The necessity of trust in the Scriptures

It is essential to the Christian faith that God exists and that he can, and has, and continues to, show up and reveal himself to humans. Furthermore, Christianity essentially affirms that God’s revelation to man has been captured in the Holy Scriptures.

Much of the latest textual critics and historians downplay and invalidate the events recorded in the Bible. They believe later political and religious leaders (Pharisees or the like, probably) tampered with the story to solidify their hold on the kingdom of Israel, or to gain power for the Levitical order, or etc.

This is not an option for the Christian: We must believe that that God’s revelation is available to us now, in an essentially and sufficiently accurate form. Why? Because this is the bedrock of Christianity. Historical revelations define our collective concept of who God is, how we are to relate to him, and what he wants from us. Believing in God is inextricably linked to believing in his Word – the only means by which we know him, being the revelation of the Unseen God who “dwells in unapproachable light.” The Word is in core essence Jesus Himself, but by extension, and by similar pattern, his Word means that set of linguistic information by which the Word from the Father is made known to our individual hearts, namely, Scripture. Without the Word (logos), preached from human mouths and preserved in the sacred texts, we cannot possess the Living Word (rhema), with which the Spirit of Jesus feeds our souls and gives us New Life. Without the Scriptures, our link to a true knowledge of God is severed.

We must believe that all that God requires us to know about him will by him be preserved and made available to his people in every age. He cannot be thwarted by conniving religious leaders or sloppy scribes who would attempt to distort his word. Nothing can sever Jesus, the Head, from His Body. Thus the Christian must affirm and believe a doctrine of the divine preservation of revelation (the inerrancy of scripture, as it is usually called).

This affirmation of the Scriptures is not blind; it is based on significant textual and historical evidence. The fact is that the Bible contains some of the best-preserved ancient documents available in the science of textual criticism, and to pick and choose which parts of it we think have been tampered with or haven’t, based on how odd they appear to us (or, again, to select critics who agree with us), is to act with dangerous ignorance.

We must trust Scripture, even when it doesn’t make sense. We cannot deny revelation because it is contrary to what we would have preferred or expected. That is to commit a grievous evil: to believe that our imagination or reason (or that of whatever other human philosophers we happen to agree with) is sufficient to bring us to a true knowledge of God. In reality, it is only when God makes himself known to man that man can know God. As John Piper says:

“He is what you’ve got to deal with in reality. Therefore our role is not to tell him how it is, but to learn how it is, and then adapt our little finite minds and hearts to the way he is…so that we bring our minds and hearts into conformity with Reality, namely, God.”

The Christian accepts all of scripture, even if he does not understand it. Even if it is quite inconvenient. Even if battles of contextual criticism rage on in academia (which they will always do). We must trust in the scriptures, not as the source of Life of themselves, but as our link to Jesus, the Word, who himself is our link to the Father, and our Eternal Hope.

Killing the Canaanites: Part 4

Did God really tell the Israelites to wipe out the Canaanites?

 

From Part 3, we know that God uses people to accomplish his purposes, and that even if his purposes included killing other humans, his human instruments would be justified in doing so – and even bound to do so. But countless people over the centuries have claimed to have received revelation from God to kill people, and committed atrocities as a result. The Crusades and the Inquisition come to mind, not to mention many smaller  lashings-out from people bearing the name of YHWH. Were the Israelites deluded just like them? Was their leader Moses, who told them to do these severe deeds?

Let’s also assume for our argument that the Bible reflects the true revelation of God. If you don’t agree, check out this article, which evolved as a bubble off of the current article. Now, from scripture, did the Israelites have reason to believe that God was really speaking to them through Moses when Moses told them to kill the Canaanites? Quite a lot of reason, in fact. The whole period was loaded to the brim with miracles!

  • Moses performed the 10 signs – the 10 plagues on the Egyptians – which made even hard-hearted Pharaoh acknowledge that God’s power was behind him
  • God appeared to Israel as a mysterious of cloud by day and fire by night
  • Israel had just experienced the Parting of the Red Sea (!)
  • Moses received the law on top of a smoking mountain atop which thunder and lighting crashed, and his face was glowing when he came down
  • God provided manna and quail for them to eat in the desert
  • God made water come out of a rock when Moses struck it (at Meribah)
  • Israel defeated the attacking Amalekites whenever Moses was raising his arm, but lost whenever he dropped his arm
  • God sent a plague among the Israelites after they made the golden calf
  • Israel would have remembered the promise to their father Abraham that they would return to Canaan (Genesis 15).

Etcetera etcetera. The whole exodus and redemption of the Israelite nation, and the formation of God’s covenant with them, had been filled with incredible miracles and signs. So Israel had every reason to believe that God was really speaking to them through Moses – not that Moses or any human contrivance was responsible for the command to kill the Canaanites. Therefore, if we have accepted the Biblical narrative as part of our faith in God, it follows that God really was responsible for the command to the Israelites, and that many miracles and signs affirmed this to the Israelites themselves. They and we both have reason to believe that they heard the divine voice giving them the solemn command to invade and “devote to destruction.”

 

Killing the Canaanites: Part 3

Can God use people to kill other people? 

 

Say (from Part 2) that God is just in killing the Canaanites. But what about the Israelites themselves? Was it wrong for THEM to kill the Canaanites? Isn’t murder wrong, period? Shouldn’t God have used some non-human means to wipe out the Canaanites, like a plague, and then had His people enter the promised land peaceably?

