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Has Your Bible Become A Quran?
blogs.ancientfaith.com/glory2godforallthings ^ | Fr. Stephen Freeman

Posted on 10/01/2014 9:18:18 PM PDT by bad company

Those who engage in debates on a regular basis know that the argument itself can easily shape the points involved. This is another way of saying that some debates should be avoided entirely since merely getting involved in them can be the road to ruin. There are a number of Christian scholars (particularly among the Orthodox) who think that the classical debates between Christians and Muslims during the Middle Ages had just such disastrous results for Christian thinking.

Now when engaging in religious debates it is all too easy to agree to things that might make for later problems. It is possible, for example, to agree to a comparison of the Scriptures of the Old and New Testament and the Book of the Quran. After all, Muslims have a holy book – Christians have a holy book. Why should we not debate whose holy book is better?

It is even possible to agree with the Muslim contention that Christians (and Jews) are “People of the Book.” Of course Muslims meant that Christians and Jews were people of an inferior book, but were somehow better than pagans. Again, it is possible, nevertheless, to let the matter ride and agree that Christians are “People of the Book.”

And it is also possible to give wide latitude to the Muslim claim that the most essential matter with regard to God is “Islam,” that is “submission.” After all, if God is the Lord of all creation, then how is submitting to Him, recognizing and accepting that He is God, not the most important thing?

But each of these proposals had disastrous results in the history of Christianity and may very well be the source of a number of modern distortions within the Christian faith.

Thus, at the outset I will state:

The Bible is not the Christian Holy Book. Christians (and Jews) are not People of the Book. Submission to God is not a proper way to describe the Christian faith Further, any and all of these claims, once accepted, lead to fundamental distortions of Christianity. An extreme way of saying this is that much of modern Christianity has been “Islamified.” Thinking critically about this is important – particularly in an era of renewed contact with Islam.

The Historical Debates

Most modern Christians are unaware of the contacts and debates between Christianity (particularly in the West) and Islam (particularly in Spain) during the Middle Ages. A great deal of the learning in early European Universities, especially in the model of scholasticism, owed much to the encounter with Islam scholasticism – this was especially so for the work with Aristotelean philosophy. Christian, Jewish and Muslim scholars, such as Thomas Aquinas, Moses Maimonides, and Ibn Rushd (Averroes), are foundational for Medieval thought. (Averroes is sometimes called the “Founding Father of Western secularism“). But the rationalist movement represented by these schools had lasting effects in the Christian West – not all for the best.

The notion of the Scripture as the Book whose place and authority in Christian life are similar to the Quran in Islamic life is one such idea. Islam has no Church – no one stands between the believer and Allah. There are communities, to be sure, but not in the necessary form of classical Christianity. The exaltation of the sovereignty of God and the working of the Divine Will (predestination) are hallmarks of Muslim thought. They eventually become hallmarks within certain forms of Christian scholasticism.

The Protestant Reformation is rightly described as a product of Christian scholasticism. Other historical forces shaped it, but it is worth noting that Luther, Calvin and their like were all “schoolmen.” Their ideas, particularly in Calvin, were largely absent prior to the Medieval dialogs with Islamic scholasticism. It is not that the Reformers borrowed directly from Islam – but that Islam contributed certain key notions that have, in time, become foundational for certain segments of contemporary Christianity.

The Bible is not the Christian Holy Book

As I have recently written, the Bible is properly seen as the Holy Scriptures, a collection of writings that span some 1500 years or more. They represent a variety of genres, address very different situations and understandings of God, and lastly (in the case of the New Testament) represent the internal documents of the primitive Christian community. Christians treat these books as inspired, though there are some books not included, or only included by some Christians, that are also recognized as having a case for inspiration.

The Christian Scriptures are books (particularly in the Old Testament) that have a unique history of interpretation. Christians and Jews, traditionally, do not read these books in the same manner. In such a sense, they do not possess an “objective” meaning. Indeed, Christian Fathers have recognized more than one meaning being present in the text.

The Christian community predates its own texts (the New Testament) and is not described as in any way having a foundation on the Scriptures – the Apostles and Prophets are described as the foundation of the Church. And though the Tradition does not describe the Scriptures as somehow inferior to the Church, neither do they consider the Scriptures to exist apart from the Church. They are the Church’s book.

In short, the place of the Scriptures within Christianity are utterly unlike the place of the Quran in Islam. Any confusion on this point is a distortion of the Scriptures.

We are not People of the Book

Christians are not baptized into the Bible. Jews were circumcised and made part of the Covenant people before ever a word of Scripture was written. God revealed Himself as the God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob some hundreds of years before Moses ever wrote a line.

