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How Not to Interpret Scripture
Crisis Magazine ^ | March 21, 2016 | MICHAEL HAYES

Posted on 03/21/2016 3:43:44 PM PDT by NYer

Illuminated Bible

There is a class that most college students will take at one point in their academic career. It is the course on Western Civilization—“Western Civ” for short. It is a feeble attempt to supplement the modern college curriculum (typically in two freshman-level courses) with what used to be the very backbone of a liberal education. The course revolves around classics of the Western Tradition: Plato’s Republic, Virgil’s Aeneid, Augustine’s Confessions, Descartes’ Meditations, and Locke’s Second Treatise on Government. But one text in particular, I think, has been subject to mistreatment and misuse—the Holy Bible.

The problem is simple. One of the goals of the Western Civilization class is to teach students the ways in which certain texts have shaped the world in which we live. This often does not happen within the modern secular university.

The reason for this is that most people charged with teaching such classes have been deeply steeped within the modern worldview; as such, their understanding of scripture is quite different from the approach that shaped the ancient and medieval world. Typically, there are three ways to understand scripture available to the modern mind—none of these are true to the actual historical reading of the Bible; more importantly, none of these accurately reflect the way in which the Bible has been understood within the Catholic intellectual tradition.

The first of these three approaches to scripture is fundamentalism. This view, which has been popular in America for over a century, is a byproduct of the Protestant rejection of the interpretive tradition of the Catholic Church. Instead of relying on a tradition of apostolic tradition (full of flawed human beings, to be sure) or on the powers of human reason (which are often mistaken) to aid in our understanding of God’s Word, the fundamentalist view simply accepts all passages of the Bible as literal, historical truths. If the genealogy from Adam suggests that the world is 6000 years old, so be it—regardless of what human reason, through the sciences of geology, biology, anthropology, and all the rest may say. The word of God is meant to be taken literally at every step—and our faith demands that we reject our own reason when it conflicts with this literalistic approach to the scriptures.

While this approach to scripture is somewhat influential throughout America, the second approach is constantly growing in popularity among those with a weak background in theology and history, and especially among those who spend a considerable amount of time on the internet (i.e., the young). It is largely derivative of the fundamentalist view, except it is highly antagonistic in nature. This approach to scripture is largely characterized by a highly uncharitable reading of various passages with the intention to undermine their moral, spiritual, or religious authority. Popular authors like Richard Dawkins and Christopher Hitchens, and popular figures in entertainment like Bill Maher are spokesmen for this approach.

“You expect me to believe that snakes can talk? Or that ‘the first day’ could have existed before the creation of celestial bodies? How childish, how absurd,” they say, without ever attempting to penetrate the text in pursuit of deeper, spiritual, truths.

This view, while rarely endorsed by college faculty (for even most unchurched professors understand how anti-intellectual it actually is) is nevertheless very popular on college campuses due to the combination of theologically uneducated youths, the internet (where misinformation abounds), and a desire to view oneself as intellectually superior; picking on “people of faith” is an easy target when one thinks that such people are naive, superstitious, and simply irrational, given the assumption that everything in the Bible is to be understood (by people of faith) to be literal, unambiguous, scientific, historical truth.

The final approach to scripture encountered on college campuses, while certainly more intellectually respectable, is equally unhelpful when trying to gain an understanding of the way in which scripture shaped our world. This is the historical-critical method, developed in the early modern period by philosophers like Benedict Spinoza. Writing in a period of religious persecution and widespread theological controversy, Spinoza argued that biblical scholars should read scripture as if it were not the word of God—as if the many books of the Bible had no collective unity, no overall meaning as a whole, no purpose beyond what the human author, in his own historically limited view of the world, could have intended.

This became the model of all secular Biblical interpretation within modern universities—the Bible was a collection of ancient writings, stemming from particular and contingent historical circumstances, which could give us insight into ancient Jewish and Christian thought, but is not necessarily reflective of any higher, deeper truths.

