrath of a righteous God so that we might have life and have it more abundantly.
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