Christians may rightly see Islam as an ersatz version of Christianity – an attempt to create a rival to meet the peculiar needs and desires of the man, Muhammed. The Quran is Muhammed’s distorted idea of the role played by a “book” in the life of Christianity and Judaism. It is his attempt to create a rival. But this book, unlike any writing or utterance of a Biblical prophet, came with new claims. The Quran is what a misinformed desert preacher thought the Christian and Jewish holy books looked like. It is a poor substitute and a caricature of those writings. In this sense, the Quran is more akin to the Book of Mormon, a fabrication that tells what Upstate New York con-men thought an ancient religious book should look like. It tells us much about the mind of 19th century Upstate New York, but nothing about God. The Quran tells us about the perception of a 7th century Arabian merchant, but nothing about God.

It is thus a supreme religious irony that such a misperception should have changed how Christians saw their own sacred texts. But, it can be argued, this is indeed the case. The movement from authoritative Church to authoritative book that occurs over the 15th and 16th centuries (the Protestant Reformation), should not be considered apart from the dialog with Islam in the two or three centuries that preceded it. It is worth noting that scholasticism in the West was largely begun in Andalusian Islam. It was not a natural development from within. Scholasticism was ultimately rejected in the Christian East.

Martin Luther’s, “Hier, stehe ich!” (demanding that only a Scriptural argument would be an acceptable response to his position) would have been unimaginable four or five hundred years before. The “Bible” had not yet become a Christian Quran. Today, however, many Christians are indeed, “People of the Book.”

Christianity is not submission to God

On the face of it, denying that Christianity is submission to God seems ludicrous. Surely, if God is truly God, then submission to Him is the only proper response. But submission is not a word that passes the lips of Christ. His invitation to become a child of the Father is not a demand to submit to the Supreme Being. It is why there can be no conversion at the point of a sword in Christianity, and why conversions at the point of a sword have never ceased in Islam. (Such conversions have indeed occurred in Christian history – but have been later subjected to deep criticism and condemnation).

The question placed in Christian Baptism (Orthodox) is: “Do you unite yourself to Christ?” This is the language of union, reflecting St. Paul’s teaching that Baptism is union with the death and resurrection of Christ. The modern Evangelical phrase, “Do you accept Jesus Christ as your Lord and Savior?” has more in common with Muslim submission. For there need be no union implied in the question – many who have become Christians under the guise of this question have no perception of union whatsoever.

Obedience to the gospel is, in critically important ways, not at all the same thing as submission. In proper Christian understanding, obedience is a cooperative action, a synergy between God and believer. As such, it is part of the eternal dance of union between Creator and created. Submission (particularly as taught in Islam) contains no synergy – it is the recognition of a force that can only move in one direction. It is the diminution of the human person, even its obliteration. Obedience, rightly understood, is an invitation into true Personhood – and, strangely, the beginning of true freedom.

Classical Christianity exalts the dignity of the human person and proclaims a gospel that unites humankind to God. The proclamation of Christ’s Lordship, though derived from Christian teaching, can easily become a distortion that takes on the submission demands of classical Islam. I have seen such a Christianity. It is not a pleasant place to dwell.

Contemporary Christianity needs to come to its historic senses and reexamine its various distortions of the gospel. Christ is not a cypher for Allah – they are nothing alike. The fullness of Christian distinctives is required in our present confrontation with Islam. The Bible is not the Christian Quran. It is nothing like it. Being able to articulate this is essential. Christians are the Body of Christ and not People of the Book. The absence of a true ecclesiology in contemporary Christianity is a hallmark of its Islamification. The call to relationship with God in Christ, true union in the Divine Life of the Triune God, must be rightly proclaimed and taught among Christians. We have centuries of unthinking to do if we are to reclaim the wholeness of the Christian faith and speak truth to error.


TOPICS: Orthodox Christian
KEYWORDS: bible; quran
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1 posted on 10/01/2014 9:18:18 PM PDT by bad company
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To: bad company

An interesting article. It’s good to see an Orthodox perspective .


2 posted on 10/01/2014 9:39:22 PM PDT by Southside_Chicago_Republican (If liberty means anything at all, it means the right to tell people what they do not want to hear.)
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To: bad company

Bold assertions, but consider the issue of the canon.

Protestants say that Catholics “added” seven books to the Old Testament. In fact, Luther even argued that seven New Testament books were not inspired, and rejected all doctrine from those seven books. (Modern Protestants have uniformly restored the seven New Testament deuterocanonicals to their bibles, so this has been forgotten largely.)

