Posted by
Bob Siegel on Thursday, June 12, 2008 10:04:28 PM
“Sola Scriptura!”
That’s the Latin wording for “Scripture Alone!” a popular slogan of the
Reformer, Martin Luther, who broke from the Catholic Church in the 1500’s. OK. Actually, he didn’t break from them. They
kicked him out. And they kicked him out (among other reasons) for a
disagreement over how to read the Bible. Supposedly, Luther’s followers
(commonly called Protestants and more often today called Evangelicals)
believe we can read the Bible for ourselves without the Pope or some other
clergyman explaining to us what the Bible really means.
If you are an Evangelical, you probably agree with me so
far. You are saying to yourself, “Of course we can read the Bible for
ourselves. God’s word is very clear. God said it. I believe it. That settles
it!”
Well, just stay with my article. I submit that most
Protestants do not really believe this at all.
They should, but they don’t. They approach the Bible in ways very
similar to the Catholics. They may swear up and down a totem pole that the
Bible is sufficient but don’t you believe them for a second because, for the
most part, Protestants still maintain a Catholic mentality.
Have you ever been to a Bible study? Before it begins,
somebody opens in prayer, maybe the teacher, maybe some one else from the
group. The prayer goes something like this: “Lord we ask that your Holy Spirit
open up our eyes and our hearts as we turn to your word, so that we may
understand your teaching.”
Please know, I do not get upset with people for making this
prayer because it’s an innocent prayer. Nevertheless, this prayer speaks
volumes about their beliefs. Are we of the opinion that the Bible cannot be
understood unless the Holy Spirit first does some kind of miracle and tells us
what it means? This is the way Mormons talk about the Bible and Christians jump
all over them for it. Mormons say the Bible is too spiritual to be understood.
The only difference is they believe the Holy Spirit explains the meaning
through Joseph Smith or another of their prophets. And, of course, this is also
the Catholic mentality, that church councils, church clergy and church
traditions interpret scripture.
Allow me to pose a simple question: If the Bible is really
so mysterious, if its meaning is so hidden, why did God bother to give it to us
in the first place? Why not just allow
us to follow any opinion we want about His will and message?
Now, at least Catholics and Mormons respect the Bible. Some,
with less respect, take a similar approach. “Hey, man, the Bible can be
interpreted a hundred different ways.”
Usually that means there’s a passage they don’t like,
(something about sin, hell or judgment perhaps), and they would be absolutely
delighted to reinterpret these “mysterious verses.”
Such discussion about interpretation also brings us
dangerously close to the belief that some portions of the Bible are “more
inspired than others.”
Whenever I hear this kind of comment, I ask the following
question: “OK, what is your objective
standard for deciding which passages are inspired and which aren’t, aside from
disregarding the passages you don’t like?”
Mark Twain (no Christian by any way, shape or form) was at
least honest enough to admit that he wasn’t bothered about the scriptures he
didn’t understand. He was bothered about the ones he did understand!
“But Bob, I’ve seen passages which are honestly
difficult to understand. Isn’t there some interpretation necessary when it
comes to reading the Bible?”
It all depends on what we mean by interpretation. If we mean that the Bible is a collection of
different manuscripts, two-thousand years old (New Testament) and over
three-thousand years old (Old Testament) written in different languages and
handed down from cultures much different than our own, yes, of course we must
interpret. But the science of studying ancient manuscripts is an objective
process. We call this field of study
Hermeneutics. Obviously, if one
does not know what a Pharisee or Sadducee is, a lot of Jesus’ words and
admonitions in the gospels will make no sense.
It is also important to know that in ancient Greek (the language of the
New Testament) there were many different words for love and we translate
with only one English word. The Bible is
also a wide variety of writing styles because the Bible is not merely one book.
It is a collection, a small library, if you will, of 66 separate documents.
Some of them were written as poetry. Some of them were written as history. Some are letters from the apostles. These
letters (for the most part) do not contain teachings because they were written
to the churches as reminders of things that had already been taught when Paul,
Peter and others were with the communities in person. We must compare several
of these letters before understanding the teachings of the apostles.