God Used Israel
First of all, it is immediately and abundantly clear that, throughout history, God uses people to accomplish his divine purposes. For example, all of the prophets, the Levitical priesthood (who were the ministers through which God interacted with man in the OT) and the New Priesthood of the Church (Christ’s Body and manifestation, through which he continually interacts with the world). Israel was nationally part of this, as part of God’s promise in the Abrahamic and Mosaic covenants. So, it is clear from the Biblical narrative that God was using Israel in a special way to accomplish his purposes.

It’s Possible for Killing to be Just
There’s no real conflict with “God can use people to accomplish his purpose”…unless his purpose is killing others.  Is it wrong for people to kill other people? Ethics provides a decisively indecisive answer. Although some in the Categorical or Deontological ethical camps would haggle with wording, the vast majority of people consent that, in some of the most extreme circumstances, administering death to a fellow human is the best possible course of action. For example, if a policeman happened upon Sandy Hook Elementary in the middle of the Newton, CT massacre, he would have been justified in stopping the massacre by shooting the gunman. The same would be true of the slaughter that happened in 2006 on the very campus where I sit writing this (Virginia Tech). Isn’t killing out of self defense sometimes acceptable (for example, resistance against a military invasion)?Furthermore, when we think of certain extremely corrupt parties, killing seems more justified: Consider the “Lord’s Resistance Army” that has forcibly conscripted children for several decades. If you were in a village when that army was raiding, abducting, killing and raping, would just men not be rightly inspired to fight back? The point is, killing is wrong for certain reasons, not absolutely or inherently. What are those reasons?

What Makes Killing Wrong?
This is the most fascinating part of this argument to me. What, fundamentally, makes the taking of human life right or wrong? Human life is valuable and protected under morality because it is a God-given right. From Genesis we see that we were made in God’s image, and that brings with it a sacredness. From the covenant with Noah we see a reinforcement of this:

Whoever sheds man’s blood, by man his blood shall be shed, for in the image of God He made man. (Gen. 9:6)

When David killed Uriah and took his wife Bathsheba, he uttered this:

Against you, you only, I have sinned and done what is evil in your sight… (Psalm 51:4)

How can killing a man be a sin against God, not against that man? Well, as we established in Part 2, man has no right over his own life. But God does. Human life is sacred because it is given by (and patterned after the image of) YHWH, the God of Life. Therefore, killing is wrong because it usurps God’s authority to give and take the breath of life. The Noah verse explains why it is justifiable to kill the VT or Newton gunmen, etc. God has decreed that he has appointed the right to take a man’s life to his neighbor, should that man himself take innocent life. So in those cases, God’s right has been delegated, not usurped.

Presumption vs. Obedience
But what about a different circumstance: What if God tells man to take a life of a non-murderer? In that case, the One who has the right to take the life is still consenting to the act. In fact, he is initiating the act by direct command, instead of perennial decree, which makes it even more binding. One may object, “But a man hasn’t got the right to take another man’s life! You just said it was God’s right, not man’s.” Maybe, but it is not presumptuous to obey a command to do something that one has no authority to do on his own. If Bobby is playing videos games, and Johnny comes in and unplugs the game console, he acts presumptuously, because the video games are the property of their dad, and their dad has by default given both boys the right to play the game. Therefore Johnny violates the right that his dad has given to Bobby. However, if their dad told Johnny to unplug it for some reason (say an electrical emergency) and Johnny unplugs the console, he acts lawfully. Furthermore, he does not even have to fully understand the reasons that their dad had. His moral responsibility is to obey.

Therefore, the Bible clearly claims that God was using the Israelites to accomplish his purposes. It is not unequivocally wrong to kill: it is wrong to kill whenever you rob the right to give and take life from God. Thus, if God sanctions it, the normal moral rule doesn’t apply. This removes another chunk of ground from the objections to the killing of the Canaanites. In Part 4, we’ll look at the question of whether the Israelites really did receive a command to annihilate from God (or, in particular, whether they had sufficient reasons to believe that they had received such a command).

Killing the Canaanites: Part 2

Was God wrong to want the death of the Canaanites?

This post examines the first of the four conditions under which we could judge the killing of the Canaanites to be wrong. The thesis is this: God desired the death of the Canaanites, and he did so justly. First of all, the doctrine of Total Depravity says that all mankind is polluted by sin, and “the wages of sin is death”. Death entered the human race through Adam, and we are subject to it now, as part of the natural order.

Surely there is not a righteous man on earth who does good and never sins. (Ecclesiastes 7:20)

Therefore, no one has a right not to die. This applies even to children.

Behold, I was brought forth in iniquity,
And in sin my mother conceived me. (Psalm 51:5)

This is not the same as saying that all children go to hell. Only that all children are subject to death. As Copan reminds us:

If any infants or children were killed, they would have entered the presence of God. Though deprived of earthly life, those young ones wouldn’t have been deprived of the greatest good–enjoying everlasting friendship with God. (p. 189)

Besides, let’s not forget that it is God who may require our lives of us whenever he wants – he decided to give us life, and he decides when it’s over. I have never understood the indignant attitude that some people feel when God takes a life early. He gives you life, and then suddenly it becomes your possession, and he is obligated to let you retire, or see your grandchildren, or some other rule that you impose upon him? Homicide, abortion and euthanasia are wrong because in them, man is usurping God’s right to end life. But when God exercises this right, he is not wrong.

