Posted on 01/12/2012 7:27:57 PM PST by rzman21
Do you understand what you are reading? How can I, unless someone guides me? (Acts 8:30, 31)
The problem of biblical hermeneutics the question of how to interpret the scriptures is by no means a recent one. Indeed, the Bible itself bears witness to the need for its careful interpretation, as illustrated by our epigraph.
What our epigraph also illustrates is the kernel of the central thesis of this article: namely, that the churchs scriptures are best understood from within the ecclesial context for which and in which they were written. The Bible, as the churchs book, needs to be studied in its own proper context for a text, any text, out of context is a pretext.[1] Just as Darwins The Origin of Species is best read and understood in the scientific context, and Shakespeares Julius Caesar is best heard and seen in a theatrical context, so the scriptures are best received and explored in an ecclesial context. Of course, Darwin can be read as philosophy and Shakespeare as history but that would be a mistake. It is just as much a mistake to reduce the Bible to history or philosophy, or (worse still) to read it as science or great literature.[2]
But what is an ecclesial reading? How do we read and interpret the text of scripture in its ecclesial context? In Part One of this article we shall explore this question with the aid, primarily, of scripture itself, but also by drawing on the example and teaching of the desert fathers. Part Two will explore the same question that of biblical hermeneutics but from a more theoretical and heuristic perspective, by offering a hermeneutic model that complements the theological exploration offered in Part One.
Searching the Scriptures Together
Then he said to them, You foolish men! So slow to believe all that the prophets have said! Was it not necessary that the Christ should suffer before entering into his glory? Then, starting with Moses and going through all the prophets, he explained to them the passages throughout the scriptures that were about him . Then they said to each other, Did not our hearts burn within us as he talked to us on the road and explained the scriptures to us? (Luke 24:25-27, 32)
Biblical fundamentalism, naïve literalism, reductionist notions of sola scriptura, individual and private interpretation of the churchs book, are all highly problematic, not least of all because they are, in fact, unbiblical. The Bible is a serious, adult book. It requires more than just reading: it requires closereading, which is to say study. In the Second Letter of Peter we have this about the letters of Paul:
In all his letters there are some difficult passages, the meaning of which the uneducated and untrained distort, in the same way that they distort the rest of scripture, to their own ruin. (2 Pet 3:16)
Clearly, this is more than just a salutary warning about the difficulty of reading the letters of Paul as the reference to the rest of scripture makes clear: it is a key hermeneutical principle which applies just as much to how we read the rest of scripture, lest we read it to our ruin. In the same letter, the author also warns us:
First of all you must understand this, that no scriptural prophecy is a matter for ones own interpretation; because no prophecy ever came from human initiative; rather Gods holy ones spoke as they were moved by the Holy Spirit. (2 Pet 1:20-21)
Despite their brevity, these passages identify some of the most important principles of biblical hermeneutics: scripture is both inspired and relational at both its inception and reception; and it deserves, indeed demands, our most sophisticated effort to understand it. It is never a matter of (what too often passes for) my simple faith[3] coming up with an immediate and idiosyncratic interpretation. To really understand holy scripture we have to be guided by Gods own Holy Spirit; and in dialogue with one another, since that guidance is always in the context of relationship:
They said to each other: Did not our hearts burn within us while he talked to us along the way, while he opened to us the scriptures? (Luke 24:32)
Note the emphasis on relationality and dialogue permeating this passage. Individualistic, simplistic, naïve or presumptuous reading of Gods word is rejected by the Bible itself, as a closer reading of the Bible, when it speaks about how to read Gods word, itself shows sometimes quite provocatively:
And the Lord said, Go and say to this people: Hear and hear, but do not understand; see and see, but do not perceive. Make the heart of this people fat, and their ears heavy, and shut their eyes; lest they see with their eyes, and hear with their ears, and understand with their hearts, and turn and be healed. (Isa 6:9-10)
That this passage is indeed about biblical hermeneutics is supported by the fact that Jesus himself uses it to make a point about how to interpret his own parables (Matt 13:13ff); which is to sayeverything he says to the crowd, for, as Matthew makes clear, Jesus only ever speaks to them in parables (13:34).This has huge implications for biblical hermeneutics (at the very least in regard to how we interpret the Gospels); especially when we consider that parabolē is the Greek word used to render the Hebrew maal, a word which denotes a well-known and widely used genre in biblical and inter-testamental literature and rabbinic teaching; a word that is best translated into modern English as: a subtle and complex saying, proverb or story requiring much careful interpretation in short, ariddle.[4] This particular parable/riddle from Isaiah is used by Jesus to explain how to interpret Jesus own parables/riddles. And Matthew adds: This was to fulfil what was spoken by the prophet: I will open my mouth in parables, I will utter what was hidden since the foundation of the world. (13:35)[5]To see, and really see, things hidden since the foundation of the world, we must be willing to admit that we do not see (cf. John 9:39); to hear, and really hear, things forgotten and repressed, we must acknowledge that we do not understand or else we cannot turn, and be saved: we cannot change if we do not know that we need to change; and unless we change, we cannot live; and finding life is the whole point of not just reading but searching the scriptures:
You search the scriptures because you think that in them you have eternal life, and it is they that bear witness to me; yet you refuse to come to me that you may have life. (John 5:39-40)
The purpose of the scriptures of the written witness to the word of God is that we might change (metanoia) the way we see and hear; and by so changing, come to live.
But the Bible can only be read as sacred scripture, as Gods word, in relationship with the Word which is sent to accomplish Gods purposes (cf. Isa 55:11); and that means within the ecclesial relationship to the apostolic (sent) community of faith which hands on the very tradition we now call scripture. In other words, I cannot understand what I am reading unless someone guides me:
And behold, an Ethiopian, a eunuch, a minister of the Kandake, queen of the Ethiopians, in charge of all her treasure, had come to Jerusalem to worship and was returning; seated in his chariot, he was reading the prophet Isaiah. And the Spirit said to Philip, Go up and join this chariot. So Philip ran to him, and heard him reading Isaiah the prophet, and asked, Do you understand what you are reading? And he said, How can I, unless someone guides me? And he invited Philip to come up and sit with him. Now the passage of the scripture he was reading was this:
As a sheep led to the slaughter or a lamb before its shearer is dumb, so he opens not his mouth. In his humiliation justice was denied him. Who can describe his generation? For his life is taken up from the earth.
