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Cosmos Hermeneutics Science and Religion Scripture Song of Songs Theological Hermeneutics

Gregory of Nyssa on the Trees in the Garden

I’m auditing a patristics class at St. Vladimir’s Orthodox Theological Seminary.  This week we’re reading some of Gregory of Nyssa’s writings. Gregory was Bishop of Nyssa in the Fourth Century, and is one of the great Fathers of the Church.

Among other things, we read the Prologue from Gregory’s Commentary on the Song of Songs, in which he defends his allegorical method of interpreting the Song.  Biblical scholars and theologians today will not be entirely comfortable with allegorizing, but I think Gregory’s general comments are helpful in our age of polarization between rigid literalism and “scientific” critical exegesis:

“[w]e must pass to a spiritual and intelligent investigation of scripture so that considerations of the merely human element might be changed into something perceived by the mind once the more fleshly sense of the words has been shaken off like dust.”

It’s possible to misread this statement to suggest that the literal sense doesn’t matter.  But I don’t think that’s what Gregory means.  He’s saying, rather, that interpretation can’t stop at the literal sense, because at that level the text is merely human.

Gregory presents a number of examples in which scripture’s “literal” sense would in fact render it unintelligible. Such examples, he says, “should serve to remind us of the necessity of searching the divine words, of reading them, and of tracing in every way possible how something more sublime might be found which leads us to that which is divine and incorporeal instead of the literal sense.”

Again, the phrase “instead of” here seems jarring.  Yet it is not that the literal sense is irrelevant.  It is that careful study of the literal sense yields insights into the spiritual sense.

The most interesting of Gregory’s examples is his discussion of the two trees in the Garden of Eden:

[H]ow is it possible that there are two trees in the middle of paradise, one of salvation and the other of destruction[?]  For the exact center as in the drawing of a circle has only one point.  However, if another center is somehow placed beside or added to that first one, it is necessary that another circle be added for that center so that the former one is no longer in the middle.

He continues,

There was only one paradise.  How, then, does that text say that each tree is to be considered separately while both are in the middle?  And the text, which reveals that all of God’s works are exceedingly beautiful, implies the deadly tree is different from God’s.  How is this so?  Unless a person contemplates that truth through philosophy, what the text says here will be either inconsistent or a fable.  (Emphasis added.)

Note that Gregory lived long before the our scientific age, and long before historical-critical investigation of the Biblical texts.  We live after both the natural sciences and Biblical scholarship have demonstrated that texts such as Genesis 2 cannot be read simply as “literal” history or science.  But this is no more a problem for us than it was for Gregory, if we understand, as he did, that taking in the text’s literal sense is only the very start of interpretation.

Yet, a note to be fair:  not all ancient interpreters agreed.  Indeed, disagreements were often sharp.  Then, as now, there were arguments between allegorizers and literalists.  Here, for example, is another excerpt we were assigned to read, from Theodore of Mopsuestia, Bishop of Mopsuestia in the Fourth Century, in his Commentary on Galatians:

Those people [the allegorizers], however, turn it all into the contrary, as if the entire historical account of divine Scripture differed in no way from dreams in the night.  When they start expounding divine Scripture ‘spiritually’ — ‘spiritual interpretation’ is the name they like to give to their folly — they claim that Adam is not Adam, paradise is not paradise, the serpent is not the serpent.  I should like to tell them this:  If they make history serve their own ends, they will have no history left.

Everything old is new again!  And we were also given an interpretive article by Margaret Mitchell of the University of Chicago, which notes that the “Alexandrine” allegorizers and “Antiochene” literalists were not so neatly polarized as some might think:  she notes that both Alexandrine and Antiochene exegesis often “was a tool for enacting particular ecclesiastical, theological, and social agendas.”  Yes, everything old is new again!

So what might we learn?  Perhaps that there are many ways of reading, and the interpretive task never ends.

