Sunday, May 11, 2008

Foundational thinking on Scripture

Why do I, as a Greek Orthodox Christian, include non-Orthodox writers in my spiritual library? Because I do not believe that the Church can be or has ever been divided. What then do I make of the "apparent" divisions? To me, they are only testimonies to the sinfulness of man, our arrogance, our thirst for power and self-glorification. True enough, some "churches" espouse very erroneous beliefs. To me, though, these are patently not "of the Church," they prove themselves to be mere human constructs, for sure. As for the rest, what is keeping us apart?

"…simply ignorant, full of self-conceit, with a craze for questioning everything and arguing about words. All that can come of this is jealousy, contention, abuse and wicked mistrust of one another, and unending disputes by people who are neither rational nor informed, and imagine that religion is a way of making money." (1 Timothy 6:4-5 Jerusalem Bible)

Martin Luther (1483-1546) is best known as the reformer who said, "Here I stand," to Pope and Emperor, but he understood his vocation to be a Doctor of Biblical Studies at University, and the majority of the 55 volumes of his works in English are commentaries on Scripture. In Luther's approach to understanding Scripture, the Word and Spirit create an event in which the reader participates. As the Holy Spirit used a human to write it, the Holy Spirit uses the Word and helps the human enter into Scripture. The impression one gets from Luther as he writes about figures and scenes in Scripture is that he is describing an actual landscape that he had visited. Luther would say that interpretation is a Word-event available to all readers through the Holy Spirit.

These thoughts are not only foundational in regard to the Holy Scriptures, but also Orthodox:
1) We participate in scripture. We don't just read it.
2) We enter into scripture. Our lives become enmeshed with it.
3) We are taught by the Word Himself when we enter the scriptural world. All believers, not just specialists, can interpret the Bible.
Whether they do it correctly depends on whether they have in fact entered and participated in it.

Scripture alone is authoritative. No doctrine be taught except the pure Word of God.
Scripture as the sole authority for the rule of the life of the Church can be found in the writings of the earliest church Fathers. Augustine wrote, "For Holy Scripture fixes the rule for our doctrine, lest we dare to be wiser than we ought. Therefore, I should not teach you anything else except to expound to you the words of the Teacher." This is the tradition of the early Fathers and the monastics to pray, meditate, memorize, and copy the sacred text daily.

In the Bible everything has to do with Christ. Furthermore, we see that all the fathers in the Old Testament, together with all the holy prophets, had the same faith and Gospel as we have, as St. Paul says, "For they drank of that spiritual Rock that followed them, and that Rock was Christ." (1 Corinthians 10:4). The sole difference is, they believed in the coming and promised Seed; we believe in the Seed that has been given. The gospel this side of Pascha (Easter) is the promise of God that in Jesus Christ, God has fulfilled the Law of Moses on the cross; Abraham received his version of promise before the law was given to Moses.

Simple is best. One should not say therefore that Scripture has more than one meaning. God is beyond human all-knowing. However, all Scripture can be interpreted, and all Scripture has one simple sense."The Holy Spirit is the simplest writer. His words could have no more than the one simplest meaning which we call the grammatical or the literal meaning." Luther's understanding of "literal" is different from the modern definition of something that which can be verified by facts—rather, "literal" means what the author intends by the words.

Scripture interprets itself. One passage of Scripture must be clarified by other passages.

Luther said that the best method of interpreting the Bible is to put Scripture alongside Scripture allowing plainer texts to illuminate the more obscure. For example, the book of Hebrews and the Gospel of Matthew employ Old Testament so continuously that they are almost running commentary. Luther's commentaries function the same way; for example, to explain the word anathema in his commentary on Gal 1:8, Luther cites Joshua 6:17; Lev 27:28; and Ex 17:14. Luther practices "commentary by concordance."

Related to how Luther experienced no historical gap between God and himself, he referenced Scripture for answers to contemporary questions, he also experienced no gap between historical eras, and seems to be unaware of the ease of his time-traveling, shifting easily from the time and culture of Cicero, to that of Abraham, or the distance between Jesus in Palestine and the desk in his study. In his biblical world-view, the Holy Spirit makes Scripture come alive, and through faith inserted Luther into the stories. The historical gap is bridged by faith when one is lifted out of the present and placed into the Bible. The biblical world and the contemporary world run together.

In Christian Orthodoxy, something similar happens to us in our encounter with the holy icons: The Holy Spirit makes Scripture come alive, and through faith inserts us into the stories we see depicted in the icons. That's one reason why it is said that "icons are written, not painted."