And the eunuch said to Philip, About whom, pray, does the prophet say this, about himself or someone else? Then Philip opened his mouth, and beginning with this scripture he told him the good news of Jesus. (Acts 8:27-35)
This is a rare example of scripture directly commenting on scripture; and, more to the point, an example of scripture explicitly teaching us how to read scripture. It is, therefore, a most important and deeply revealing passage, deserving our close reading.
But before we do so, a word about how and why we are to do so, with a little help from the desert fathers.
A word from the fathers: the holy wholly other
Pay attention to what I tell you: whoever you may be, always have God before your eyes; whatever you do, do it according to the testimony of holy Scripture; in whatever place you live, do not easily leave it. Keep these three precepts and you will be saved. (Anthony n. 3)[6]
The close reading of scripture, studying the sacred page, and its centrality to the life of the Christian is, perhaps, nowhere more explicit or more ubiquitous a practice than it is in the life of the Christian monk[7] and this despite the fact that so very little is said about biblical interpretation in the monastic texts that bear witness to the earliest sources of monastic life and spirituality (in particular the various collections of Sayings of the Desert Fathers we shall be drawing on here). But then that same observation has to be made about scripture itself: the handful of texts that explicitly deal with scripture in the scriptures share the same reticence (and the same terse incisiveness) we encounter in the sayings and lives of the desert fathers.
The reticence is of course only apparent. Anyone familiar with monastic life knows that scripture is an all-pervading spirit, permeating not just the thought and word, but, more basically, the action, life, heart and soul of monks. Monastic life itself is a kind of living midrash, a visceral lectio divina, an incarnation of the Words word. In deep accord with scriptures own reflection on the divine word, monastic life, especially in its eremitic expression, says little about scripture; but what it says, says a great deal to those who have ears to hear and next to nothing at all to those who hear and hear again, but fail to understand.
Familiarity, as the cliché goes, breeds contempt. Our over-familiarity with the term holy scripture has largely deprived it of its original meaning, and us of discovering scriptures holiness; as our over-familiarity with particular texts (the canon within the canon) can blind us to the transformative potential of the Bible as a whole. The term holy originally denoted something asother and separate; something over-and-beyond the mundane and profane, above the temporal and secular; in short, holiness is about the transcendent, the wholly other.
You shall be holy to me, for I the Lord am holy, and I have separated you from the peoples, that you should be mine. (Lev 20:26)
It is this understanding of holiness that lies at the heart of monastic anachoresis (withdrawal) andcontemptus mundi (rejection of the world-as-we-have-made-it) which informs the specifically monastic approach to everything, including the reception of scripture.
Alas, the modern and postmodern (secular) reader tends to think of the term holy scripture as an obsequiously pious sobriquet for a largely irrelevant ancient text; as an ideologically loaded ensign in the contemporary culture wars a kind of fundamentalist flag asserting its conservative and obscurantist protest against modernity and its reduction of all texts to critique, particularly postmodernitys deconstruction of all grand narratives. Holy, in an increasingly, indeed militantly, antireligious and secularist world, has come to mean something altogether feeble, repressive, conservative and other worldly, rather than as something transformative, revolutionary, indeedsubversive and radically other-than-worldly; as something that has, to use a biblical term, lost its saltiness, its persuasive and pervasive savour indeed its parabolic power to change the world thus becoming good for nothing but to be thrown away (cf. Luke 14:34-35).
But holy in the original sense of the word is just what the scriptures must be if they are to make any sense at all as Gods word; certainly if they are to make the kind of sense to us that they made to those who wrote them, and for whom they were written, as Gods word; those who first heard them read and who made them their rule (kanōn) of faith. Unless we read these ancient texts, these grand narratives, as sacred texts, as holy scripture, from the place of otherness, from the margins, they will remain nothing more than antique curios or one more self-deluding melange of myths among all the others to be dissected in an academic pursuit of a history of religions or deconstructed in a comparative critique of literary canons. To put this in more familiar, Christian terms: unless we read the Bible christologically, from the perspective of the crucified and risen Jesus, we cannot possibly avoid misinterpreting it. Or to put it in even simpler, more biblical terms: unless we take up the cross and follow Christ, unless we go out and stand with the crucified victim outside the city gate (cf. Heb 13:12-13), we shall never understand Gods word.
The holy subversive one
An Ethiopian eunuch slave is, at first blush, no more likely an exemplar of holiness than a good Samaritan is that of a good neighbour (cf. Luke 10:33-37); or a good thief that of a candidate for canonisation (Today you will be with me in Paradise Luke 23:43); or even a Galilean that of a prophet, much less the Messiah (Can anything good come from there? John 1:46; search for yourself; prophets, do not, in fact, arise in Galilee John 7:52). But an Ethiopian eunuch slave is exactly what the author of the Acts of the Apostles presents to us as our model of how to read holyscripture meaningfully.
According to Acts, the ideal/model reader of holy scripture is the thrice alienated other: (1) an Ethiopian, which, from a Jewish/biblical point of view, means an obvious foreigner, an alien, someone other by virtue of his race;[8] (2) a eunuch, which, from any point of view, means onesexually mutilated, and therefore one alienated from the community (cf. Deut 23:1, Lev 21:20); and (3) although he is a minister, or high ranking official (dynastēs), in the service of the Kandake, the queen of the Ethiopians, he is in fact a slave albeit a high ranking slave in the service of a foreign power (but, notice: a womans eunuch slave, adding a further dimension of shame for an already mutilated male in a deeply misogynist world). This unrelenting stress of otherness is highly suggestive, and, if we attend to it carefully, deeply revealing.
But what is ultimately more important and revealing is that he is reading the prophet Isaiah speaking of a sacrificial victim. Little wonder that our thrice alienated other does not understand what he is reading at least, at first, and alone. But what a wonder some may even think scandal that it is only by joining the likes of this other that we will ever come to understand this text ourselves.