The problem with all of these approaches, at least, within a Western Civilization class, is that they are peculiarly modern. That is, they are entirely inappropriate for understanding the way in which the Bible shaped the Western world within the context of ancient and medieval history, which is typically the context in which they are examined.

If the goal of a Western Civilization class is to help students understand the way in which these texts have shaped the world; if it is to involve them in the great conversation that extends back to the fathers of our Western culture, we ought to teach our students how the great minds within the Catholic intellectual tradition understood the word of God, as it was this Catholic tradition that shaped the West.

Students are often surprised to find that St. Augustine, an ancient Roman in a world of pagan superstition, argued that the creation stories in Genesis are not to be understood as scientific, cosmological truths. They are puzzled by the fact that Aquinas, a medieval monk, praises reason, philosophy, and science in addition to faith. This is a product of their lack of exposure to the very worldview that produced Christendom—a blind spot in the college education of many.

The approach to scripture that transformed the Western world is one in which the whole of the scriptures is interpreted through the lens of the Word of God incarnate. God, it is revealed to us, is Truth and Love. Therefore nothing within his revelation can contradict Truth and Love—any interpretation of the Bible that is contrary to the light of human reason or that contradicts the law of love cannot be from God.

Contrary to fundamentalism, our faith, and the scripture in which it is revealed, is not contrary to reason. Contrary to the critics of fundamentalism, we do not treat faith as an anti-intellectual substitute for reason. Contrary to the historical-critical method, the Bible is an integrated whole that cannot be understood merely by an analysis of its parts.

This leads to the last misunderstanding about the scriptures. It is not the Bible alone that serves as the basis for our faith; rather, the Bible is only at home within the Church, with its long apostolic tradition, a tradition of authoritative interpretation that can be traced to Jesus himself. In the Acts of the Apostles, the Ethiopian eunuch could not understand the scriptures until Phillip—an apostle, charged with authority by Christ—interpreted them for him.

It is rare that this apostolic, Catholic approach to Biblical interpretation is offered to students at our modern, secular universities. Thus, the graduates of these universities may ultimately become ignorant of the understanding of scripture that shaped the world in which we live. The approach to the Bible that produced the West as we know it—an approach that looks for deeper, spiritual meanings, transcending the letter of the text, as part of a holistic revelation of the God that is Truth and Love—is often missing from the college curriculum. This is true even in a course like “Western Civilization,” which places such importance on history, interpretation, and the roots of our culture.



TOPICS: Apologetics; Catholic; Religion & Culture; Theology
KEYWORDS: bible; crisismagazine; education; michaelhayes; modernity; perpetuousity; scripture; westernciv; westerncivilization
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To: MHGinTN
You can learn a lot about the pagan world prior to Jesus resurrection by looking deeply at the Catholic Religion, because it has incorporated so many of the pagan rites and holidays into that religion. Easter is a prime example, with the Ishtar holiday (Ishtar is Easter) being put into the rituals as a Sunday cewremony to replace what the earliest Christians celebrated on Nisan 14, The Passover, as Jesus established it.

Here is a list of translations of the greeting "Happy Easter" into other languages. E.g., Latin is "Prospera Pascha sit". The official language of the Catholic Church is Latin and uses the word "Pascha" derived from the greek word Pascha which St. Paul uses.

The word Easter is the word in English, which is not the official language of the Catholic Church.
41 posted on 03/21/2016 5:14:49 PM PDT by ronnietherocket3 (Mary is understood by the heart, not study of scripture.)
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To: Slyfox

And especially when it comes to the purpose of mankind, they will talk out of both sides of their mouth. First they will say that they don’t believe mankind has a purpose. Then they will posit things for the purpose of mankind that are worse than the bumbles made by 99% of churches.

Faith needs to be the reason we do what we do, or it all devolves into a destructive chaos.