(Image credit:  Wikimedia Commons)

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Hermeneutics Patristics Theological Hermeneutics Theology

The Fathers on Scripture

I’m auditing a Themes in Patristic Theology class at St. Vladimir’s Orthodox Theological Seminary with Dr. John Behr.  A good portion of the first class was a reading of Melito of Sarids’ homily On Pascha.  There is some controversy about whether Melito was anti-Semitic, but as Fr. Behr explained it, the references to “Israel” in this text are really references to us, the hearers, as we approach the table:  we are the reason Christ died.

Here are some notes on on the lecture about the Fathers’ approach to scripture:

1.  Scripture is cryptic.  “If it were not cryptic, it wouldn’t be scripture.”  “You don’t have to work at interpreting a shopping list.”

2.  Scripture is harmonious.  It all speaks about Christ.

3.  Scripture is contemporary — it wasn’t written primarily for the benefit of the original hearers, but primarily for our benefit.

4.  Scripture is inspired, and inspiration is inseparable from how Christ opens the book to us.  It requires an “inspired” reading which turns on an ongoing encounter with Christ.  Christ is not a “lens” through which we view scripture, but is already present in scripture.  Scripture is a sort of thesaurus or treasury of Christ.

My sensibility as a theological interpreter who wants to be conversant with Biblical Studies might lead me to place more emphasis on the text’s reception by the original hearing community.  But with the Fathers, and Barth, and all good theological interpreters, notice this sense that scripture’s power isn’t so much in its static content as in its life as the reader encounters Christ in and through the text.

Categories
Hermeneutics Science and Religion Theology

Christianity Today on Adam

Christianity Today ran an article and an editorial this month on the problems with the historical Adam.  On the whole, I thought the article did a nice job of summarizing the issues.  I’m very glad CT is introducing this for discussion by the evangelical community.  I commend the article.

The editorial — not as much.  Yes, I am glad they are putting a “representative” model out there for the broader evangelical public.  That is good.  But it is not good to tie this to “the gospel,” as the title of the editorial seems to do, and it is not good to draw lines in the sand, as the editorial does.

Obviously, there are ways of thinking about the Christian gospel in which Adam and Eve could be symbolic.  It is unwise in the extreme for CT to stake “the gospel” to this hermeneutical question.

This statement by the CT editors is particularly troubling:  “First, the entire story of what is wrong with the world hinges on the disobedient exercise of the will by the first humans. The problem with the human race is not its dearth of insight but its misshapen will.” Well — yes and no.  The “entire story of what is wrong with the world” surely includes each of our individual and willful sins — right?  And it also includes the evil that was present in creation prior to Adam’s sin — the serpent — right?  So the primoridal human sin is an important part of the story of what is wrong with the world, but it is not by any means the whole story.

Equally troubling, the editors say “Christians have drawn a line” as though anyone who thinks otherwise is not a “Christian.” But most Christian theologians and Biblical scholars today take Adam and Eve to be symbolic.  In this regard, the editors misconstrue Catholic theology for support for this idea that “Christians” have drawn a line in the sand. I’m really getting tired of conservative evangelicals citing Papal statements as if they understand how Catholic theologians think about these things. And they completely ignore Eastern Orthodox theology, which generally is unconcerned if Adam and Eve are symbolic (see, e.g., the Orthodox Church in America website).

At the end of the day I agree with the CT editors that Adam and Eve were “real people,” or at least are literary figures that represent real people and real events.  This seems to me the best way to pull together the important theological and heremeneutical principles we need to integrate.  But why this continual insistence that all real “Christians” think like editors of CT? It still strikes me as a kinder, gentler fundamentalism, despite the expressed desire to achieve distance from fundamentalism.  There still is work to do on this front.

Categories
Hermeneutics Historical Theology Song of Songs Spirituality Theological Hermeneutics

A Prayer for Study of Song of Songs: William of St. Thierry

Here is a wonderful prayer from William of St. Thierry, which is a prelude to his study of the Song of Songs.  This is from The Church’s Bible Commentary.