A word from the fathers: I do not understand
The first hermeneutical lesson we must learn from this scriptural exemplar of how to read scripture is that he knows that he doesnt know the meaning of what he is reading a lesson well known and understood in the monastic tradition of the desert. Here is a saying from the Alphabetical Collection of the Sayings of the Desert Fathers:[9]
One day some old men came to see Abba Anthony. In the midst of them was Abba Joseph. Wanting to test them, the old man suggested a text from the Scriptures, and, beginning with the youngest, he asked them what it meant. Each gave his opinion as he was able. But to each one the old man said, You have not understood it. Last of all he said to Abba Joseph, How would you explain this saying? and he replied, I do not know. Then Abba Anthony said, Indeed, Abba Joseph has found the way, for he has said: I do not know. (Abba Anthony, n. 17)
A similar point is to be gleaned from another saying, this time from the Systematic Collection of theSayings:[10]
They said of a hermit that he went on fasting for seventy weeks, eating a meal only once a week. He asked God the meaning of a text of the holy Scriptures and God did not reveal it to him. So he said to himself, I have worked hard and gained nothing. I will go to my brother and ask him. Just as he had shut his door on the way out, an angel of the Lord was sent to him; and the angel said, The seventy weeks of your fast have not brought you near to God but now you are humbled and going to your brother, I have been sent to show you the meaning of the text. (Humility, n. 72)
What each of these stories, in their different ways, is telling us is perhaps the most important preliminary lesson we need to learn if we are ever to understand scripture: never presume you understand by your own effort. Rather, in all humility which is to say honesty let us acknowledge our ignorance and our need for others; or we will merely impose that ignorance on the text we are reading in the form of our own unchallenged and unexamined presuppositions, prejudices and agendas. Let us instead be willing to learn, to dialogue, and to be challenged by the question, Do you understand what you are reading? Humility here is synonymous with the wisdom of knowing that we do not know, and therefore with asking the right question: How can I, unless someone guides me?
Who shall guide me?
That someone to guide me is, according to the Acts of the Apostles, personified in a man called Philip. If this is indeed the apostle Philip (and we assume that it is, since this pericope occurs in the Acts of the Apostles), then he is the same Philip whom the Greeks approach in Johns Gospel at the climactic moment of Jesus own mission (Now the hour has come; cf. John 12:20ff). He is also the one who, at the beginning of that mission, brought the very Jewish Nathanael (sitting under a fig tree, the very model of a Jew studying Torah) to Jesus, declaring Jesus to be the Messiah spoken of in Moses and the Law, in other words, scripture (cf. John 1:41ff).[11] But even if it is not the sameperson,[12] it is the same name (Philip) and the same issue (reading scripture), and therefore makes the same hermeneutical point (since in both cases the issue is around how to read scripture), irrespective of whether Philips interlocutor is the archetypal insider (Nathanael under the fig tree) or the epitome of the outsider (the Ethiopian eunuch reading Isaiah). And what is that hermeneutical point? The name Philip is a thoroughly Greek one. There is nothing Hebrew or Jewish about it. And yet the apostle is himself a Jew. What we have here in the apostle Philip, then, is a Jew with a Greek name; who, in Johns Gospel, is approached by the Greeks who wish to be brought to Jesus. What we have is a bridge-builder between the Hebrew and the Hellenic worlds: an insider with an outsiders perspective.
Far from being about institutional power and mind-control (as is often asserted by a militantly antireligious agenda), an ecclesial and apostolic interpretation of scripture is about reading in dialogue with those who, like the crucified Lord, are at once at the centre (of Gods people) and on the margins(of the world) in Jerusalem, yes; but outside the city gates (cf. Heb 13:12-13). In short, ecclesial reading is done by insiders with an outsiders perspective.
This insider/outsider dynamic is played out in numerous ways in the passage from Acts indeed, from the very start. It is initially the angel of the Lord, a messenger of Gods word, who sends Philip out of the city along a desert road (Acts 8:26) to meet the thrice marginal other who is also on his way outof Jerusalem, reading a passage from the prophet Isaiah (which we later learn is about the sacrificial victim). In short, and apart from anything else, what we have here are the two prototypes, Philip and the eunuch (and the one archetype: the sacrificial lamb), of anything but political power exercising ideological mind-control from an institutional centre. Indeed we would be entirely justified to see in these two the icon of a monastic teacher and disciple meeting in dialogue over the word of God, teaching us how to hear that word at the margins (of the world) and from the heart (of the church).
Furthermore indeed, ultimately it is the Spirit, and no mere angel, who commands Philip to go up and join the Ethiopian eunuch in this enterprise (8:29). Gods word is always Gods word; and it is always to be encountered under the inspiration of the Spirit, whether at its angelic inception or its spirited reception. Biblical inspiration is no less a part of scriptures telos than it is the source of itsgenesis.
But no less important is the ecclesial context of dialogue and at both the teleological and the generating ends of the process. And not just any kind of dialogue; not even the simple question-and-answer kind of dialogue; but dialogue as framed by the penetrating question giving rise to another question, an equally revelatory insight-through-question:
Do you know what you are reading? How can I, unless someone guides me? (Acts 8:30, 31)
Scripture is the product of ecclesial dialogue through questioning, inspired by the Spirit at its inception; and its interpretation is the product of such dialogue throughout the history of its reception. Or as the Ethiopian says so much more simply and lucidly: come up and sit with me (cf. 8:31). A genuinely ecclesial reading of scripture is an invitation from the marginal other to rise to the challenge of dialogue on equal terms through the process of honest, probing, indeed relentlessquestioning. And that is what we need to do with respect to our ecclesial reading: we need to look at the world from beside the marginal other, and engage the apostolic tradition in honest dialogue-in-question, precisely because the apostolic tradition is the deposit of insight gleaned by the biblicalinsider who shares the marginal outsiders perspective.
Only now, once the basic hermeneutical principle has been established, are we ready to read the actual text. Only once we are clear that to read scripture meaningfully we must acknowledge our ignorance, take our place at the side of those who are on the margin (the Ethiopian), and engage in honest, open, questioning dialogue with the apostolic tradition (Philip) in an ecclesial context of reading (side-by-side) then, and only then, does the author of Acts give us the text to read:
Beginning with this scripture
As a sheep led to the slaughter or a lamb before its shearer is dumb, so he opens not his mouth. In his humiliation justice was denied him. Who can describe his generation? For his life is taken up from the earth. (Acts 8:32-33, quoting Isa 53:7-8)
The choice of this passage is neither accidental nor incidental to its hermeneutic intent; and neither are the exegetical difficulties surrounding the passage (including the problem of just how best to translate it).[13] For the purposes of this article, however, we shall confine ourselves to the hermeneutical issue in the role of the sacrificial victim. As demonstrated by René Girard and the scholars who have taken up his basic insight, the role of the victim is central we might say crucial to the Bibles interpretation not just of itself but, indeed, of everything that it seeks to unveil.