It is also important to understand that Canaanite culture was perverse. In Genesis, when God was making covenant with Abraham, he he predicted that although Abraham himself would not take ownership of the land, his descendants would 400 years later, when “the sin of the Amorites is complete.” God was patient for 4 centuries with the Canaanites. Finally, when he sends Israel back to take possession of it, he says:

It is not because of your righteousness or your integrity that you are going in to take possession of their land; but on account of the wickedness of these nations, the Lord your God will drive them out before you, to accomplish what he swore to your fathers, to Abraham, Isaac and Jacob. (Deuteronomy 9:5-6)

Various passages in the Bible describe the kind of immorality practiced in Canaan, and the Law warns against it. The Canaanites openly affirmed child sacrifice, both heterosexual and homosexual adultery in temples and on high places, and bestiality. What’s more, as Capan points out, these things were part of Canaanite worship and theology: their gods practiced these things. Like gods, like worshippers. For example, when the fertility god Baal had sex with his consort Anath, patroness of both sex and war, his semen is the rain that brings fertility to the land. By the way, Anath is described as joyfully wading in blood and decorating herself with disembodied human heads and hands. Wow.

Lastly, sin exists in cultures, not just in individuals. Evil practices have a way of polluting a culture from the roots up. Sodom and Gomorrah, for example, had thousands of citizens, but their sin was so great that there were not even 10 righteous men in those cities. That’s pervasive pollution of hearts! God often judges and saves people as family units (Abraham and his family…Achan and his family…Cornelius and his family…). Western culture is not very aware of the social bleed-over of righteousness because we are very individualistic, but God reveals himself in the Ten Commandments as “visiting the iniquity of the fathers on the children, on the third and the fourth generations of those who hate Me,” (Exodus 20:4). So, in the Canaanite question, it is quite in keeping with truth for God to judge the societal sins of the Canaanites not just their individual sins. I’m sure that each will be judged individually on Judgement Day.

Therefore, the Almighty and Righteous Judge of the earth was not only lawful, but utterly good and just, in killing the Canaanites. Why did he choose to wipe them out, and yet deal with other pagan nations differently? Is that favoritism? Unfortunately, such questions exceed the question of morality, or the realm of human knowledge in general. The Parable of the Workers reminds us that we cannot act like children and make comparisons with God. “Well, HE got TWO pieces of cake!” doesn’t work. As the landowner says,

Don’t I have the right to do what I want with my own money? Or are you envious because I am generous?’

We all deserve death. The question is not why some receive death, but why we still have life. So yes, if God’s secret intentions for the redemption of the world involved the death of the Canaanites, he is just to bring it about.

Oh, the depth of the riches of the wisdom and knowledge of God! How unsearchable his judgments, and his paths beyond tracing out! (Romans 11)

Killing the Canaanites: Part 1

In the Old Testament, God commands the Israelites to possess the fertile crescent and wipe out its inhabitants. This has been called “genocide” and smells rancid to the modern conscience. It is a bit of an embarrassment in a society that champions tolerance, peace, and religious coexistence. Prominent atheists call the God of the Old Testament ruthless, and point to the invasion of the Promised Land as nothing but barbarism: “indiscriminate massacre and ethnic cleansing”. The war passages are not the favorites of most Christians either. How many Bible study application questions have you heard like, “What does the total annihilation of the Canaanites mean for your relationship with your neighbors?” Many Christian traditions object to war outright (like my wife’s family’s denomination, the Brethren in Christ). What then do we do with a God who orders the mass destruction of an entire ethnic group? What do we do with verses like this?:

However, in the cities of the nations the Lord your God is giving you as an inheritance, do not leave alive anything that breathes. Completely destroy them—the Hittites, Amorites, Canaanites, Perizzites, Hivites and Jebusites—as the Lord your God has commanded you. (Deuteronomy 20:16-17)

We believe in an unchanging, loving God. He is Love, so much that he incarnated himself in Immanuel to offer the free gift of salvation to all peoples. So what do we make of the killing of the Canaanites? Some considerations, leaning very heavily on (and inspired by) Paul Copan’s book Is God a  Moral Monster?, might help to justify the destruction of the Canaanites.

Semitic Exaggeration Rhetoric: How Brutal Was the Invasion?

Some cultural and linguistic evidence shows that the invasions of Canaan were probably not as brutal as we think at first glance. The account of the conquest of Canaan is filled with the language of “total destruction”, for example, from Joshua 10:

So Joshua subdued the whole region, including the hill country, the Negev, the western foothills and the mountain slopes, together with all their kings. He left no survivors. He totally destroyed all [haram] who breathed, just as the Lord, the God of Israel, had commanded.