42 posted on 03/21/2016 5:21:49 PM PDT by HiTech RedNeck (Embrace the Lion of Judah and He will roar for you and teach you to roar too. See my page.)
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To: HiTech RedNeck

Does God reveal His character to us in His creation account?


43 posted on 03/21/2016 5:22:58 PM PDT by ealgeone
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To: MHGinTN
I don't think you can find serious support for the idea that Easter and Ishtar are related.

Easter

Ishtar

It MAY be worthy of mention that Ishtar seems associated with Aphrodite (and Venus, the goddess and the planet) and is the goddess of sexual love.

But the goddess of the dawn (and there MIGHT be a link as far back as Indo-European between Εως ροδοδακτυλος and ~Proto-Germanic *austron-, "dawn," also the name of a goddess of fertility and spring. But Ishtar and Eos are in two very different businesses, and the Nordic people had another goddess of sexual love.

44 posted on 03/21/2016 5:25:22 PM PDT by Mad Dawg (Sta, si cum canibus magnis currere non potes, in portico.)
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To: ronnietherocket3

Good point.

And the etymology I have seen in dictionaries has it deriving from a term that simply means “east.” Maybe this is tied to the common practice of having sunrise worship services on Easter, symbolizing the rising of Christ.

We might as well complain that Christians are worshiping Mithras, a tack that a lot of enemies of Christianity take to try to get Christians tied up in moral knots.

If every time a demonic mimicker sidled up and said “boo” we stopped worshiping Christ, we wouldn’t be worshiping Christ.


45 posted on 03/21/2016 5:26:10 PM PDT by HiTech RedNeck (Embrace the Lion of Judah and He will roar for you and teach you to roar too. See my page.)
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To: ealgeone

In far more than the creation account — in how the creation GOES once it has been created.

The greater explains the smaller. C. S. Lewis put it quite nicely: It cost God nothing as far as we know to create nice things. But to convert rebellious souls cost His crucifixion.

You’re making a huge deal of the purchase of the music paper, and none of the writing of the symphony upon it.


46 posted on 03/21/2016 5:29:12 PM PDT by HiTech RedNeck (Embrace the Lion of Judah and He will roar for you and teach you to roar too. See my page.)
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To: ealgeone
If the creation account in Genesis isn't six 24 hour days as we understand them, then how can you take the rest of the Word seriously? ,/p>

I recommend:
reading Augustine for one of the earlier answers to that question.
considering what the article in the original post is about.

Stipulate that everything everybody who thinks Catholics are wrong is true. STILL, a Catholic reading of scripture dominated Western Civ well in to the 2nd millennium, so a course on Western Civ would be irresponsible if it ignored that reading. Perhaps ANOTHER class could be devoted to how awful the Catholics were for thinking as they did.

47 posted on 03/21/2016 5:32:25 PM PDT by Mad Dawg (Sta, si cum canibus magnis currere non potes, in portico.)
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To: NYer
It is largely derivative of the fundamentalist view, except it is highly antagonistic in nature. This approach to scripture is largely characterized by a highly uncharitable reading of various passages with the intention to undermine their moral, spiritual, or religious authority.

I'm reminded of something by an Orthodox (neither Catholic nor Protestant!) writer:

Using the Bible Against Christians: Sola Scriptura Atheism

What struck me about all this is that these atheists and various other assorted anti-Christians were reading the Bible essentially as sola scriptura fundamentalists. In essence, they presume to claim that their own reading of the Bible is the only possible one, that their reading is also quite obvious (perspicuity), and that the Bible is the sole basis for Christian doctrine, life and legitimacy. If the Bible can be made unpalatable even to Christians, then it just shows that the whole Christian enterprise is bunk.

And, true to form, I saw plenty of sola scriptura Protestants arguing with these atheist fundamentalists on exactly the same grounds. The exchanges just got shriller and shriller, with each side claiming that the other must be stupid, evil or uneducated, which is what brought about their fallacious reading of the Bible.