And the eunuch said to Philip, About whom, pray, does the prophet say this, about himself or someone else? Then Philip opened his mouth, and beginning with this scripture he told him the good news of Jesus. (Acts 8:35)
A christological reading of the Bible is not about reading the story of Jesus back into the ancient texts of the Hebrew revelation in order to prove that Jesus really is the long-awaited Messiah of Jewish expectation. It is not about proof-texting the New Testament with the Old. A christological reading of the Bible is about discovering what was always already there in the sacred texts of Israel since the foundation of the world but, alas, remained hidden, because our own wilful forgetting concealed it from us: namely, that the victim buried beneath the cornerstone of human civilization(s), the foundation of the world as we make it, is, in fact, innocent (cf. Matt 23:34-35). To read the Bible christologically is to read it from the point of view of the innocent victim: from the cross of Christ. It is about discovering that God, the only true God, revealed in the paschal victim, has never had anything whatever to do with our distortions of sacrifice (as sacred gift) into the sacrificial system of sacred violence better known as (pagan/generic) religion. In the final analysis, to read the scriptures (and everything else) in the light of Christ, and him crucified, means finding that it is God, and God alone, who is the giver of the sacred gift: Christ, Gods own Self in Person, and our own true Self as one-with-God. In short, the only valid purpose of reading the Bible is the purpose of life: theosis through participation in the cross and resurrection of Christ, or baptism:
And as they went along the [W]ay they came to some water, and the eunuch said, Behold, here is water! What is to prevent my being baptised? (Acts 8:36)
Of course, the legal answer to that question is: Just about everything about you! But the good news of Jesus is: Nothing in heaven or on earth!
and they both went down to the water, both Philip and the eunuch, and he baptized him; and when they came up from the water, the Spirit of the Lord took Philip away; and the eunuch saw him no more, but went on his way rejoicing. (Acts 8:38-39)
Once the apostolic witness has fulfilled his mission, he is taken away by the Spirit who enabled him to accomplish his task; and the marginal-other now become one-and-whole goes on his way rejoicing.
Beginning with Moses and the prophets
Now that very same day, two of them were on their way to a village called Emmaus, seven miles from Jerusalem, and they were talking together about all that had happened. And it happened that as they were talking together and discussing it, Jesus himself came up and walked by their side; but their eyes were prevented from recognising him. (Luke 24:13-16)
The same pattern, the same hermeneutic, operates in the Emmaus story as in the story of the Ethiopian eunuch: a journey out of the city; dialogue along the way; a chance meeting with a stranger; incomprehension; and the key to it all, the innocent victim:
He said to them, What are all these things that you are discussing as you walk along? They stopped, their faces downcast. Then one of them, called Cleopas, answered him, You must be the only person staying in Jerusalem who does not know the things that have been happening there these last few days. He asked, What things? They answered, All about Jesus of Nazareth, who showed himself a prophet powerful in action and speech before God and the whole people; and how our chief priests and our leaders handed him over to be sentenced to death, and had him crucified. Our own hope had been that he would be the one to set Israel free. And this is not all: two whole days have now gone by since it all happened; and some women from our group have astounded us: they went to the tomb in the early morning, and when they could not find the body, they came back to tell us they had seen a vision of angels who declared he was alive. Some of our friends went to the tomb and found everything exactly as the women had reported, but of him they saw nothing. Then he said to them, You foolish men! So slow to believe all that the prophets have said! Was it not necessary that the Christ should suffer before entering into his glory? Then, starting with Moses and going through all the prophets, he explained to them the passages throughout the scriptures that were about himself. (Luke 24:17-27)
In virtually every ancient religion, ritual sacrifice is one of its defining features (followed by myth justifying the sacrifice, and law/taboo/prohibition regulating the sacrificial system); and at the root of ritual sacrifice there is, of course, always a victim whether the sacred king, the first-born heir, the vanquished enemy, the mysterious stranger, or the specially cultivated pharmakon, scapegoat or effigy.[14] That YHWH eschews sacrifice, desiring instead mercy and justice (cf. 1 Sam 15:22; Prov 21:3), is a revelation that only very gradually (and imperfectly)[15] begins to break through in the scriptures and in the liturgy of ancient Israel (especially the atonement liturgy during the period of the First Temple)[16] until, that is, the coming of Jesus (cf. Matt 9:13; 12:7).
In Jesus the blinding light of this revelation that the victim is innocent, and that God has nothing whatever to do with the sacred violence of the sacrificial system breaks through into our history in person, in the flesh, as God incarnate.[17] Jesus is the final sacrifice, the ultimate victim, because with his own self-sacrifice all sacrifice (of others) ends precisely because he is God: he dis-illusions the world, he takes away our sinful delusions that God requires our sacrificial sacred violence in order to be appeased. Even the idea that we have to give an expiatory victim to God in atonement for our sins (or indeed that we have anything at all that we can give to God) is radically subverted: all that God wants from us is love love for God and love for our neighbour; and not because God is needy, because God needs our love, but because we need to love if we are to become what we already are by Gods grace as the imago Dei.
The biblical revelation is that God certainly does not want our neighbours bloody corpse in atonement for our sins or the deluded play-acting of religious substitutionary ritual sacrifice the Bible bluntly calls scapegoating. On the contrary: such atonement, far from appeasing God, is the very sin of the world by which the world bestows its own peace upon itself. Such sacred violence is the hidden foundation of the world as we make it, not as God would have it be. Indeed, this is precisely what the prophetic forerunner points to when he declares at the very beginning of Johns Gospel (before the incarnate Word has uttered a single word): Behold, the Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world! (cf. John 1:29) the Lamb of God, note, not a lamb for God.
In the new economy of salvation, it is not the dead bodies of our victims, human and substitutionary, but rather our own living bodies ourselves alive that is the only sacrifice God desires; and not in expiation of our sins, but out of love, which we are enabled to give by the mercies of God, since it is Gods mercy, Gods love for us, that enables us to make this gift of ourselves in faith:
I appeal to you therefore, brethren, by the mercies of God, to present your bodies as a living sacrifice, holy and acceptable to God, which is your spiritual worship. Do not be conformed to this world but be transformed by the renewal of your mind, that you may prove what is the will of God, what is good and acceptable and perfect. (Rom 12:1-2)
Renewal of the mind in Christ
To sum up so far: The Bible is holy scripture in so far as it achieves its holy purpose: to inspire, to animate, to transform. It can only achieve this purpose insofar as its holiness is otherness, an irreducible transcendence; indeed, a subversive strangeness. To approach the Bible barefoot as the discalced Moses on the holy mountain before the burning bush is to engage the mystery on its own terms, on holy ground, at its irreducible fiery heart, transforming and liberating, forging anew as it purges the old, revealing without exhausting. And with Moses it is to discover a call and a mission to look beyond self to the other: I am who I am but you are to go to Pharaoh, king of Egypt, and say, Let my people go!