But Copan points out the problem: later in Joshua and Judges, the very same people that were totally destroyed appear again! The Jebusites appear again (Judges 1:21), and the Anakim appear again in the hill country (to be driven out by Caleb) even though “there were no Anakim left in the land…they were utterly destroyed in the hill country” (Joshua 11:21-22). In Judges 1-2, God says that he will “stop driving out” the people before Israel because of their sin: so the destruction was a gradual process of smothering the Canaanite culture and religion, not a once-and-done massacre. How? The “total destruction” language isn’t literal. Rather, it is using exaggeration as a rhetorical style. It was common ancient Near Eastern culture to exaggerate conquests using obliteration language, similar to how one boy today would say to another, “Dude, you totally destroyed him.” For example, Copan says:

Egypt’s Tuthmosis III (later fifteenth century) boasted that ‘the numerous army of Mitanni was overthrown within the hour, annihilated totally, like those now not existent.’ In fact, Mitanni’s forces lived on to fight in the fifteenth and fourteenth centuries BC. (p. 172)

This kind of hyperbole can also be found in the records of the Hittite Mursilli II, the Egyptians Rameses II and Merneptah, the Moabite Mesha, and the Assyrian Sennacherib.

The fact that haram might not necessarily mean killing everyone is evident in Deuteronomy 7. In verse 2, God tells them to utterly destroy (haram) the seven Canaanite nations, but then, as Copan points out, he tells them not to intermarry with them. How can you intermarry with dead people? The whole context of Chapter 7 shows that God is primarily creating a ban on Canaanite thinking and culture – they are to be shunned and debased as unclean. The focus is on destroying their religion: verse 5 continues with, “Break down their altars, smash their sacred stones, cut down their Asherah poles and burn their idols in the fire. For you are a people holy to the Lord your God.” Copan cites scholars that haram is thus focusing on obliterating political/military strongholds, desecrating religious symbols (high places, temples, etc.), and “driving out” or dispossessing the people of the land. In other words, the focus of the ban was on wiping out the corrupted Canaanite identity and culture, and above all their idolatry, not so much on taking the lives of the Canaanites themselves.

A last note is that the Old Testament commonly refers to “driving out” and “dispossessing” the Canaanites, as opposed to killing them. Presumably this meant that all those who would flee were allowed to. Only those who resisted and fought would be killed.

If Some Women and Children Did Die

Despite this significant down-tone of the brutality of the occupation of Canaan, suppose we still have to admit that some women and children were killed. The text isn’t clear, so we should be ready to deal with a worse-case scenario. For example, Deuteronomy 20 commands the “destruction of everything that breathes” among the Caananites in contrast (“however,” v. 16) to nations outside the promised land, from which the Israelites could keep the women, children and livestock as plunder (v. 14). So, presumably, Canaanite women and children couldn’t be kept as plunder. What then was their fate? More subjectively, scriptures such as Joshua 1 seem to express God’s displeasure when devotion to destruction (harem) is not complete, and we see that when the Israelite Achan is cut off from Israel and stoned after he took objects under the ban during the battle of Jericho, his wives and children are stoned with him (Joshua 7:24-25). The point is that God’s command was intended to be very severe and that noncombatants and families weren’t necessarily exempt from punishment in the ancient Semitic conscience. So we are still faced with the possibility that God commanded, and the Israelites executed, the death penalty for both combatants and noncombatants in those Canaanite lands. Is this the Bible committing moral suicide? Not so fast: let’s think it through. The Israelites would have committed a moral atrocity by killing the Canaanites if and only if any of the following scenarios were true:

(1) It was wrong for God to desire the death of the Canaanites. That is, the Canaanite women, children, etc. were innocent and not worthy of death.

(2) Human hands were not a legitimate means for God to accomplish the death of the Canaanites. That is, although Providence might have desired their death, it is always wrong for men to kill other men, so it is impossible for them to be the agents of God’s judgement (at least when it comes to the death penalty).

(3) Even though it would have been possible for God to have ordered Israel to execute his justice, Israel did not receive the command. Perhaps the God who ordered the death of the Canaanites was only an invention of religious leaders to accomplish their political conquest – not the True God.

(4) Even if Israel had indeed received a divine command, they were motivated not by this command, but by selfish motives for invading Canaan (greed for the land, xenophobic hatred, etc.), and thus did the right thing for the wrong reason. Similarly God acted with unloving, wantonly wrathful motives, not demonstrating love for the Canaanites.

I think that all four of these conditions are false, and therefore, by indirect reasoning, the Israelites did NOT commit a moral atrocity. If none of the above conditions is true, then God rightly desired the death of the Canaanites and lawfully delegated the task to Israel, who, accordingly, received a true revelation from God and acted in faith and holy fear. There is nothing ignoble anywhere in the equation. My next four blog posts will aim at these four points, and will, I hope, show us how we can gladly accept God’s war on the Canaanites as a triumph of his justice, love, and strength, not as something to be ashamed about.

Progressive revelation & cultural context

How do we interpret the Mosaic Law? Are we to destroy our homes if mold keeps growing in them, and go to the pastor if we have a persistent white bump on our skin? Are we to accept the killing of the Canaanites as an enduring precedent for how God might deal with heathen nations? (In which case we might have to support the Crusades etc.) Is polygamy okay, since David, Jacob, and Abraham participated in it? Questions like this demand accurate interpretation of the Old Testament and the Mosaic Law in particular. Paul Copan’s book Is God a Moral Monster? Making Sense of the Old Testament God inspired me to make some hermeneutic observations here. 

 

Progressive Revelation

A prominent piece of theology has to do with the “progressive revelation” of God to man. The main idea is that God has revealed himself in stages throughout history. Thus, although God is eternal and unchanging, men have understood him differently (with differing degrees of perfection) throughout history. (Sometimes referred to as “dispensations of grace” etc.)