Hermeneutics studies language, culture, context,
corroborative historical documents that were contemporaries of the Bible and
writing style. We do not read a book of poetry like Psalms or Proverbs
the way we would read a letter like Romans or a history book like Acts.
When the Psalmist talks about trees clapping their hands, I do not take it
literally because, again, I am reading a poem. But when Paul talks about sin, I
do take it literally, Yes,, all of this is interpretation but it is objective
interpretation: It seeks an answer to the question, “What was the original
writer intending to say and what did his original audience understand him to
mean?”
On the other hand, if what we mean by interpretation
is, “The Bible says whatever I want it to say,” that is bogus. I would also
dismiss the more sincere (but no less misguided) belief that the Bible is
mysterious and we need some prophet to explain it to us or we need the Holy
Spirit to enlighten us. That belief smacks into the face of God’s whole
purpose in providing the Bible. We have a God who speaks clearly, who wants us
to know His will, who does not give us codes and secret messages. His own word
tells us we need no outside interpretation:
“Above all, you must understand that no prophecy of
Scripture came about by the prophet's own interpretation. For prophecy never
had its origin in the will of man, but men spoke from God as they were carried
along by the Holy Spirit.”
1 Peter 1:20-21
See? The Holy Spirit
already spoke when the scripture originated. He does not need to speak again to
tell us what He said.
We do not throw away the rules of literary criticism simply
because we are reading from a book called, “The Word of God.” Yes, the Bible is spiritual in its
inspiration. It is also spiritual in its application. Without the help
of the Holy Spirit, we would not be able to apply the Bible to our lives. But
as for merely reading it? A Christian, a Buddhist and an Atheist should all be
able to read the same passage of scripture and agree as to what it says. I’m serious. Oh, sure, they may disagree as
to whether or not they like it, they may disagree as to whether or not they
believe in it and they may disagree as to whether or not they plan to obey it.
But they should agree as to what it says. When Paul greets the Corinthians, are
we to pray over the meaning to see if he was really greeting the Galatians?
“What about parables?”
Parables were very simple stories with one basic moral
message. Put in the context of Jesus’ linear teaching, it is not too difficult
to understand a parable’s meaning. It is true that this unusual teaching method
made the point a little less apparent at first.
This was a method of communication that provoked thought instead of just
handing the truth on a silver platter. A seeking disciple would understand the
meaning of the parable. On many
occasions when we stumble into the parables of Jesus, all we have to do is keep
on reading and sooner or later we see Jesus’ band of merry men asking him what
the parable meant. And then Jesus tells them what it meant! This isn’t rocket
science. Look at the parable of the sower and the seed (Matt. 13). After the
disciples ask Jesus to explain, He gives an extremely detailed explanation. The
seeds are the word of God. The birds are Satan, etc. There is no doubt whatsoever
of His meaning and it leaves no room for additional interpretation. So even New
Testament parables are not beyond our ability to understand.
It may interest you to know that the idea of a secret hidden
meaning in the Bible was unknown to the Jews until after Jerusalem
was conquered by Alexander the Great. After that, everything changed, because
the Jews found themselves living in a Greek dominated world. This means the Jews eventually approached
their literature the way the Greeks tackled theirs. In Greece,
it was legally dangerous to not believe in the gods of Mt.
Olympus, even though many Greek
citizens (especially those who loved philosophy) found the stories of Zeus,
Athena, etc. to be pretty nutty. But they figured out a loophole, a loophole that saved
their lives and their sanity at the same time. They decided to “look beneath
the surface” of Homer (author of The Iliad, practically the Greek
Bible). If one could understand the stories of the Greek gods properly, one
would see that they were really teaching Platonic philosophy.
Around the time of Jesus, a Jewish teacher named Philo lived
in Alexandria (one of the chief
centers in the world for the Greek way of life). Philo grew up on the Hebrew Bible but had
also fallen in love with Greek philosophy. Not feeling the freedom to dismiss
the scriptures, he felt the same conflict between Moses and Plato that the
Greeks had felt between Homer and Plato. This led to the idea that the Bible
had hidden meaning and this hidden meaning bore a remarkable resemblance to
Greek philosophy. By the time Philo was finished, Abraham was a Stoic
philosopher who sought Sarah (meaning "wisdom") and traveled to the land of
Haran, which means “holes” and stands for the incompleteness of approaching
life through the senses alone.