Catholics assert that they have always been part of the canon. And indeed, they were universally read as scripture in masses (the Catholic test of what is scripture) since the first century.

But the weird truth is that there had always been substantial grey shades to the biblical canon until the Council of Trent; before then, there had never been a universal synod declaring the content of the canons. At Trent, the Church had to look to the universal usage among the particular churches to infallibly discern the canonicity of the dueterocanonicals.

The Protestant assertion that St. Jerome rejected the canon is both malarkey (he explains that he was reacting merely to the impossibility of winning Jews over to the Church’s theology using them, since the Jews — not he — reject the deuterocanonicals) and also irrelevant (if he only came to accept the deuterocanonicals under duress from the Pope, does that not demonstrate that the Pope authoritatively asserted the matter to him?)

But the weakness of the Protestant position that any one of the deuterocanonicals is not scriptural doesn’t wash away the awkward lack of definition of the canon:

A medieval gloss of the bible warns of the futility of basing theological arguments on those books;

Jesus himself cites as scripture two books which didn’t make the Catholic canon; there were variations in the accepted New Testament canon for three centuries after Christ;

to this day, various Eastern churches hold additional books as canon (most commonly 3 Maccabees;

To this day, 2 Esdras (also known as 3 Esdras, or Greek Esdras) remains in a canonical limbo: It was part of many versions of the Septuagint, but the Council of Trent left it out of the list of books that must be defended as sources of doctrine, for the simple reason it had no unique doctrine. (It’s an abridged version of 1 Esdras, which itself is more commonly divided into two books, Ezra and Nehemiah.)

Truly, the bible is an expression of the Holy Tradition given to the Church by Christ. And while anything that is not in accord with the Scriptures is thereby revealed to be counterfeit to the Holy Tradition, and while it sustains that Holy Tradition, and while it breathes the life of that Holy Tradition within the reader of it, it is NOT the temporal source of that Holy Tradition.


3 posted on 10/01/2014 9:47:05 PM PDT by dangus
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To: bad company

4 posted on 10/01/2014 9:50:24 PM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet (The question isn't who is going to let me; it's who is going to stop me.)
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To: bad company
Classic Eastern church perspective that blames the problems of the universal Church on the West.

"Martin Luther’s, “Hier, stehe ich!” (demanding that only a Scriptural argument would be an acceptable response to his position) would have been unimaginable four or five hundred years before.

What a preposterous statement without a smidgen of support--except in slandering scholasticism. Luther himself rejected "the schoolmen," so calling him a scholastic is silly. Mainly though, the idea that the Bible was not seen by the early Church as her final unarguable authority--the very Testimony of the Apostles....is ridiculous.

Were the books of the Bible dictated by one man in the words of Allah, like the Koran claims of itself? NO. But the Word of God and the supreme authority which the Church must obey? YES.

5 posted on 10/01/2014 10:01:08 PM PDT by AnalogReigns (Real life is ANALOG...)
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To: Southside_Chicago_Republican

Much if not most of this is utter rubbish and not worth responding to further.


6 posted on 10/02/2014 1:15:53 AM PDT by caww
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To: bad company

John 8
32 And ye shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free.

Nothing to debate.


7 posted on 10/02/2014 1:33:09 AM PDT by ravenwolf (nd)
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To: bad company

Worthless article. Tears down the Bible more than Islam.

The Quran is not an ignorant book. It was very cleverly designed to invert Christianity in every respect for Muhammad’s evil and self-serving purposes. The author should read it.


8 posted on 10/02/2014 2:06:35 AM PDT by UnbelievingScumOnTheOtherSide (HELL, NO! BE UNGOVERNABLE! --- ISLAM DELENDA EST)
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To: bad company

A major difference between Islam and Christianity is the condescension of God.

Allah doesn’t lower himself to man, but God shown in Christianity and recorded in the Bible not only communes with man, He provided His Son to dwell with us and sacrificed Himself for our sins, so that we might be justified to live with Him.

Muslims, just like all men after the fall in the Garden, have the ability to discern between good and evil, but how Christians respond with righteousness and justice is different.

The Muslim may perceive unrighteousness, and demands judgment, but sees his delivery of justice as something identifiable with righteousness, worthy an eternal reward.

God has already provided the Judgment on the Cross. None of us are good, but only though faith in Christ might we be found righteous to be saved from condemnation.