Covenant Stages

Progressive revelation can be seen in the Covenants he makes with Adam, Noah, Abraham, Moses, and David. He reveals himself more and more in each of the covenants and gives conditional promises (covenants) that lead his chosen faith community closer and closer to the revelation of the Messiah. As Copan points out (p. 65), even within the history of Israel itself there are stages to how God relates to man. In each stage the covenant people are referred to with different Semitic words.

  1. Ancestral wandering clan (Genesis 10:31-32)
  2. Theocratic  people under the prophets (Genesis 12:2, Exodus 1:9, 3:7…)
  3. Monarchy, institutional state (1 Samuel 24:20)
  4. Afflicted remnant (Jeremiah 42:4)
  5. Postexilic community/assembly of promise (Ezra 2:64)

The Covenant People as a Maturing Bride

Evolutionists might have a grain of truth in saying that there have been certain kinds of improvement over time in the human race. Mankind has had a long way to go in climbing back up from the Fall, and God has been nurturing her toward maturity. The imagery of a bride in the process of preparation can be found throughout scripture  referring to the Covenant People. For example, in prophetic metaphor in Ezekiel 16 God describes his Covenant people as a child who he nurtures until she is full grown and ready for marriage. In Revelation the people of God are called the “bride who has made herself ready.” Like the Hebrew wedding ritual, only after a time of preparation and sanctification will the husband come for his bride. Therefore, the Mosaic Covenant should be seen as a stage in the gradual enlightenment of the people of God.

The Promises of Another Covenant

The Mosaic Covenant never claims to be ultimate. In Jeremiah, God promises another, better covenant in which he will write his law on the hearts of his people. The Lord tells Moses that he will raise up another prophet like himself (Deuteronomy). Therefore the Mosaic Covenant should not be seen as absolute and final revelation, but rather as an intermediate and less perfect one.

The Purpose of the Mosaic Covenant

God in his wisdom knew that to prepare the Covenant People for the messiah, they needed a tutor; so he sent the Law. The law is not, by nature, not an agent of faith, but rather an agent by which the need for faith is made manifest. Consider Galatians 3:17-25:

The Law, which came four hundred and thirty years later, does not invalidate [the Abrahamic] covenant previously ratified by God, so as to nullify the promise. For if the inheritance is based on law, it is no longer based on a promise; but God has granted it to Abraham by means of a promise.

Why the Law then? It was added because of transgressions, having been ordained through angels by the agency of a mediator, until the seed would come to whom the promise had been made…. For if a law had been given which was able to impart life, then righteousness would indeed have been based on law. But the Scripture has shut up everyone under sin, so that the promise by faith in Jesus Christ might be given to those who believe.

But before faith came, we were kept in custody under the law, being shut up to the faith which was later to be revealed. Therefore the Law has become our tutor to lead us to Christ, so that we may be justified by faith. But now that faith has come, we are no longer under a tutor. For you are all sons of God through faith in Christ Jesus.

Therefore the Mosaic Covenant is essentially prophetic in nature. It should be seen as a preliminary and preparatory revelation, creating the need for faith in future grace through a system of visible signs and types that prefigure Christ and his atonement. It was never intended to be an end in itself or to supply righteousness, and the provisions of the law cannot be simply taken at face-value without understanding this prophetic function.

Contextualization

The Mosaic Law was spoken to members of the ancient Semitic or Near Eastern culture. Their world was quite different from ours. As with all scripture, it contains eternal truth, but this truth is subject to its meaning, and its meaning must be interpreted through language, and language is a function of culture. The fact that God’s revelation was contextually tailored to the Ancient Near East (and thus must be understood as nearly through that lens as possible) is shown through the many references that the Law makes to that culture. The Mosaic law utilized, referred to, forbade, and improved upon different aspects of Semitic culture (we’ll look at examples later). Many seemingly arbitrary laws take on new meaning when we understand that God had cultural references in mind that Israelites would have understood loud and clear. Because the Bible was written to a specific group of people at a particular place and time, extreme hermeneutical care should be taken to consider the cultural and linguistic context in order to understand the significance that the Law had for those for whom it was intended.

Conclusion

The Mosaic Law must not be understood as an absolute moral standard, but as a tutorial code that would evolve the faith of the people of Israel in such a way as to prepare them for the Messiah, as part of the overall growth of God’s people. Furthermore, they must be understood as they would have been understood by their original audience, the Israelites and their ancient Near East cultural context. Copan talks about the law as a “compromise” that bridges ancient semitic culture to the New Covenant. Does this mean that the Mosaic law does not contain eternal, divine truth? Does it mean that the books of the Old Testament were not inspired – every jot and tittle? No. It just means that these perfect revelations were perfect but not entire, but each cumulatively leading to Jesus. Even now in the church age, our revelation is incomplete, as we “see through a glass darkly” until we meet Him face to face.

The Mosaic Law must be understood this way, as a stage in progressive revelation that was directed toward a people in ancient Near Eastern culture. To absolutize it is to misapply it. I plan on writing several posts on the killing of the Canaanites and the treatment of women, slaves etc. in the Old Testament, and I will bank on and refer to these hermeneutical presuppositions.

What are we to make of Jesus Christ?