In time, Greek ideas were dismissed by the Jews but the idea
of symbolic, hidden meanings to scripture remained. We have a whole body of
Jewish literature that has survived to this day, called The Midrash. It
contains the words of many rabbis explaining what various passages of scripture
“truly mean.”
The rest is history: Christianity grew out of Judaism and
this method of interpretation, this idea that the Bible has some mysterious
message beneath the surface, has never been completely shaken. It continues to
this day. One must wonder how we would
read the Bible today if Alexander had not conquered the western world. Thanks,
Alexander!
Years ago, in a college poetry class, we were each asked to
write a Haiku. Here is what I wrote. See
for yourself how brilliant it sounds.
Eternal breeze,
Bellows with dusty madness,
Crying, “I am lost.
It was so fun to listen to my fellow students attempt to
interpret my humble, yet profound, little poem.
“It makes serious statements about society today.”
“It’s an allegory about man’s search for meaning.”
Allow me to apply some hermeneutics: What the original
author meant to say is the only meaning. What did I mean to say when I wrote
that poem? Nothing! Absolutely nothing!
This is Bob Siegel, making the obvious, obvious.
Other blogs about Christianity by Bob Siegel
Does
Jesus Belong on the College Campus?
Try
To Follow This Logic: If God Exists, God is Real.
Does the Bible Really Speak About the Future?
What is the Unforgivable Sin and How Do I Know If I've
Committed It?
Does The Bible Teach An Age of Accountability?
Was Jesus Gay?
How Should We Pray For Healing?
Is The DaVinci Code Something to be Taken Seriously?
How Does One Become a Christian?
My Brief Time In the Occult
How Do We Know Which Manuscript Copies Truly Belong In The
Bible?
Does The Bible Teach That God Is Everything or that God Created
Everything?
Was Jesus A False Prophet?
Why Are There Different Versions of the Bible?
Three Questions That Test Your Friend's Opinions
Subsiding All The Passion Over "The Passion"
Cherry Picking Our Doctrines
St. Bob's Epistle To The Calvinists
Oh, That Horrible Christianity!
Was Judas Forgiven?
Oh Yeah? Well David Did Alot of Stupid Things
If You Don't Like Her, Take It Up With Jesus
Calling God Allah: What's In A Name?
How To Cause A Muslim Freudian Slip
Behavior Not Even A Christian Apologist Can Defend
Evidently Christians Don't Hold A Monopoly On Stupidity
I'm Not Doing It For the Warthog and the Pine Cone
Is Persecution Good For The Church?
A Pro-Choice Christmas Card?
The No Longer Sacred Santa
Can A Christian Be Pragmatic?
Now Kids, Keep The Name of the Holiday a Secret
Are Christian Ministers Just In It For The Money?
Christianity, Judaism and Islam: Comparison
Is Mormonism Really a Cult? Let's Finally Settle This Once and
For All
How a Reformed Jew Became an Evangelical Christian Part One
Are Christians Expected to Keep the Sabbath?
If The Gospel Was Fake, This Would Have Been A Really Dumb
Thing To Include
Did Jesus Really Claim To Be God?
Did Jesus Really Claim to be The Messiah?
The Prayer Game
Can The Existence of God Be Proven?
Can't I Accept Christ On My Deathbed?
The Day God Gave Me One Hundred Dollars (And Believe Me; I
didn't Deserve It)
Is Tithing Really Biblical?
The Day A Scholar Said Scholars Aren't Scholarly
Of course the Trinity is Impossible! Haven't You Ever Studied
Math?
Jesus Didn't Rise! Wait Until You Hear How They Decided
Did Jesus Fulfill Bible Prophecy? Isaiah 53
Was
Jesus The Promised Messiah? Daniel 9
Does
God Have a Sense of Humor?
Scripture
taken from THE HOLY BIBLE
New
International Version NIV
Copyright 1973, 1979, 1984 by International Bible
Society
Used
by permission of Zondervan Publishing House.
All rights reserved.