The Bible, as Gods word, is never about me; it is always about us it is radically relational, social, ecclesial literally, of a community of those called out (ek kaleō). Only those who find themselves called out (ekklēsia) and sent out (apostolē) can engage the Bible as Gods word, as holyscripture, inspired by the Holy Spirit.
To do that we need to acknowledge that we do not know what we are reading, unless someone comes up and sits by us and guides us: the apostolic and ecclesial someone who, as an insider to the story, has an outsiders perspective because he accepts the invitation to come up and sit beside the marginalised other. And then, in the course of their holy discourse, through penetrating questioning and dialogue, the story has a chance to transform us, to give us life.
(The actual process of what happens when we start to read will be explored in the second part of this article.)
Drasko Dizdar
[1] The proper context for the Tanak, or Hebrew Bible is, of course, the Jewish community (itself an ecclesia in the generic sense of the term, therefore making the point being made here no less valid). But the Old Testament, though composed of almost exactly the same writings (indeed, for Reformed Christians it is exactly the same), is by no means the same book as the Hebrew Bible, since its coupling with the Christian/New Testament changes it as utterly as oxygen is changed into water by the addition of hydrogen, or as a child is conceived by the union of sperm and ovum, or as blue changes red to purple.
[2] Equally it would be a mistake to claim that evolution has no philosophical implications or that Shakespeare invented Julius Caesar; as it would be to claim that only Jews and Christians can read the Bible. The only point being made here, however, is that reducing the Bible to something it was never intended to be is a mistake because it fails to respect its integrity and particular identity as an interlocutor in the process of meaning production. We shall return to this point in Part Two of this article.
[3] For simple faith read simplistic fideism which should never be confused with a faithsimplified, in the sense of purified, by the anything but simple process of refinement, purgation and suffering that are inevitable, and necessary, in an adult journey of faith and discipleship.
[4] Cf. Sir 39:1-3: [The one] who devotes himself to the study of the law of the Most High will seek out the wisdom of all the ancients, and will be concerned with prophecies; he will preserve the discourse of notable men and penetrate the subtleties of parables; he will seek out the hidden meanings of proverbs and be at home with the obscurities of parables.
[5] Referring this time not to the prophet Isaiah, but the Psalmist: I will open my mouth in a parable; I will utter dark sayings from of old (Ps 77[78]:2)
[6] The Desert Christian: Sayings of the Desert Fathers: The Alphabetical Collection, trans. Benedicta Ward (New York: Macmillan Publishing Co. Inc., 1975), 2.
[7] I use the term monk to refer to both men and women who live the monastic life.
[8] Ethiopia was once considered to be one of the outer frontiers of the known world; cf. Esth 1:1; Ezek 29:10; Jud 1:10; Zeph 3:10.
[9] The Desert Christian, trans. Benedicta Ward, 4.
[10] The Desert Fathers: Sayings of the Early Christian Monks, trans. Benedicta Ward (London: Penguin Books, 2003), 166.
[11] NB: Nathanael and Bartholomew are usually identified as the same person; and in Lukes list of the twelve, Philip precedes Bartholomew, which adds some weight to what may appear to be a weak link between the Philip of the Johannine Gospel and the Lucan Acts. But, in any case, it is the use of thename, and its connotations, which is significant for the point being made here.
[12] It may be the Philip numbered among the seven deacons (Acts 6:5), and elsewhere called the evangelist (Acts 21:8), who is probably not one of the Twelve (although that, too, is, of course, debatable).
[13] These exegetical difficulties and translation problems deserve an article to themselves; but for our purposes it is important to note that the choice of this text in this context is rich in hermeneutical implications concerning the need for sophisticated critical study.
[14] See the work of René Girard, especially Violence and the Sacred, trans. Patrick Gregory (Baltimore, MD: The Johns Hopkins University Press, 1977); The Scapegoat, trans. Yvonne Freccero (Baltimore, MD: The Johns Hopkins University Press, 1986) and Things Hidden Since the Foundation of the World, trans. Stephen Bann and Michael Metteer (Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 1987).
[15] Consider, for example: by offering your gifts and by burning your children as sacrifices, you have been polluting yourselves with all your foul idols to this very day (Ezek 20:31).
[16] See Margaret Barker, The Great High Priest: The Temple Roots of Christian Liturgy (London: T & T Clark International, 2003), and my own book, Sheer Grace: Living the Mystery of God (Strathfield, NSW: St Pauls Publications, 2008).
[17] Cf. the story of St Pauls conversion, Acts 7:589:28, which frames the story of the Ethiopian eunuch.
And Evangelical (something wrong with being evangelical?) Biblical (something wrong with being Biblical in approach?) hermeneutics:
o Normal interpretation is basic
o Literal interpretation being _normal_, with literal or figurative-literal language
o Only _one_ primary interpretation exists
o Every statement of Scripture having only one sense, which is the literal sense
This hermeneutic is pretty much which the article above employs -- so far
Donatism is/was a heresy.
Augustinian catholicity was heresy to the Donatists, who had excellent Scriptural NT foundation examples and Original Apostolic tradition. Pot and kettle. Still holds today.
"To the Augustinian catholic, the true church was within the visible, catholic institution. married to the Roman state by Constantine (after AD 313), entered into by infant baptism, and maintained by the implementation of the sacraments. To the Donatists, the true church was the assembly of immersed believers in a particular locale, maintaining their purity through strong preaching and church discipline." (Strouse, T. A., "Ye Are The Body Of Christ," Emmanuel Baptist Theological Journal - no date available, p. 71)
"In failing to use the historical-grammatical (dispensational) hermeneutic to interpret Scripture, the Patristics superimposed yhe sacral society concept upon the NT. They looked to the OT for the antiquity of church leadership and for the meaning and mode of baptism, The sacral society concept is the state religion in a certain region, headed up by one leader, entered into by one means for all inhabitants, and defended by exterminating all dissidents." (ibid. p. 72)
Also note that the Donatists were organized according to the first church, the Jerusalem church, and had the same polity. There was no invisible earthly church nor was one described. That was an invention of Cyprian and Augustine. And because they were local, not statist, they never needed to persecute, but instead were called heretics, and were persecuted.