Karl Barth said, "The Holy Scriptures will interpret themselves in spite of all our human limitations." Men and women do not interpret Scripture as much as Scripture interprets each person. This takes place when Scripture is read in the faith which is freely given by grace of God. Though Barth and Luther differ in part in their theology of the Word, they stand shoulder to shoulder against any who would say there is any other way into the landscape of the Bible. And I, as an Orthodox Christian, stand with them.

There is nothing really potentially unorthodox or disruptive in holding these views. By reminding ourselves of the centrality of the Holy Scriptures, we are not devaluing the (Orthodox) Church Fathers. We are giving them their true value, removing them from the possibility of being considered infallible, and restoring them to their proper place—members with us of the Body of Christ.

The Bible's Author is God, the text is alive, it has the power and the freedom through the Spirit to do what it says it is going to do, and the message addresses the reader personally through the action of the Author. There is no passive Scripture in faith.

As Martin Luther said, "Christianity is simple, lying open to the light of day. One must take and accept it as it is." He could say that because he understood that Scripture had an Author whose voice could be heard and verified only through the humility of faith, and then the gift of revelation can be received.

This post consists mainly of excerpts from Andrew Kenny's blog. For his original post, click here.

6 comments:

C. Marie Byars said...

Glad you posted on Luther. I enjoyed the original posting on another site. As a Lutheran, I will only quickly gloss over something here: Luther found some agreement with the Orthodox church, but he could be quite pugnacious about doctrine (which was also in keeping with the general writing style of the times) & frequently found fault with some fathers.

Here's a lesser known thing about Luther that not even all Lutheran explore: he was an enthusiastic nature-lover. Anytime he was writing or preaching on a text that dealt with something from the natural world, you can see the genuine, meaningful way he was able to deal with it. But no misty-eyed theology of glory: he also dealt quite thoroughly with nature being subject to "frustration", as in Romans 8, due to humanity's fall in to sin.
Anyway, we may have some big changes coming up in our professional, service, family life. So we keep praying for God to keep opening doors!!
God bless!!!

Ρωμανός ~ Romanós said...

I also sometimes find fault with some of the fathers. Both Martin Luther and John Chrysostom have notable streaks of anti-Semitism, for example. Gregory of Nyssa and Isaac of Syria show tendencies and sometimes outright endorsement of unbiblical universalism (everyone will be saved, even Satan). We have the Bible to guide us, and to return to, when any of the fathers goes a little off the deep end. They're only human, after all. If Christ can intercede for us in our personal folly, He can do the same for the more visibly foolish. Thank God for His mercy.

Jim Swindle said...

Thank you for this post. I neded the reminder that we'll truly encounter the Bible's message only by means of the power of the God of the Bible.

I don't understand the matter of encountering the Lord through the icons; I've usually found that somewhere between useless and dangerous. How do you guard against "praying to the God of the picture" instead of praying to the God of the Bible? I don't mean that as a rhetorical question. I recognize the reality of your Christian faith. You demonstrate much more than the mere cultural Christianity that is so common in many denominations including my own.

Ρωμανός ~ Romanós said...

Jim, I don't know if I can answer your question about encountering the Lord through the icons, but I’ll give it a try.

There is no question that the Bible, called the verbal icon of the Word of God, is without equal as the source of our knowledge about the nature of God the Holy Triad and the salvation that is open to all of us. There would be no Church, no church fathers, no worship or doctrine, no icons, in short, no deliverance from sin and death, without the Bible. It is folly when some church authorities insist that the Bible is "the Church's book" and that only the Church can interpret it, meaning only their church. The same is true of those who say, "The Church was there before the Bible was, and that's why the Church owns it and uniquely can understand it aright."

We find that Mary the Theotokos (God-bearer) gave birth to Christ (God) in the flesh. Do we ever find her claiming to own Him, or to be the only one who understood Him aright? Yet, in time, she did precede Him. So did John the honorable forerunner and prophet. Yet He also said, "He that comes after me is greater than I." In the same way, though the Church, even considered institutionally, though it may have preceded, in time, the compilation of the books contained in the volume of the Bible, and though some members of it (the holy apostles and evangelists) wrote the parts of it called the New Testament, cannot consider itself the "owner" of the Bible, nor its unique interpreter. Instead, that which the Church "gave birth to", the Holy Scriptures, has come through her, the Church, as Christ the Divine Logos came through the Virgin Mary, to be her Lord, her Master, her only Teacher, her Rabbi the Messiah. This proves the utter primacy given to the written Word of God, which is the original “icon” of Christ the Divine Logos (Word of God), within the Church.