I found it with help from something on the Religion Forum: that thing led me to do a search. (Without doing such a search, I probably would've taken much longer to find this page, if at all.) I don't remember what that thing was or exactly what my search terms were, but interpretation was probably at the heart of the matter.

48 posted on 03/21/2016 5:32:29 PM PDT by Lonely Bull ("When he is being rude or mean it drives people _away_ from his confession and _towards_ yours.")
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To: Wyrd bið ful aræd
The singularity of Catholic Dogma is one of it’s strongest truths.

What a crock! In fact, it is the weakest point and biggest lie that the Romanist cult has to offer a gullible public. It does not make common sense, and it does not make spiritual sense. Here's the plain and proper sense, well-known to any heir of God's promises who is able to hear and respond to Jehovah's invitation:

"And he humbled thee, and suffered thee to hunger, and fed thee with manna, which thou knewest not, neither did thy fathers know; that he might make thee know that man doth not live by bread only, but by every word that proceedeth out of the mouth of the LORD doth man live" (Deut. 8:3 AV).

"But he answered and said, It is written, Man shall not live by bread alone, but by every word that proceedeth out of the mouth of God" (Mat 4:4 AV, cf Lk. 4:4).

"All scripture is given by inspiration of God, and is profitable for doctrine, for reproof, for correction, for instruction in righteousness: That the man of God may be perfect, throughly furnished unto all good works" (2 Tim. 3:16-17 AV).

My grandmother, with an 8th-grade education 19th century one-room schoolhouse education, the faithful wife of a dairy farm frontiersman, knew more about fellowship with Jesus and His Word than this low-hanging poorly-indoctrinated Romanist could even dream of.

So did my Dad, nurtured in a prayer-filled home, college-trained and seminary-polished, who spent the rest of his life ministering The Word to his family and to congregated believers.

Please take a break with this nonsense you've written.

49 posted on 03/21/2016 5:33:43 PM PDT by imardmd1 (Fiat Lux)
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To: ealgeone

But not to deal solely in negatives, I will assert the positive that the day-age theory of creation is at least as good as any other, and has some distinctive virtues.

Hugh Ross (www.reasons.org) has delved into this in great detail, and even yet has missed some things that I’ve noticed. None of these creation days have noons or afternoons vouched for. Each goes: Evening -> creation activity -> morning. If evening is a metaphor for a lack of light, then morning is a metaphor for its presence. And this eliminates other idiosyncrasies, such as why did God pull all-nighters, why do we expect a global activity to be governed by what we would call a single time zone, etc.

The 6*24 fundamentalists seem to be driven more by an allergy to scientists and evolutionary theory, than by any positives. Evolutionary theory is not helped at all by a proposition that the earth is billions of years old in literal time. Nor is it impossible to have a Garden of Eden, with an unfallen mankind that soon falls, upon such an earth.

Theories driven by what you hate, rather than by Whom you love, end up being warped.


50 posted on 03/21/2016 5:40:28 PM PDT by HiTech RedNeck (Embrace the Lion of Judah and He will roar for you and teach you to roar too. See my page.)
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To: MeganC
Shortly after the death of Mother Theresa of Calcutta, one of the two local BIG Baptist churches had an advertisement on the radio about her now famous long arid desert of prayer -- and how it showed she didn't really understand the Gospel.

Protestants may think that they can recruit members by saying things of questionable truth about dead women who cannot defend themselves. It's a free country.

But here the point of the article is being missed. RIGHTLY or WRONGLY, Catholic thought dominated Western Intellectual life for about 1,000 years -- say, from 400 to 1,400. But So many report that their education, even their seminary education, glossed over everything between Constantine and Luther, with maybe a nod to Augustine. In my Episcopal Seminary we spent more time on the "Great Awakenings" than we did on Scholasticism.

Whether you think Aquinas was a disaster and Jonathan Edwards a miracle or not, it is simply not an honest representation of Western Civ to ignore a millennium of thought.