(Just a statement of facts, not intended to start a flame war. The theme is on your article above. Let's stick to that.)
The earthly Church consists of both penitent and the reprobate.
That's a way of saying that one knows the visible church organization is not pure throughout, I suppose. Means you can lose and regain and lose and regain your salvation?
With grateful appreciation --
i do. (wafflehouse)
OK, explain Deut. 30:11-14.
i suppose i can take your answer for a 'NO' (wafflehouse)
Ah, not sure just what _your_ question is. What is it?
No, I will not do that. I am not going to let you make a trivial game of this. My time is important enough to me not to let you waste it.
please explain to me in SMALL WORDS how this is not contrary to scripture:
No. I will give you my thoughts on my terms. If it is not clear, you will have to go somewhere else. You can at least read instructions enough to write html in a chosen font face and color, so don't plead stupidity and poop on my effort to illuminate your sandbox.
God has nothing whatever to do with the sacred violence of the sacrificial system (statement from the article)
The author is correct, backed up by Holy Scripture.
The bottom line is THAT NOW The God's righteous demands have totally been met by our Savior and Redeemer, on our behalf, once and for all, throughout eternity. The God is no longer interested -- in fact rejects -- any further attempts to recreate any sacrificial system with any kind of "sacred violence." The one which He insisted on once, has happened, and is past. Now in effect is the Second Will, the First Will having been utterly removed (the one with blood of bulls and goats that could never take away Sin), and the Second Will (Testament) is established because of The Christ's submitting to and doing the Will of The Father. (Heb. 10:9)
Furthermore, by this Second (and Last) Will (Testament, Covenant) we (the regenerated believer-disciples) are sanctified (sainted, made holy, separated from Sin, Satan, and the World's culture) by the offering (since it is for sin, it must be a bloody, not a bloodless one, not a wafer) of the body of Jesus Christ once for all (ephax = emphatically once for all time, never to be repeated) (Heb. 10:10)
Finally, This (God)Man, after He had offered one sacrifice (a bloody one)(himself) for sins for ever, sat down on the right hand of The God. Such sacrifice, again, is never to be repeated! Therefore to recreate this through instituting "sacraments" is doing exactly what the author of the article ought to condemn. This is what I spoke of before.
To reinvent the "sacral society" as a carrying forth of Israel's Law-based religion, with a water-tight division creating a clergy class and a separate "lay" class is the Niko-laitan error. And the recreation of "sacraments," especially as a supposed reappearance of Christ's actual body and blood, presents the problem of corruption/destructibleness of the elements, especially when digested, a paradox.
The Lord's Supper, as conducted by the Lord himself (how could he eat his own body and drink his own blood, when as yet he was not even dead?) would be and is a Memorial meal, with bread and UNfermented (unleavened) blood of the cluster, as the tokens of His Passion. There would be recognition of the moments of His agony and love, conducted under the guidance of The Holy Ghost, with sincere preparation; and conclusion with a hymn.
This would be a Remembrance Supper occasion as ordained, not a Resacrifice.
But your thesis of Old Testament sacrifices being required by or pleasing to The God is not only forever done away with, but never was His desire. Read Psalm 40:6-8, Heb. 10:4-14, Is. 1:11,13, Hosea 6:6 -- these contradict your presuppositiob of the author being a Scripture rewriter and false teacher. You ought to be able to prove that a lot more substantively.
This author is quite correct, and your hypothesis is dead wrong, if you are trying to apply it at this time in history, which is the time frame the author refers to.
FOR THE RECORD, HERE IS A DETAILED SUMMARY:
From Tbe Creation until the cross-death of Jesus The Christ, God required blood sacrifices. He allowed animal sacrifices to be made in order to postpone the debt due Him by mankind for initiating and continuing to practice disobedience to His clear instructions. However, the end for each and every individual was physical death as the consequence for the slightest error. Their flesh bodies decayed, but their ever-lasting indestructible soul/spirits were transferred to a kind of holding pen, one outside of the time/mass/radiation/gravity sphere. There they were to be retained for final disposition.
This continued for several thousand years, and through several consecutive updatings (called Covenants) of the disclosed determinate Will by The God. The last in this series was The God's _written_ agreement with a group of especially selected Semites. The Law under the Mosaic Covenant is today known as Torah, to which further historical and explanatory additions were made by The God through men who put His revelations and instructions into writing. These writings plus Torah is called Tanakh in Semitic. In English, Tanakh is the first written Will (or Testament, or Covenant).
But to wind up this phase of His plan of dealing with mens' disobediences, The God sent Son (His title) to enter the world as a human, and be tested to see if such a human perfectly conceived, and occupied by Divinity, could fulfill The God's righteous demands for payment of the cumulative sin debt owed Him. In fact, this God-in-the-flesh man did, on behalf of all mankind, live in a manner perfectly most pleasing to The God, up to a point in time.
At that time, it was perfectly apparent that all the animal body/blood sacrifices, though postponing the day of payment, did not take away the accumulated debt, because The God had predetermined that it could only be paid in human blood.
But it could only be paid with human blood that would not decay -- that it would be far more durable than even silver or gold or platinum -- that it would never, ever in the least decay or change, thus proving perpetually that the transaction had taken place, and the consideration received.
It must be collected from the Earth, be moved into another sphere/dimension called Heaven, and forever remain in the Throne Room there, the Holiest Of All; and always be visible, to exhibit The God's most valuable Treasure -- the Blood from the human body of The Precious Son of His Love. It was also located there to cover and make inaccessible the contents of a sealed box that contained the hewed stone upon which His Law was written.
But going back to the moment of the fulfillment of the Law, culminating on the Cross, we see what was going on. Though this God-man Jesus had lived a perfect life and thus was eligible to immediately return to this sphere of The Heaven, His peculiar quality of compassion pervaded His further actions. He remained behind to give His life as the ransom for many, out of sovereign love for them.
Somewhen, He had arranged with His Father, The God, to receive not only the wrath of religious theocrats and petty officialdom for being Divinity in Person, but in the same plight to willingly receive and endure the immeasurable furious wrath of The God for being The Man of men! And under that contract, to bear within His body all the sins of all mankind -- to be declared Sin Personified, so that The Holy God's entire pent-up wrath would be spent in fully collecting the Blood-price from Him, down to the very last gamma globule in payment (and in advance) for the least imaginable disappointment to Him ever caused by mankind.