God is One, revealed to us as the Holy Triad of Father, Son and Spirit. The Second Person of the Holy Triad is Jesus Christ. He is the Word of God. The Bible is the icon in human language of the Word that He is, written and therefore interpreted by the Third Person of the Holy Triad, who is the Spirit. That Spirit can and does live in us, the people of God, sanctifying us and setting us apart as the New Israel of God. It is He, the Holy Spirit, who interprets the Bible for us and in us, making us participants in the acts of God described there. Without the Holy Spirit’s unique work in us, the Bible would be only a book, maybe even the greatest book, but still only a book. The Church includes everyone in whom that Spirit lives, and to the extent that we follow the leading of that Divine and Holy Advocate (Paráklitos), to that extent we understand the Bible, the written icon, aright, we have correct teaching (Orthodoxía), and we live rightly (Orthopraxía). All this comes from the Holy Scriptures.

What are the other holy icons? Why do we encounter the Word of God in them as we encounter Him in the Bible, and how?

Icons that are pictures painted on canvas or wood are written, using pigments and forms, and can never be anything except that which conforms to the Word of God, as expressed in the Bible, and in the verifiable history of the Church. (The history of the Church extends from our first parents Adam and Eve, down to the people of God living at this present moment in chrónos time.) Anything beyond that, even if it is painted in an iconographic “style” can never be an icon, only a religious picture, because it cannot be trusted. That’s the first point. Icons are pictures that must conform to what is literally revealed in the Holy Scriptures, or in verifiable history. Their validity as a “Word-event”, as was talked about earlier in this post, hinges on this fact.

But icons are still only pictures, unless the Holy Spirit who authored them in the mind and hands of the iconographer gives them life, drawing us into the events they portray. This is a matter of faith, not superstition. The superstitious receive nothing for their trouble in kissing and venerating icons, leaving flowers, lighting candles, in front of them, even praying before them, if they pray not to the Heavenly God, but to the images themselves. I do not know anyone who does the latter, or at least admits to it, but I have seen plenty of gestures towards the holy icons that lead me to believe that, despite what they say, some people do regard them in this superstitious manner.

Thus, the second point about icons is that it is only by the work of the Holy Spirit, their divine Author, that we can be drawn into the eternal reality of the events portrayed in them—eternal reality because before God all things are present. That’s why some people describe icons as “windows to Heaven,” although I sometimes wonder if they really know what they mean by it.

In the Jewish Passover service, the participants are told that it is not with their ancestors who came out of Egypt that the covenant was made, but with them, and that it is not their forefathers but they themselves whom YHWH delivered from slavery to pharaoh. This is straight out of the Bible. In the same way, in the Orthodox Christian Pascha (Easter) services, the participants are told that it is we, the people of today, who have witnessed the resurrection of Christ. The resurrection of Christ is directly experienced by those living today, through the work of the Spirit of God, if they respond to His invitation.

These two examples underscore the idea expressed in the post that “In [Luther’s] biblical world-view, the Holy Spirit makes Scripture come alive, and through faith inserted [him] into the stories. The historical gap is bridged by faith when one is lifted out of the present and placed into the Bible. The biblical world and the contemporary world run together.” This is exactly an Orthodox understanding of how we approach the Holy Scriptures, as well as the holy icons (which, as I must reiterate, are visual renditions only of what is related or revealed in the Bible, and verifiable history).

I hope this rather lengthy explanation helps. I can understand it, if a brother still cannot see the point of having icons and still sees them as useless and possibly dangerous. Even in Orthodox Christianity we are taught "not to have any image of God in our minds as we approach Him in prayer," but to present ourselves before Him wholly as we are, so that we can receive Him, the King of all, solely as He is. Giving us this kind of instruction, it sometimes makes me wonder why the Church got stuck on icons in the first place, but I think biblical illiteracy had something to do with it. In an odd sort of way, I think Evangelical Christians and Roman Catholics are drawn to our icons for the same reason, they've given up "living in the Word of God" (the Bible), and are trying to fill the void created by their biblical illiteracy in the wrong way.

As Luther said, "Anyone not ceaselessly busy with the Word of God must become corrupt," is still the hard and fast truth, for Orthodox Christians, and for everyone. Outside of that, all our works and thoughts lead us only to bondage and vanity.

Unknown said...

my mother used to cry

Jim Swindle said...

Thank you, Romanos, for the long, thoughtful reply. I think I understand Orthodoxy's position much better now. I'm not saying I agree, but I understand better, and it makes more sense than before.