As we approach the epithalamium, the marriage song, the song of the Bridegroom and the Bride, to read and weigh your work, we call upon you, O Spirit of holiness. We want you to fill us with your love, O love, so that we may understand love’s song — so that we too may be made in some degree participants in the dialogue of the holy Bridegroom and the Bride; and so that what we read about may come to pass within us.  For where it is a question of the soul’s affections, one does not easily understand what is said unless one is touched by similar feelings.  Turn us then to yourself, O holy Spirit, holy Paraclete, holy Comforter; comfort the poverty of our solitude, which seeks no solace apart from you; illumine and enliven the desire of the suppliant, that it may become delight.  Come, that we may love in truth, that whatever we think or say may proceed out of the fount of your love.  Let the Song of your love be so read by us that it may set fire to love itself within us; and let love itself be for us the interpreter of your Song.

Categories
Hermeneutics Historical Theology Song of Songs Theological Hermeneutics Theology

Gregory the Great: On Scripture (Song of Songs)

Here’s a wonderful quote from Gregory the Great on the nature of scripture.  He is commenting on the Song of Songs — a text I’m studying for some small group settings and adult classes I’m leading.  This was reproduced in the wonderful The Church’s Bible Commentary on Song of Songs.  Notice that, for Gregory — as for all the Church Fathers —  discerning the meaning of scripture was a spiritual exercise that involved drawing out the divine meaning from the human words.

For it is the same with the words and meanings of sacred Scripture as it is with the colors and subjects of a painting; and anyone who is so intent upon the colors in the painting that he ignores the real things it portrays is immeasurably silly.  For if we embrace the words, which are spoken externally, and disregard their meanings, as if knowing nothing of things that are portrayed, we are clinging to mere colors.  “The letter kills,” it is writte, “but the spirit gives life” (2 Cor. 3:6).  For the letter covers the spirit in the same way that the husk conceals the grain.  The husks, however, are food for beasts of burden; it is the grain that feeds human beings.  Whoever, then, makes use of human reason casts away the husks that belong to beasts of burden and hastens to consume the grain of the spirit.

To be sure, it serves a good purpose for mysteries to be hidden by the cloak of the letter, seeing that wisdom that has been sought after and pursued is savored the more for that….

Hence when we attend to words that are employed in human intercourse, we ought to stand as it were outside our humanity, lest, if we take in what is said on the human level, we detect nothing of the divinity that belongs to the things we are meant to hear….

For Scripture is a sort of sacred mountian from which the Lord comes within our hearts to creat understanding.  This is the mountian of which the prophet says, “God shall come from Lebanon, and the holy one from the dense and overclouded mountain” (Hab. 3:3).  The mountain is dense with the thoughts it contains and “overclouded” with allegories.  One must be aware, however, that we are instructed, when the voice of the Lord sounds on the mountain, to wash our clothing and be purified of every fleshly pollution, if we are hurrying to come to the mountain.  Indeed, it is written that if a wild beast should touch the mountain, it would be stoned (Heb. 12:20).  Now a beast touches the mountain when people given over to irrational urges hasten toward the height of sacred Scripture do not understand it as they ought, but irrationally bend their understanding of it to the service of their own pleasure.

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Biblical Studies Hermeneutics Photography and Music Theological Hermeneutics Theology

N.T. Wright on "Literal"

Another good video in the continuing conversation with N.T. Wright.

Categories
Biblical Studies Culture Hermeneutics Science and Religion Theological Hermeneutics

NT Wright on the Biblical Creation Texts, Genre, and Politics

This is an excellent video from N.T. Wright.  I think he’s right that faithful readings of the text must try to disentangle the text from our prior cultural and political assumptions and battles.

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Biblical Studies Hermeneutics Theology

Pete Enns on the Fundamentalist-Modernist Controversy

This recent commentary on Pete Enns’ blog, I think, hits the nail on the head:

I have said this on other occasions and it bears repeating: the tensions in conservative American Christianity that began in earnest in the 19th century were not so much “caused” by higher-critical scholarship, but by the clash of some very legitimate newer insights into the Bible (e.g., pentateuchal authorship, the ANE background to Genesis, etc., etc., etc.) with older theological paradigms that were not suited to address these newer insights. I understand that the matter is a bit more complicated than I lay out here, but the general contours are clear to me. The resulting liberal/fundamentalist divide was perhaps an inevitable perfect storm, but neither option does justice to the rich possibilities before us.