What are we to make of Jesus Christ? C.S. Lewis responds to a question with a brilliant exposition of his and others’ “lunatic, liar, or lord” logic.

 

 

If this essay doesn’t either make you flushed with joy at the wonder of Jesus Christ or angry that his presumptuous insanity ever became the world’s largest religion, I don’t know what response is left to you. May we deal rightly with Jesus. It is the most important thing we will ever do.

If you want to read the article instead of listening to it, here is a PDF.

C.S. Lewis on a “Christian Political Party”

 

I came across this essay, “Meditation on the Third Commandment”, by C.S. Lewis, while reading God in the Dock, a collection of his lesser-known writings. He brings in a reminder not to believe that the Kingdom of God will be achieved by political means. His essay is expressed in terms of the 1940’s political situation in England, but it is remarkably relevant to the United States in the twenty-first century. In this historically “Christian country”, it is easy to over-associate our political and social beliefs with our religious beliefs, to get caught thinking (or at least feeling), “If only this law would be passed, if only this political party would succeed, then our country would get right with God again.” But to do so is to run the risk of breaking the Third Commandment.

“You shall not misuse the name of the Lord your God” (Exodus 20:7)

We must not attach the name of the Lord to anything man-made. The Kingdom that Jesus preached was decidedly unpolitical (“render unto Caesar what is Caesar’s”), despite the longings of Israel for political deliverance from the Romans. Although we must maintain strong hope and desire that the power of God will influence all layers of culture, including our government, we should take care not to expect that His power will manifest itself as a particular human-level institution or political platform. C.S. Lewis says it much better than I can, so I highly recommend reading this article, bearing in mind that a little cultural transposition is necessary.

“Meditation on the Third Commandment”
(C.S. Lewis, 1941)

 

How Baptism can be called necessary for salvation

Say there is a fire in a building and two men are trapped inside. A fireman appears and says, “I’m here to save you!” The men say, “Thank God! How do we get out?” The fireman says, “I know the way. Tie this cable that is around my waist around yours, and then follow me.” But the second man replies, “Why do I have to tie the cable around my waist? It might get tangled on the debris. Let me just follow you.” So both men follow the fireman, but only the first man ties the cable around his waist. Now, as they are escaping, a burning wooden beam falls and blocks the door. Other firemen appear on the roof and are able to pull up the fireman and the first man by the cable to safety. However, the second man was unable to climb out. He called up to the fireman as he was perishing, “Why didn’t you save me?” But the fireman called back down, “Why didn’t you trust me?”

The parable is imperfect, but the point is simply this: One cannot truly have faith in something if he rejects commands to demonstrate that faith through action. The ordinance of Baptism has always been associated with faith. It is the action that seals faith, just like tying the cable around his waist sealed the faith of the first man. That is the sense in which it can be called necessary for salvation, not as a replacement for true faith but as its necessary manifestation.

Visible signs: A Protestant defends controversial Catholic doctrines

The Catholic Church has been accused of corrupting the essentials of the Christian faith. Catholics maintain the importance of a priesthood to steward the faith, claim that Baptism and Holy Communion are necessary for salvation, and that Christ is fully and really present in the elements of Holy Communion. Protestants decry these as denial of the priesthood of the believer, salvation by ritualistic good works, and hocus-pocus cannibalism. Although I believe that the Catholic Church has exaggerated some of its doctrines beyond what the Bible teaches, and is encumbered in some areas by centuries of gradual accumulation of pharisaical over-complication, recent inquiries lead me to believe that these accusations do not fully understand Catholic doctrine. Moreover, I believe it is possible to reconcile some of the more controversial Catholic doctrines with what the Bible teaches. Many of the supposed errors of Catholicism can be explained if we make a crucial assumption: that the language whereby God communicates with man is through visible signs. I will explain this idea and show how it works to account for  the controversial Catholic doctrines of the Church, Priesthood, Baptism and Transubstantiation, while showing that these doctrines are not, if properly understood and practiced, a betrayal of Biblical Christianity. The goal for all of this is to show that it is possible for Protestants and Catholics to strive for unity through a deeper understanding of these doctrines. Such unity would be of great value to the church.

Understanding the Sacramental Paradigm

The Catholic Catechism describes the basis for the belief in a visible symbolic language of interaction between God and man: God conveys his grace to man, and man renders his worship to God, by way of rituals that signify spiritual realities and form a bridge of meaning between the temporal and eternal. These signs and symbols are called the sacraments. “A sacramental celebration is a meeting of God’s children with their Father, in Christ and the Holy Spirit; this meeting takes the form of a dialogue, through actions and words” (Catechism, 1146). The core of this philosophy is rooted in human nature.

 In human life, signs and symbols occupy an important place. As a being at once body and spirit, man expresses and perceives spiritual realities through physical signs and symbols. As a social being, man needs signs and symbols to communicate with others, through language, gestures, and actions. The same holds true for his relationship with God. (Catechism, 1146)

Do visible signs usher in heavenly realities? Scriptures can be offered that support and defend the sacraments, and scholars have debated for centuries. Let me offer to broad ideas that verify that we communicate with God through visible signs.