9 posted on 10/02/2014 2:24:18 AM PDT by Cvengr (Adversity in life and death is inevitable. Thru faith in Christ, stress is optional.)
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To: bad company
We are not People of the Book

Christians are not baptized into the Bible. Jews were circumcised and made part of the Covenant people before ever a word of Scripture was written. God revealed Himself as the God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob some hundreds of years before Moses ever wrote a line.

Christians may rightly see Islam as an ersatz version of Christianity – an attempt to create a rival to meet the peculiar needs and desires of the man, Muhammed. The Quran is Muhammed’s distorted idea of the role played by a “book” in the life of Christianity and Judaism. It is his attempt to create a rival. But this book, unlike any writing or utterance of a Biblical prophet, came with new claims. The Quran is what a misinformed desert preacher thought the Christian and Jewish holy books looked like. It is a poor substitute and a caricature of those writings. In this sense, the Quran is more akin to the Book of Mormon, a fabrication that tells what Upstate New York con-men thought an ancient religious book should look like. It tells us much about the mind of 19th century Upstate New York, but nothing about God. The Quran tells us about the perception of a 7th century Arabian merchant, but nothing about God.

It is thus a supreme religious irony that such a misperception should have changed how Christians saw their own sacred texts. But, it can be argued, this is indeed the case. The movement from authoritative Church to authoritative book that occurs over the 15th and 16th centuries (the Protestant Reformation), should not be considered apart from the dialog with Islam in the two or three centuries that preceded it. It is worth noting that scholasticism in the West was largely begun in Andalusian Islam. It was not a natural development from within. Scholasticism was ultimately rejected in the Christian East.

Martin Luther’s, “Hier, stehe ich!” (demanding that only a Scriptural argument would be an acceptable response to his position) would have been unimaginable four or five hundred years before. The “Bible” had not yet become a Christian Quran. Today, however, many Christians are indeed, “People of the Book.”

Yesterday saw...a forceful plea from a key papal advisor [Bishop Salvatore Fisichella, the rector of the Lateran University and President of the Pontifical Academy for Life] to reject the idea of Christianity as a “Religion of the Book”....

.......the big debate over Dei Verbum at the time of the council pitted what was then known as the “two-source theory,” which held that Scripture and tradition are essentially two separate streams of revelation, against the “one-source theory,” which posited that Scripture is the lone source of revelation and tradition is an elaboration of it. In effect, Dei Verbum held that Scripture and tradition are interdependent and integrally related to one another.
-- from the thread Synod: Christianity not a 'Religion of the Book'


10 posted on 10/02/2014 4:52:36 AM PDT by Alex Murphy ("the defacto Leader of the FR Calvinist Protestant Brigades")
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To: Alex Murphy

Yep.

Moses didn’t write scrolls until shortly before his death. For forty years Israel followed God’s very specific laws and built the Tabernacle. Moses had spent several periods of forty days in supernatural communion with God (witnessed by all Israel), and then taught for forty years before anything was written down.


11 posted on 10/02/2014 5:05:44 AM PDT by jjotto ("Ya could look it up!")
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To: bad company; caww; metmom; boatbums; daniel1212; Iscool
>>Christianity is not submission to God<<

James 4:7 Submit yourselves therefore to God. Resist the devil, and he will flee from you.

Submit in Greek hupotassó - I place unde r, subject to; mid, pass: I submit, put myself into subjection.

Catholics relying on these leaders who are obviously ignorant of what the word of God says is not going to turn out well for them.

12 posted on 10/02/2014 6:47:14 AM PDT by CynicalBear (For I decided to know nothing among you except Jesus)
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To: bad company; KC_Lion; All
Yet another liturgical attack on the authenticity and inerrancy of the Bible. I could tell by the title. These are probably going to increase as the Catholic Church veers ever more left and the "unchangeable" church starts changing big time in all the wrong ways.

Jews are The People of the Book. THE people. No one else is.

Jews have many, many, many holy books. The Torah is the absolute pinnacle.

The rejection of submission to G-d and His Authority (and His laws) is the heresy at the heart of chrstianity that has made its current situation inevitable. Ditto for the creation of "natural law," a tactic to have G-d's Law without G-d.

13 posted on 10/02/2014 7:15:10 AM PDT by Zionist Conspirator (Throne and Altar! [In Jerusalem!!!])
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To: jjotto
Yep.

Moses didn’t write scrolls until shortly before his death. For forty years Israel followed God’s very specific laws and built the Tabernacle. Moses had spent several periods of forty days in supernatural communion with God (witnessed by all Israel), and then taught for forty years before anything was written down.