If I may continue a rather reductionistic analysis (which is not accurate on the level of historical analysis, but is alive and well, nonetheless—indeed, perpetuated—in some popular circles): liberals looked at our developing knowledge of the ancient world of the Bible and said “A ha, I told you. The Bible is nothing special. Israelite religion is just like any other ancient faith. You conservatives need to get over yourselves.” The fundamentalist response was (fingers firmly planted in ears) “La la la la la la, I do not hear you. There may be a millimeter of insight in some of what you are saying, but if what you are saying is true, our theology—which is the sure truth of Scripture, handed down through the ages—is false, and that is unthinkable.”

Battle lines were drawn rather than theological and hermeneutical principles reassessed.

“Neither option does justice to the rich possibilities before us.” Exactly.

Categories
Hermeneutics Historical Theology Science & Technology

McGrath on Augustine on Darwin

An excellent essay in CT by Alister McGrath on what Augustine might have made of Darwin.  (HT:  BioLogos blog)

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Biblical Studies Hermeneutics Historical Theology Theology

Bloesch on Scriptural Authority, Truth and Error (Third Way)

Scot McKnight has been blogging about a “Third Way” in evangelicalism.  Donald Bloesch wrote a book in 1983 — yes, 25 years ago! — talking about many of the same ideas:  The Future of Evangelical Christianity:  A Call for Unity Amid Diversity.  Among other things, Bloesch’s book (and others from that era like it) show that thinking about a “third way” is not just some kind of emergo-liberal babble.  Bloesch resonates with me on scripture and epistemology.  Here he is in “The Future of Evangelical Christianity” on scripture:

As I see it, there are three basic approaches to scriptural authority:  the sacramental, the scholastic, and the liberal-modernist.  In the first, the Bible is a divinely appointed channel, a mirror, or a visible sign of divine revelation.  This was the general position of the church fathers, the doctors of the medieval church, and the Reformers.  In the second, the Bible is the written or verbal revelation of God, a transcript of the very thoughts of God.  This has been the viewpoint of Protestant fundamentalism, though it was anticipated in both Catholic and Protestant scholastic orthodoxy.  in the third, the Bible is a record of the religious experience of a particular people in history; this refelects the general stance of liberalism, both Catholic and Protestant.  Only the first position does justice to the dual origin of scripture — that it is both a product of divine inspiration and a human witness to divine truth.   We need to recognize the full humanity of Scripture as well as its true divinity.  Indeed, it should be impressed upon us that we can come to know its divinity only in and through its humanity.  As Luther put it, the Scriptures are the swaddling clothes that contain the treasure of Christ.

Well there you have it — all of the issues that are on the table today were being discussed by wise and eminent evangelical theologians such as Bloesch twenty-five years ago.  And, as Bloesch notes, what we are calling the “third way” is really the ancient way of “faith seeking understanding.”

Similarly, Bloesch deals in “The Future of Evangelical Christianity” with how we define the inerrancy or infallibility of scripture.  He says:

On the intractable problem of whether Scripture contains errors, e need to recognize that this conflict is rooted in disparate notions of truth.  Truth in the Bible means conformity to the will and purpose of God.  Truth in today’s empirical, scientific milieu means an exact correspondence between one’s ideas or perceptions and the phenomena of nature and history.  Error in the Bible means a deviation from the will and purpose of God, unfaithfulness to the dicates of his law.  Error in the empirical mind-set of a technological culture means inaccuracy or inconsistency in what is reported as objectively occurring in nature or history.  Technical precision is the measure of truth in empiricism.  Fidelity to God’s Word is the biblical criterion for truth.  Empiricism narrows the field of investigation to objective sense data, and therefore to speak of revelation as superhistorical or hidden in history is to remove it from what can legitimately be considered as knowledge.  The difference between the rational-empirical and the biblical understanding of truth is the difference between transparency to Eternity and literal facticity.

Again, here it is — a critique of modernist epistemology from an evangelical theologian who is not “post-modern” twenty-five years ago.   The “third way” is not an effort to do something new.  It’s an effort to correct something new and get back to something ancient.