Now, this portion of the transaction all took place on the Savior's Cross, where under this duress Jesus hung, died, and was pierced to the pericardium and through! That is, his soul and human spirit left the body of flesh, and descended into that "holding pen" -- one portion of which was Paradise. But in fact, The God, unable to look on All Sin Personified, turned His back on The Crucified, thus inconceivably multiplying the fiery burning torment of this Abandoned One for an eternity-unmeasured time.
Yet, the The God's wrath being assuaged, the Sin-bearing body, purified but bereft of soul and spirit, died. That body, dismounted from the wood and laid in the Tomb, received perfect pure rest until just before dawn on the First day of the week. Then somehow, He that raised up Christ from the dead ones rejoined Jesus' soul, spirit, and glorified but wounded body. After briefly greeting Mary of Magdala, Jesus The Christ ascended to The Heaven with His Holy, Precious Blood.
There, beginning his tenure as the Eternal High Priest of Us, He placed The Incorruptible Treasure upon the Golden Mercy Seat, for the final affirmation of His Work, and final purchase of the reconciliation of The Most Reverent, Holy, Loving God and Father of Mankind to whom the undeserving but deeply grateful children, having been desperate and defiant former enemies, and now eternal subjects, became His glorious Kingdom forever. There you have it -- why The God is no longer interested in efforts to earn one's way to heaven through personal good deeds or sacraments. What he is interested, though, is forever Remembrance of His Son's Passion, unfeigned love in sharing His love of the brethren, recruitment and oversight of personally supervised believer-disciple servants, reverence toward and familiarity with His Holy Word, the fruit of our lips giving thanks to His name, doing beneficial good, communication through fellowship in the Gospel, and contending for The Faith.
With sincere and felicitous regards, and seeking the certain deliverance of your never-dying soul -- CFS
Have you ever pondered the beauty of a sunset or a particularly interesting cloud? what do you think would happen if you asked 10 other people to describe it? do you think you would get 10 identical answers? (wafflehouse)
If I was going t ask someone for an ambulance to transport a deathly ill person to the hospital, I don't think I would take a shot of a beautiful flower with my cell-phone and send it to an emergency room to try to communicate what their response out to be, ne?
In the above, if you are trying to relate the way God might communicate with humans, you are not talking about Biblical communication. You might be talking about natural or general revelation (Rom. 1:18-20) but you are not talking about deriving a meaning from written language. If you want to know about His purpose for the Bible, look up supernatural or special revelation, written down, with no doubt about what the message says. Though a Bible sentence may not be understood, it will not be a jumble of non-sensical words without any logical relationship -- even for Mene, mene, tekel, upharsin. That does not have a dozen meanings. It has one, and they had to get someone to interpret it. But it could be done. Quit toying.
PEOPLE ARE DIFFERENT. Thinking otherwise is the same mistake tyrants have made since the dawn of time. Why then, would God mean for everyone to get the same message? Why cannot the all powerful God have a message for everyone, that speaks directly to their own heart? The Jewish people have argued over the Law since it was entrusted to them, and now (relatively) suddenly some priest has all the answers? I cannot see how that is a logical conclusion.
Here your example of the OT Jews is obscured by the fact that the NT is in the OT concealed; the OT is in the NT revealed. Or, the NT is in the OT contained, the OT is in the NT explained. Why they argued is exactly that God had not finished writing His Bible, and they did not understand much of what God had caused to be written down. Daniel wrote stuff down exactly without understanding it. Check Daniel 12:9 in its context. But that does not meant that his sentences were not readable to anyone who could read. They may not at that time apply it, but we can now. And the meanings are exact and not containing dozens of inscrutable thoughts.
But even now, Jewish scholars are not likely to see the clear communication for the Tanach, because they are not looking at it from a deep understanding of the revelation of OT passages in the NT.
Interpretation (hermeneutics) is both an art and a science. But it is not just a bunch of jumbled allegories. It is language. With words. With grammar. With rules. With a culture. If I said "Give me a Susan B. Anthony dollar." that would be clear to most Americans today, but not to Susdan B, Anthony, who was well educated and would have known exactly what was said.
You might consider, if you have not, to get some knowledge of Biblical hermeneutics, which the author of the article in focus has as his very intent to provide you with some tools and a method. If you can't or won't analyze what he is saying without prejudice, you are wasting time pestering others in criticizing the author or the work.
God has one message to deliver. It is simple, but has a lot of history and structure, not very pliant in bending obvious non-negotiable meanings that He wants you to get. Here's the skinnay:
o The theme of the Bible, throughout every book is:
The Coming of The Messiah, The King, and His Kingdom
of Righteousness and Peace
o The purpose of the Bible, throughout every book is
To Teach The God's Plan of Redemption
There is no Catholic way, or Presbyterian way, or Orthodox way, or Copt way, Or "People of the Way" way, or Billy Graham way. There is only God's way, and it is in the Masoretic Hebrew Text for the OT, and the Received Text of the Koine Greek of the NT: get a faithful literal equivalency translation of those, in whatever language you choose. Then settle down to do your own interpretation. If you do it correctly, it will be pretty much the same as anyone else's. If not, you didn't get it right.
The Bible is not a Dick-Jane-Spot reader or a Three Bears and Goldilocks parable. It is reasonably difficult, but the plan of salvation from sin, judgment, and the Lake of Fire is not. It is plain and it is graphic, because The God wants it to be understandable. You might need a dictionary, though, and a Strong's Exhaustive Concordance will be a great help (for a KJV Bible). It is not a self-contradictory mystery trip of allegories and prophecies that never came true, like the Kama Sutra, the Vedic, the Koran, or the Book of Mormon. Its deeper meanings are not found without spiritual maturity from being discipled by one who has himself been discipled, who has overcome the "Wicked One" (Satan). Quien sabe?
Regards
You will encounter grave opposition from the Scriptural primitives who believe that Scripture speaks to them plainly whether over breakfast or else in the evening after a case of beer.
You will encounter grave opposition from the Scriptural primitives who believe that Scripture speaks to them plainly whether over breakfast or else in the evening after a case of beer.
Well, that's likely so! But I think the way to find the passage is to close your eyes, open the Bible, put your finger on the page, then open your eyes, and -- voila! -- you have the verse God wants to show you today! /sarc
You will encounter grave opposition from the Scriptural primitives who believe that Scripture speaks to them plainly whether over breakfast or else in the evening after a case of beer.
