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How Evangelicals Now Move the Goalposts on Bibliology (part three)

Part One     Part Two

Somebody kicked a field goal from the fifty yard line.  That’s a sixty yard field goal, except that someone moved the goalposts to the thirty.  In the same manner, evangelicals say, “This is scriptural bibliology,” but it isn’t.  The goalposts were moved.  Evangelism has moved on bibliology, first on the doctrine of inspiration.

Ipsissima Verba and Ipsissima Vox

Precise Words

Ipsissima verba, Latin, means, “the precise words.”  On the other hand, ipsissima vox is more Latin, meaning, “the very voice.”  Ipsissima verba says that the words of Jesus in the gospels were recorded verbatim.  Vox says that the gospels capture the concepts of what Jesus said.

Vox says that when the gospels say, “Jesus said,” these are not necessarily the words of Christ.  He probably didn’t say them according to many evangelicals, just the essence or general content of what He said.  The gospels say, “Jesus said,” 65 times.  Many times, speaking of Jesus, in the gospels, “the Lord said.”  Sometimes, literally the gospels say, “these words spake Jesus.”

Who dares say that Jesus did no speak the words that scripture says He spoke?  The Holy Spirit would not inspire a “Jesus said” and not provide the very words of Jesus.  Matthew 24:35 says:

Heaven and earth shall pass away, but my words shall not pass away.

That statement by Jesus about His own Words is false if the gospels do not record His Words.  Several years ago now, a blogpost here said:

God’s people must hear the Words of the Son (John 12:47), receive His Words (John 12:48; 17:8), keep His Words (John 14:23), have His Words abiding in them (John 15:7) and remember His Words as from the Father (John 14:10).

Concepts

Daniel Wallace in his “An Apologia for a Broad View of Ipsissima Vox,” paper presented to the 51st Annual Meeting of the Evangelical Theological Society, Danvers, Mass., November 1999, wrote:

[T]he concepts go back to Jesus, but the words do not—at least, not exactly as recorded.

I wrote these lines on this blog in the not too distant past:

His colleague, Darrell Bock, wrote a chapter in Jesus Under Fire [ed. Michael J. Wilkins and J. P. Moreland (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1995):73-99], defending the vox position, entitled, “The Words of Jesus in the Gospels: Live, Jive, or Memorex.” Bock’s chapter tries to defend the historical reliability of the Gospel writing of Jesus’ Words from the destructive criticism of the Jesus Seminar. He writes, “The Gospels give us the true gist of his teaching and the central thrust of his message,” but “we do not have ‘his very words’ in the strictest sense of the term”. . . .

Wallace and Bock approach Jesus’ Words in the Gospels from a naturalistic viewpoint. The apostles forgot the Words like historians often do and so presented the Words the best they could, considering their shortcomings.

Verbal Inspiration

Donald Green in an essay on this subject, published in The Master’s Seminary Journal (Spring 2001), wrote:

Jesus’ promise of the direct inspiration of the Holy Spirit placed the Gospel writers in a different realm in which different standards of memory would be operative. They would be supernaturally enabled to recall Jesus’ words in a manner that freed them from the human limitations of secular historians.

The great high priestly prayer of the Lord Jesus Christ in John 17, begins with the words:  “These words spake Jesus.”  Ipsissima verba, a high view of scripture, says that Jesus said these very words in His prayer to His Father.  Later in the prayer itself, Jesus says in verse 8:

I have given unto them the words which thou gavest me; and they have received them.

This is what Jesus says, that He has given to the New Testament writers through inspiration very words, not just concepts or ideas.