First, the unique miracle of Christianity is that God has communicated redemption to us visibly and entered the physical realm. In Jesus Christ, God came from that which we could not experience to become like us, tangible and understandable to us. That is the heart of the wondrous Gospel—Immanuel, God With Us, the God-Man, the Word and Revelation of the Unseen God! Catholic.org makes the analogy of Jesus and the sacraments:

 The great mystery of the union in Christ of a human nature with the second Person of the Godhead is that the human actions and sufferings of Christ are divine actions and sufferings. The sacraments are a living continuation of this mystery. There are earthly, external signs here which, of themselves, could never acquire any supernatural significance, but the signs of the sacraments have been made by Christ into vehicles of his grace. They effect in men the grace for which Christ made them the sign.

In no other major religion does God Himself so enter the physical. Furthermore, we will have resurrected bodies—again, a redemption of the physical, which is not the same as simply enlightening us to a spiritual plane. Therefore, the very Incarnation of Jesus set the precedent for a sign economy.

Second, we express faith back to God visibly. True faith is not intellectual assent, but a response with “heart, soul, mind and strength.” The New Testament cautions us countless times to express the sincerity of our belief through actions. As James says, “Was not Abraham our father justified by works when he offered up Isaac his son on the altar? You see that faith was working with his works, and as a result of the works, faith was perfected” (James 2:21-22).

There is a fullness, a reality, a consummation that only comes to faith when it is acted upon. Like the old example says, one might believe that the tight-rope walker can carry him across the canyon, but he does not truly have faith until he climbs into the walker’s arms.

If man has both divine and earthly natures, and God came to earth to partake of both, and if man offers back faith through both, then it makes sense that our communication with God would be in a language of holy signs which, by God’s power, themselves bridge the sacred and mundane, to bring our human hearts into God’s heavenly presence.

Controversial Doctrines Understood through the Sacramental Paradigm

The presupposition that visible  rites are the vessels of heavenly realities has given rise to many of the doctrines that Protestants take issue with. However, if we think through this sacramental lens, the doctrines seem less than heretical.

The Church

In Catholicism, the Church, the Body of Christ, is the great sacrament by which God communicates the gospel to the world. The Latin phrase extra Ecclesiam nulla salus means: “outside the church there is no salvation” (Wikipedia). The Catechism interprets this to mean that “all salvation comes from Christ the Head through the Church which is his Body.” Is this adding to salvation by requiring “church membership” as a distinct or separate requirement? I don’t think so. Why? All Christians affirm that there is no salvation without being united with Christ, being “in Him,” and all believe that one is united to the Body of Christ on the basis of faith, and that receiving the life of Christ by grace through faith unites one to the Body of Christ. Furthermore, it is impossible to be a member of Christ’s Body and yet at the same time, not a member.  The difference is that Catholics connect the Body Christ in the mystical sense with the Body of Christ that exists in the world—the church is the visible sign of the mystical reality. The Church is the representation of that entity to which every true believer belongs. So, because Catholics believe that membership in the earthly Body of Christ is sacramentally united with membership in the mystical or heavenly Body of Christ, they do not hold to a separate source of salvation. They simply define the expression of the heavenly reality in more concrete terms.

The Priesthood

In Catholicism, priests, bishops, and above all the Pope are said to represent the office of Christ. For example, priests proclaim salvation during confession, and the Pope speaks with divine authority when he makes proclamations ex cathedra. Is this elevating others to the level of Christ, or granting authority to men that belongs to God?

Not under a “visible sign” worldview. All Christians believe that Jesus is our shepherd and high priest, and that he is continually performing priestly intercession for us before the father, and conveying to us the blessings of priesthood by his spirit.  Catholics believe that human priests are sacramental representations of Jesus, not additional mediators between God and man. Catholic doctrine states that the services of the priest are effective regardless of the worthiness of the priest; rather, they are effective ex opere operato, i.e., by virtue of their being done. This shows that priests do not represent an intermediate gateway to Christ, per se. If they were a gateway, then, like a kink in a hose, a breach in their holiness would damage the services of sacraments administered through them. On the contrary, the priests are representational in their service—meaning that they represent Jesus to the Church, and the Church to Jesus. Just as the Church is the visible sign of the Body of Christ, the priests represent Christ the Head. They bear Christ’s authority and conduct his ministries as the signs of the invisible Christ who presides spiritually over the worship of the church. Thus it can be properly said that it is not the priest himself, but Christ, who conducts the worship of the Mass, and when the priest offers the Eucharist, it is Christ himself who offers Himself as the sacrifice and the feast, even as he did on the Cross. If priests are seen to truly signify Christ, then their role in the Mass, rather than creating unnecessary intermediate channels of grace, increases the immediacy and power with which Christ’s presence and ministry is experienced.

The Necessity of Baptism

Just as the priests visibly signify and communicate to the visible world the spiritual presence of Christ, and just as the visible gathering of the Church signifies the Body of Christ, his Spiritual Community of Worshippers, the sacraments signify the holy exchanges by which God communicates his grace through faith to man, and man offers back faith and worship. Catholics say that partaking of Baptism and Holy Communion is necessary for salvation. “The Church affirms that for believers the sacraments of the New Covenant are necessary for salvation” (1129). In particular, the Catechism affirms that Baptism and Holy Communion are necessary for initiation into the redeemed community of the church.