Well, that's likely so! But I think the way to find the passage is to close your eyes, open the Bible, put your finger on the page, then open your eyes, and -- voila! -- you have the verse God wants to show you today! /sarc
The same folks who make fun of the selection of the replacement of Judas practice the blindfolded dart throwing art of selecting Scripture relevant to the moment.
Well, not necessarily. Have you ever followed Peter's history, chronologically, throughout the Gospels? It would be extremely difficult to show that his instigation of the seating of Matthias was promoted by The Holy Ghost, especially that no move in that specific direction by The Lord Jesus Christ was even hinted during his 40-day perambulations amongst over 500 brethren, teaching, preaching, firecting. One would think some mention would have been made in Scripture if Jesus had authorized that. Actually by its absence the negative is suggested. Reading the account leads one to surmise that Christ had His own plan, and the time was not yet ripe for Him to have shared what that was.
Remember that in the 9-10 day interval they had the promise of God in the Spirit, but He had not yet arrived. They had neither the direct counsel of the Risen Christ nor of the Holy Ghost. Nowhere is it suggested that they had any other supernatural prodding to do anything but to wait for the direction of the promised Paraclete, another Comforter and Didaskalos of the same kind as The Christ.
It is almost impossible to suppress the notion that Peter really ran true to known character, taking the bit in his teeth, jumping to claim the yearned-for but as-not-yet-granted role of dominance, engaging in the kind of actions whose impetuousness almost undid the whole plan of the Godhead for the salvation of mankind, precisely at a critical moment.
Note that in this interval, not one follower was yet regenerated. Furthermore, Peter's interpretation and application of the particular scripture, combined with an unapproved selection process, showed a deviation from Biblical hermeneutics. It is without question that the whole human-invented uninvited meddling was not overseen by Holy Spirit guidance. Did they ask the Lord as to whether or not they were to be engaging in this enterprise? No. Did they obey Christ's command to wait for the arrival Director of Operations? No. Had they not presumptuously already been pushed into this in the most delicate formative stage, without any heavenly direction? Yes. Did they leave the Godhead out of the preliminary selection process? Yes. They only sought God's participation, and then only to take the blame for the choice limited to only one of the two they had already preselected. Was any of their desperate enemies like, say Saul of Tarsus, even remotely considered for their selectiion pool? No.
In the end, the only other primary apostle directly chosen, inducted, and personally discipled by Christ was Saul. And what everybody has missed is that both Matthias and Barsabas, though having companied with the primary disciples, had already been deselected by The Christ for the closest innermost group of trainees. If either had been satisfactory for Judas' replacements, why did not Christ choose them in his 40-day contact with them? It seems to be very certain that neither were yet destined for that honor, ne?
Is this just blindfolded dart-throwing? No -- but I think the eleven were playing this role, whilst they were not trusting in the Lord with all their hearts, but leaning on their own understanding, and not acknowledging the Lord in this matter, nor allowing Him to take the initiative. They were being wise in their own eyes, and insensibly falling into error. Furthermore, after this other, wiser, more Scripturally prudent were chosen as ruling elders in the Jerusalem church.
However! Think what Holy Ghost power came upon those assembled believer-disciples on that first Pentecost-church day! Especially how the headstrong, presumptuous, disloyal, imprudent Simon The Petros (little rock) mightily proclaimed the resounding foundational massive rock-ledge (Petra) Truth, personified in Jesus: "Thou art the Christ, Son of The Living God!"
What a transformation! And the apostles, all having the capability of binding or loosing, saw Satan bound and 3,000 believer-disciple souls immersed and let into the local church that day!
Sorry, not “firecting”; meant _directing_
Well, not necessarily. Have you ever followed Peter's history, chronologically, throughout the Gospels? It would be extremely difficult to show that his instigation of the seating of Matthias was promoted by The Holy Ghost, especially that no move in that specific direction by The Lord Jesus Christ was even hinted during his 40-day perambulations amongst over 500 brethren, teaching, preaching, firecting. One would think some mention would have been made in Scripture if Jesus had authorized that. Actually by its absence the negative is suggested. Reading the account leads one to surmise that Christ had His own plan, and the time was not yet ripe for Him to have shared what that was.
That does not follow from the effort that Jesus made to create His Church and the painstaking teaching over and over of the 12 and the disciples. If you read Acts 2, you will see the effect that the Holy Spirit had upon Peter and his newfound leadership.
However! Think what Holy Ghost power came upon those assembled believer-disciples on that first Pentecost-church day! Especially how the headstrong, presumptuous, disloyal, imprudent Simon The Petros (little rock) mightily proclaimed the resounding foundational massive rock-ledge (Petra) Truth, personified in Jesus: "Thou art the Christ, Son of The Living God!"
The Protestants we fence with have the opinion that Peter was a stumbling, bumbling fool and to a certain extent, they are correct. The Peter that we see in Acts and in his Epistles are a testimonial to the effect of the Holy Spirit upon a fallible man.
There you go again! Well, nobody can say you aren't persistent. And you gotta hand it to those desert fathers, knowing about evolution eighteen hundred years before Darwin. (I guess they must have seen it in a vision.)
You know, rzman, you once said that the Catholic/Orthodox churches are "agnostics" in the creation/evolution debate. Yet every time you post something it doesn't seem to endorse "agnosticism." It endorses evolution. Why else attack "naive literalism?" What is there about "naive literalism" that is so deadly to the ancient liturgical churches? I mean, it's not as if they are never literal . . . you and I both know they are. But never about Genesis 1-11.
Why are the ancient churches so afraid of Genesis 1-11? What does that portion of the Bible say that is so poisonous to them? Please, enlighten me.
No wonder I was asked to leave the Catholic Church (and thank G-d that I did so). Why aren't potential converts told at the very beginning that they're going to have to give up their "naive literalism" and embrace evolution and higher criticism? Why not add them to the Creed and the cathechisms so people will know what they are getting into before finding out too late?
Sheesh, why not require new converts to take an oath stating that they reject the literal historical truth of Genesis 1-11 and young earth six day creationism? Because this idea of not doing so and then waging unceasing, unrelenting war against YEC and Genesis 1-11 simply doesn't make any sense.
NB: The "British Orthodox Church" is (if I am not mistaken) a Non-Chalcaedonian church under the authority of the Coptic Church of Egypt . . . the same church for which the hearts of western chrstians bleed so much. You can see what they think of so many western chrstians! Perhaps they should turn to the atheists in academia for sympathy?
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