Redaction Criticism

Is redaction criticism acceptable or accommodated by evangelicals?  Timothy Berg, a member of an evangelical group called the textual confidence collective, says, “Yes.”  Redaction criticism says that several biblical authors were very often if not most often mere editors of source material.  This clashes with the doctrine of verbal, plenary inspiration.  Berg in an article, “Matthew 5:17-20 and the KJV,” published on his kjbhistory.com website, writes:

It would be irresponsible to deal with any text in Matthew without at least briefly mentioning the synoptic problem and its relation to the exegesis of the text. While there are some recent dissenting voices, the majority of evangelical scholarship today holds to Marcan priority. That is, that Mark wrote first, and that Matthew and Luke independently used Mark. Further, because Matthew and Luke have a large amount of material that they share in common yet which is not present in Mark, it is likely that they had both had access to a source Mark was unaware of. This source is referred to as “Q.”

He writes then specifically about Matthew 5:18:

The passage at hand in verse 18 is clearly “Q” material, or material which Matthew and Luke draw from a common source unknown to Mark. It is worth noting how Matthew has uniquely shaped this material for his Jewish audience.

Redaction criticism says that biblical authors reworked an already written text, taking it and putting it somewhat in their own words.  This is not either a biblical or historical view of the doctrine of inspiration.  It acquiesces to modernism or theological liberalism in a denial of verbal inspiration.

More to Come

How Evangelicals Now Move the Goalposts on Bibliology (part two)

Part One

Man’s Lust As An Agent of Change

Scripture itself chronicles an entire world history long Satanic attack on scripture.  It is one of the few major components of apostasy, even as seen in 2 Peter 1.  Man wants to do what he wants to do, what the Bible calls “lust.”  He follows his own lust.  The authority of scripture gets in the way of man’s own desires, so he follows the ideology of Satan by attacking scripture.  Without the Bible, authority returns to himself and he goes his own way without compunction.

People who want to do what they want to do are the audience for evangelical outreach.  These people look askance at true Christianity, wanting something closer to what pleases them not God.  Mere biblical stuff does not attract or allure them.

Evangelical churches and organizations have choices about growth and then budgets.  Evangelicals like the same comforts as their potential audience, who want to please themselves.  They “get” that audience, because they operate in a similar trajectory.  Christianity becomes another way of getting things, except with a lot of the negatives removed.  It’s not true, but a desirable narrative, what people would want their Christianity to be.  Much in scripture gets in the way of the false narrative.

The Bible becomes the casualty in the clash of desires, please one’s self or pleasing God.  These desires compete and something’s got to go.  Evangelicals will not keep their attendees without something going.  One can see the biblical and historical doctrine of scripture change.

Naturalism in Academia As An Agent of Change

Naturalism also rose and took hold in academic institutions in the United States in the 19th century.  This included evangelical ones and then churches out of these.  Supernaturalism became unacceptable.  The doctrine of the Bible reads from scripture as supernatural.  God is in charge of His Words and He wants, even requires, people to follow suit.  If professing academics try to take that supernatural point of view, they won’t fit in academia.  They won’t be the smart ones, might not find their supernaturalism acceptable for publication.

So how did and does biblical, historical, or classical bibliology change?  How did even evangelicals move the goalposts?  It’s not always through all evangelicals taking the new positions, but it’s also accommodation of the new positions.

This series will not cover every diversion from scriptural bibliology, but it will represent the point of the title, moving the goalposts for bibliology by evangelicalism.

Moving the Goalposts on Inspiration

Scripture teaches that “all scripture is given by inspiration of God” (2 Timothy 3:16), so that is true.  The historical, biblical position on inspiration is “verbal, plenary inspiration.”  God inspired every Word and all the Words.  The authority of scripture comes from that, even as seen in the rest of 2 Timothy 3:16:  “and is profitable for doctrine,” etc.  The authority of scripture proceeds from inspiration.

I provide three examples of moving the goalposts on inspiration, not necessarily in any order.  Evangelicals see large numbers of deconversions or departures from the faith.  These young people or students see apparent inconsistencies, incongruities, contradictions, or what look like errors.  I remind you of the mixture of these discoveries with their lust.  Why should these young people continue in this path without a perfect book?