The article is by a Catholic, or so it seems. But he is not attacking Protestants as such. He is attacking the deformed and, frankly, uneducated approach of, largely secular, teachers to the development of Western Civ courses.

51 posted on 03/21/2016 5:45:37 PM PDT by Mad Dawg (Sta, si cum canibus magnis currere non potes, in portico.)
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To: NYer
Ah, NYer posts another screed against the integrity of the Bible! At least she doesn't hide her beliefs.

And this, children, is why the Bible Belt will never convert to Catholicism. It literally doesn't matter who founded the Catholic Church--any church that teaches the Bible is full of mistakes and errors has the smell of brimstone about it.

52 posted on 03/21/2016 5:46:36 PM PDT by Zionist Conspirator (The "end of history" will be worldwide Judaic Theocracy.)
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To: MamaB
It is like they hate the Bible. I wonder why.

Because they associate it with "trailer trash!" Catholics are intellectuals; don't you know that?

53 posted on 03/21/2016 5:48:05 PM PDT by Zionist Conspirator (The "end of history" will be worldwide Judaic Theocracy.)
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To: wideawake

Ping for your interest.


54 posted on 03/21/2016 5:48:42 PM PDT by Zionist Conspirator (The "end of history" will be worldwide Judaic Theocracy.)
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To: HiTech RedNeck
You might enjoy this: http://www.geraldschroeder.com/AgeUniverse.aspx
55 posted on 03/21/2016 5:49:59 PM PDT by MHGinTN (Democrats bait then switch; their fishy voters buy it every time.)
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To: ebb tide; piusv; vladimir998

Do any of you so-called “Catholic creationists” have anything to say to your Bible-bashing co-religionist???


56 posted on 03/21/2016 5:50:08 PM PDT by Zionist Conspirator (The "end of history" will be worldwide Judaic Theocracy.)
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To: Wyrd bið ful aræd
BS. Just a couple days ago there was an article about Saint Patrick being a Baptist, because no way would he be part of the "Romish" "Mary-worshipping" Church.

You might want scroll back through the RF, at least a few day's worth of articles, before making a silly comment.

Nothing to say about the contents of the article, eh? I assume you too maintain that the "age old" Catholic doctrine is that the Bible is full of nonsense?

And you wonder why your church is full of homos!

57 posted on 03/21/2016 5:51:43 PM PDT by Zionist Conspirator (The "end of history" will be worldwide Judaic Theocracy.)
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To: Zionist Conspirator

It’s only you and your ilk that do Bible-bashing, the entire New Testament for example. Get lost.


58 posted on 03/21/2016 5:52:16 PM PDT by ebb tide (We have a rogue curia in Rome.)
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To: Wyrd bið ful aræd
It IS a silly comment. You said, in a nutshell, “Catholics post anti-Protestant stuff, but Protestants don’t post anti-Catholic stuff,” when there was some anti-Catholic article posted within the last few days. I don’t know what everything else you said does to justify your previous comment as non-silly.

Catholics post an awful lot of anti-Bible stuff . . . and you seem to agree with it.

59 posted on 03/21/2016 5:53:26 PM PDT by Zionist Conspirator (The "end of history" will be worldwide Judaic Theocracy.)
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To: ealgeone
If the creation account in Genesis isn't six 24 hour days as we understand them, then how can you take the rest of the Word seriously?

How can you trust what Christ says regarding if you believe in Him you have passed out of judgment and into eternal life?

You're wasting your time. They don't care.

Ironically, Catholics (and Orthodox) have adopted Protestant higher criticism and evolutionism in order to "discredit" sola scriptura. Which is insane when you consider that one doesn't need to subscribe to sola scriptura to believe that the Bible is totally true and mistake-free.

60 posted on 03/21/2016 5:57:51 PM PDT by Zionist Conspirator (The "end of history" will be worldwide Judaic Theocracy.)
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