A good point, but I don't think that's what the Eastern Orthodox priest author of the article is saying. It strikes me as just one more attack on the authenticity and veracity of the Hebrew Bible in the name of chrstian tradition.

Chrstianity does not have the authentic Oral Torah. All its oral traditions are ultimately attacks aimed at the Hebrew Bible, from ancient typology to modern historical criticism.

14 posted on 10/02/2014 7:21:51 AM PDT by Zionist Conspirator (Throne and Altar! [In Jerusalem!!!])
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To: UnbelievingScumOnTheOtherSide
The Quran is not an ignorant book. It was very cleverly designed to invert Christianity in every respect for Muhammad’s evil and self-serving purposes. The author should read it.

He ought to spend some time first in reading the bible...

The modern Evangelical phrase, “Do you accept Jesus Christ as your Lord and Savior?” has more in common with Muslim submission. For there need be no union implied in the question – many who have become Christians under the guise of this question have no perception of union whatsoever.

The saddest part of this hit piece on Christianity is that there are so many who will listen to this unGodly tripe, and believe it, without checking with what God says about it...

Luk_1:47 And my spirit hath rejoiced in God my Saviour.

Mary needed a Saviour...

Luk_2:11 For unto you is born this day in the city of David a Saviour, which is Christ the Lord.

Joh_4:42 And said unto the woman, Now we believe, not because of thy saying: for we have heard him ourselves, and know that this is indeed the Christ, the Saviour of the world.

Jesus Christ was sent as the Saviour of the world but this moronic priest doesn't need one??? Do all those idiots teach this stuff...You'd better run away from them as fast as you can...

15 posted on 10/02/2014 7:42:56 AM PDT by Iscool
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To: jjotto
Moses didn’t write scrolls until shortly before his death. For forty years Israel followed God’s very specific laws and built the Tabernacle. Moses had spent several periods of forty days in supernatural communion with God (witnessed by all Israel), and then taught for forty years before anything was written down.

Nope...Moses started writing a couple of months after they left Egypt...

Exo_17:14 And the LORD said unto Moses, Write this for a memorial in a book, and rehearse it in the ears of Joshua: for I will utterly put out the remembrance of Amalek from under heaven.

And Moses continued to write during the 40 years as he was instructed...And Moses finished up here...

Deu 31:24 And it came to pass, when Moses had made an end of writing the words of this law in a book, until they were finished,

16 posted on 10/02/2014 8:04:48 AM PDT by Iscool
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To: CynicalBear; Alex Murphy; bkaycee; blue-duncan; boatbums; caww; daniel1212; Gamecock; HossB86; ...
It is not that the Reformers borrowed directly from Islam – but that Islam contributed certain key notions that have, in time, become foundational for certain segments of contemporary Christianity.

Good thing there's no Prot bashing threads ever posted on FR......

Sheesh, Catholics brag on giving the world the Bible, that we should say *thank you* to the Catholic church for "giving" the world the Bible, and then turn around and at every opportunity they get, disparage those who adhere to it as being authoritative.

A non-Catholic simply cannot do anything right for a Catholic.

17 posted on 10/02/2014 8:58:37 AM PDT by metmom (...fixing our eyes on Jesus, the Author and Perfecter of our faith...)
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To: bad company

Yeah. Jesus kept saying, “It is written...” because he was a closet Muslim.

The problem with the Roman Catholic Church was that its teachings CONTRADICTED scripture.


18 posted on 10/02/2014 9:05:22 AM PDT by Mr Rogers
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To: Zionist Conspirator
Jews are The People of the Book. THE people. No one else is.

Those of faith were, examples of which are found in chapter 11 of the NT book of Hebrews, beginning with Abel's blood sacrifice looking forward by faith to Christ's sacrifice, to Abraham's offering up his only begotten son looking forward by faith to Christ, followed by Moses and the temple blood sacrificial system.

And when the object of their faith came, the Messiah (Christ), the faithful Jews realized this is the one to whom their blood sacrificial system pointed, and accepted him. THESE are "the people of the book, no one else is."

Those who reject him and hate him, are no longer the people of the book, for the entire "book" points to faith in Christ. His blood offered, not just for Jews but the entire world.

19 posted on 10/02/2014 9:08:33 AM PDT by sasportas
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To: metmom
A non-Catholic simply cannot do anything right for a Catholic....

....until they convert to Catholicism. Then, suddenly, everything they do will be right. So long as they convert to the "right kind" of Catholicism, of course.

20 posted on 10/02/2014 9:23:17 AM PDT by Alex Murphy ("the defacto Leader of the FR Calvinist Protestant Brigades")
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