The Christological Approach Pushed by Dan Wallace and Others

A text or book verbally, plenarily inspired by God must be perfect, every word and all of them.  Since people “don’t see that,” they push the eject button.  The presupposition for verbal, plenary scripture comes from scripture.  Some might call that circular reasoning.  Critics would say that no one should operate on circular reasoning.  Daniel Wallace, longtime professor at Dallas Theological Seminary, offers instead what he calls an incarnational or Christological approach.

Describing Christology over Bibliology

This incarnational approach defers to errors in scripture, but says that the Word isn’t a textbook.  In fact, the Word is Christ.  Christ is perfect, so His Word is perfect.  Sure you find contradictions and errors there in the Book.  Wallace can’t vouch for a literal inerrancy.  There is a mystical aspect to the faith, that starts with Jesus and not the Book.

The high view of scripture according to Wallace comes because of the perfection of Christ.  He is the Word.  Then those who start with Jesus go to scripture with the same view He had.  As you read this, I can understand your seeing or thinking there are some gaps in Wallace’s position.

You might think, “Faith cometh by hearing, and hearing by the Word of God” (Romans 10:17).  It seems faith proceeds from the Word of God, not an experience external to the Word of God with Christ.  What is this mystical experience?  And if Christ is Who He is, I would expect Who He says He is, then isn’t His Word actually perfect?  That is what He says.  If He says it, and then we look into scripture and find it isn’t true, what does that say for the testimony of Christ?

John Wenham

Wallace seems somewhat honest about his expectations of the Bible.  They are diminished by scholarship.  He went back to the drawing board on inspiration, authority, and inerrancy, unlike when Bart Ehrman came to that same juncture.  He found a book written by John Wenham in 1972, called, The Bible and Christ.  There Wallace found this innovative position, and it’s the one he pushes on his students.  Christ is a Perfect Christ no matter if the actual Words of scripture are perfect, and He would contend that we know that by a supernatural, extra-scriptural experience with Christ.

John Frame found the same shortcomings of Wenham’s book in a review he wrote in 2012.  This is not an endorsement of Frame, but I would agree with Frame’s assessment of the approach that Wallace embraces on the Christology over Bibliology doctrine.  Wallace moves the goalposts on bibliology.  Perhaps many evangelicals would reject Wallace’s position, but they wouldn’t call it neo-orthodox.  They would accommodate him.  Someone included the following in a definition of neo-orthodoxy, which I believe is true about it:

Neo-orthodoxy teaches that the Scripture is a communicator or medium revealing God rather than being revelation by itself. The Word of God is Jesus Himself rather than Scripture serving as God’s Word. The emphasis is on an encounter with God rather than a focus on the inspired words of Scripture.

This kind of thinking, now spoken by evangelical Daniel Wallace, liberals embraced in the writings of Emil Brunner and Karl Barth.  This is the end for evangelicalism, when its leaders sway the adherents into this direction and these types of positions.

More to Come

Romans 5:1 As a Consideration for Taking a Scriptural Position on the Preservation of Scripture

The Apostle Peter in 2 Peter 1 shows that attack on the authority of scripture is a major explanation or reason for apostasy.  The authority of scripture proceeds from the supernatural nature of the Bible.  It is inspired by God and then preserved by God.  When someone attacks scripture, the first wave is that it was only written by men and the second, that it isn’t preserved.  Leading away from a doctrine of preservation is evacuating divine and supernatural preservation for something naturalistic.I received an advertisement for the Center of the Study of New Testament Manuscripts, written by Daniel Wallace, and it read like a bit of a cliffhanger, using a manuscript presently residing for view at the National Museum of the Bible in Washington, DC, the oldest known, surviving hand copy of Romans 5:1.  He writes:

Among the many ancient treasures held by The Museum of the Bible in Washington, DC, there is a tattered fragment of parchment containing the oldest known text of Romans 5:1. Most modern translations render the verse, “Therefore, since we have been justified by faith, we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ.” Some scholars believe, however, that the underlined portion should read, “let us have peace,” because many of the best manuscripts do, indeed, bear this text.
In biblical Greek, the difference comes down to a single letter within a single word. And the difference of that one letter makes all the difference.
The manuscript fragment in Washington, known to scholars as GA 0220, is dated to the 3rd century (between AD 200 and 300.) Unfortunately, the critical letter in question has been obscured by a fold in the parchment and a hole in the very worst place. Nevertheless, traces of the letter appear to remain, and we believe that our high-resolution, multispectral imaging equipment can reveal the truth.
He doesn’t tell us why certain manuscripts are “the best manuscripts,” but especially here he doesn’t reveal which edition of Romans 5:1 is in “the oldest known text.”  I would surmise that he would never use this as an example if it didn’t agree with the King James Version.  He doesn’t support the King James, but here seems like he is supporting the traditional text and seeing this theological presupposition on justification by faith as tied to his conclusion.  By not giving us his conclusion, he can also please both sides on this issue.Most of the oldest manuscripts of Romans 5:1 support “let us have peace” rather than “we have peace,” as if justification by faith may not result in peace with God.  However, to spoil the cliffhanger, the oldest surviving manuscript of Romans 5:1 agrees with the traditional text on this one letter, that results in “we have peace” rather than “let us have peace.”Textual critics have changed on this one word over the years, because Wescott and Hort in 1881 said exwmen and not exomen, so they opted for “let us have peace.”  Now the critical text says the opposite and part of the “evidence” is the find of this manuscript fragment, called Uncial 0220 or the Wyman Fragment from the third century AD.  Even though as a whole, the manuscript apparently agrees with the Alexandrian text type, according to this one word and letter, it agrees with the textus receptus or the Byzantine text type.  Good news for eternal security and the doctrine of justification by faith.  Is this providence?  Is it an accident?  Do we have peace about the manuscript evidence?The find of a new manuscript doesn’t add to the doctrine of preservation of scripture.  I can’t be happy about the Wyman Fragment agreeing with the received text, God’s preserved Word, for this one word, when I know it doesn’t agree with text already received by God’s churches in other places.  We already knew that the word was exomen, “we have peace.”God’s churches believed the doctrine of perfect preservation and then they believed that text of the New Testament was the one passed down by the churches.  What was possessed in the apographa (the copies of the originals) by the churches was identical to the autographa (the original manuscripts of the New Testament).  God promised to lead His people to all truth.  His people would and could live by every word that proceeded out of the mouth of God.  God preserved through His churches every Word for every generation of God’s people.  There was a settled text of scripture.  This was the means by which God preserved His Words, using His churches, the Holy Spirit bearing witness to His Words.The Wyman Fragment didn’t offer anything new.  It contradicted many other old manuscripts on this one letter or word, but finding old manuscripts isn’t the way scripture is preserved.  If an even older manuscript of Romans 5:1 is finally found, and it disagrees with Uncial 0220, that won’t mean that we have to tweak or change that verse.  It’s already settled.On the other hand, God did preserve His Words in the original languages of the Old and New Testaments.  The King James Version is a translation of those Words.  Preservation of scripture did not occur in the English.  If that were the case, men didn’t have a perfect Bible before the King James Version and the origination of the English language, which was long after the inspiration of scripture.  Preservation of scripture is the preservation of what God inspired in the originals.  Those words and letters (jots and tittles) are preserved.  God promised that He would.Preservation is supernatural.  It is divine.  God used the churches, just like He used men in the inspiration of scripture to write the Words down.  They were His instruments.  The church is God’s instrument of preservation, but He did preserve perfectly every word in the language in which it was written.  Every generation of true saints has had accessibility to every Word of God.  Embracing a translation over the original text is a denial of the preservation of scripture just as much as the embrace of the critical text.  Both views deny preservation of scripture and should be rejected.

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