Is this tantamount to works-based salvation? Is the requirement of participation in ceremonial rites not the same as “works of the flesh,” while the Bible says that salvation is by grace alone through faith alone? Not under a sacramental paradigm. Take Baptism for instance. Is the sprinkling or immersion in water by the priest, an act that is done in order to earn salvation? No, they are acts of faith. The Catechism states:

The purpose of the sacraments is to sanctify men, to build up the Body of Christ and, finally, to give worship to God. Because they are signs they also instruct. They not only presuppose faith, but by words and objects they also nourish, strengthen, and express it. That is why they are called ‘sacraments of faith.” (1123).

Just as before, the Catholic Church simply presupposes that the spiritual reality of faith must be fully realized in a visible expression that “expresses” it. Since the sacraments “presuppose faith,” they consummate it, rather than replace it or add to it. The Catholic Church denies that a sacrament is effective if administered to someone without the right disposition of faith. And yet, Catholics believe that baptism is essential in the formation of full faith in the person. If one refuses baptism (knowing of its existence) he rejects the sign of the reality, through which the reality is consummated. How can one possess the reality if he rejects its manifestation? Consider a man who says that he loves a woman and will never leave her, but refuses to marry her. His commitment could properly be denied. It is the same sort of situation here.

Transubstantiation

The Catholic Church affirms the doctrine of transubstantiation, that in the bread and wine of Holy Communion “the body and blood, together with the soul and divinity, of our Lord Jesus Christ and, therefore, the whole Christ is truly, really, and substantially contained” (1374). The difference between transubstantiation (the Catholic doctrine) and consubstantiation (the Lutheran doctrine) is simply one of semantics: most Catholics will not agree that this means that they are participating in a cannibalistic act of eating the body of Christ on a molecular, cellular level. Catholics rely on the Aristotilian notion of “substance”, in which a substance transcends the sum of its properties or physical descriptors (as wax may change form, but still be wax). Thus the doctrine inevitably abstracts itself beyond crude physicality. Nevertheless, the Catechism states, “the signs of bread and wine become, in a way surpassing understanding, the Body and Blood of Christ” (1333). The elements of bread and wine are the body of Christ, rather than being simply symbols or memorials of Him; though perhaps not “physically” present, Christ can be said to be literally, truly, really, or actually present in the elements.

Why must Christ be so present in the Eucharist? Because it is the visible sign by which we experience the spiritual reality. Again, according to the visible sign paradigm, to participate in the atoning death of Christ in the fullest sense requires that we experience it both mentally/spiritually AND physically, since God’s graces and our worshipful responses are communicated most truly when they are communicated concurrently in both dimensions, not in one or the other separately. Christ’s atonement, eternally true in the spiritual realm, is communicated to our bipartite natures by a means at once both spiritual and, yes, physical, through the elements. Thus properly understood, transubstantiation is a miracle in which the elements of communion undergo a sort of “hypostatic union” that perpetuates the mystery of the hypostatic union of His human and divine natures, and allows us to perpetually experience the fullness of his sacrifice on the Cross.

Dangers and Benefits of the Sacramental Paradigm

 The dangers of excess on the side of the sacramental paradigm are obvious from history. Men can easily forget the signified spiritual truths, and attach slavish obligation to the performance of the physical signs. The signs can easily become “of this world.” Saussure’s semiotics tell us that, if the signs are not properly understood, they cease to exist as transporters of meaning. Without proper teaching and instruction from the word, the holiness of the sacraments will disintegrate and leave only ritualistic shells. This is what drove the Protestant denominations back to the rudiments of the Bible, and that to this day leaves many nominal Catholics without a true saving faith.

However, the sacraments, if taught correctly, have great power to awaken the spiritual life. The frequent problem of the Protestant denominations is that they are plain and uninspiring. They sometimes do not capture the heart with the beauty and sacred majesty of the gospel, because they are so concerned with preserving the intellectual/spiritual side of faith. By bringing the faith into a more tangible, immediate experience, the Catholic can experience God’s presence with the senses and worship with great awe. A visible-sign theology does not necessarily reduce faith—it can increase it. Instead of merely affirming abstract truths, one’s faith is confronted with an array of miracles spread out before him, full of sacred power. So there is much good that can come from the sacramental paradigm.

The Take-away: Seeking Unity

I have attempted to show how some of the Catholic doctrines that Protestants disdain may in fact be reconciled with Biblical faith. My approach has been to highlight the pervasive theme of sacramental economy in Catholic doctrine. I don’t claim that this concept is better than a more straightforward “sola fide” approach to the communication of God and man, but I believe it at least expresses a valid point of view through which we may perceive the Christian faith. Actually I believe that the perfect perspective lies at some mysterious place near the intersection of the many sects of Christianity. That’s why I am eager for Catholics, Protestants, Orthodox, Coptics, and all Christians to examine our faith anew and determine exactly which hills we are willing to die on. What will be worth fighting over when we look back 100 years from now? Or from heaven? There are certainly some things that should be contended for, but there are also many unnecessary divisions in the church. I am eager for the day when the church will reach new levels of unity. Am I going to convert to Catholicism? That hasn’t been the point of this essay. The point has been to expand my and my readers’ idea of what Catholicism teaches in relation to the Bible and in relation to our own denominations, so that we might be more likely to extend a hand of fellowship or sit down to engage in a discussion with Catholics in the future. I hope that you will join me in pursuing this in the future.

Soli Deo gloria.