Reading and 150 words - Writing
Please read through the following filesResponse prompt:John Wesleys Quadrilateral has largely supplanted the older 3-legged stool model of Scripture, Tradition, and Reason (understood as rational/logical thought, not reason why/explanation) as the preferred methodological basis for Christian Theology. Do you agree that it is important to add Experience (that is, the personal experience of the believer/theologian) to these foundations? What problems might arise or be solved by this approach?Please limit your answer to 150 words.
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S CRIPTURAL R EASONING
three most renowned instances are: the ‘Marrow controversy’ (1718–23), in which the Church’s contractual
understanding of good works and Christian ASSURANCE
was challenged; the case of E. Irving (1792–1834), who
ascribed a fallen human nature to Jesus Christ; and the
case of J. M. Campbell (1800–72), who contested the
Church’s teaching on the penal and limited nature of
the ATONEMENT. Also worthy of mention is the case of
biblical scholar W. R. Smith (1846–94), whose articles
for the Encylopaedia Brittanica led him to be tried for
heresy by the Free Church of Scotland. In addition,
there were a series of SCHISMS in the Church relating to
issues of polity and patronage, notably in 1690, 1733,
and 1761, culminating in the Great Disruption of 1843.
This questioning of theological norms was symptomatic of the growing appreciation of human reason
in the emergence of the Scottish ENLIGHTENMENT. This
movement coincided with the emergence of a ‘moderate’ (as opposed to the ‘evangelical’) party in the
Church, holding a rather broader and more tolerant
view of theological matters. Indeed, a number of ‘moderates’ – such as T. Reid (1710–96) and H. Blair (1718–
1800) – made prominent contributions to the Scottish
Enlightenment in diverse fields of study (see COMMONSENSE PHILOSOPHY). Meanwhile, external pressures arising
from the need to respond to the emergence of DEISM,
empiricism, RATIONALISM, and BIBLICAL CRITICISM also contributed to the broadening of the terrain of Scottish
theology from its earlier circumscription by the tenets of
Reformed ORTHODOXY. In the nineteenth century, apologetic responses to these challenges came from members
of the ‘evangelical’ party such as T. Chalmers (1800–47),
although confidence in the faculty of human reason
waned as the years passed.
The second half of the nineteenth century saw a
pronounced re-emergence of theological engagement
with continental philosophy, notably in the shape of
I. KANT and G. W. F. HEGEL. Figures such as J. Caird
(1820–98) and A. Pringle-Pattison (1856–1931) contested the inheritance of German IDEALISM but were also
at the forefront of mediating its ideas to the Englishspeaking world. Later scholars such as J. Macmurray
(1891–1976), who advanced a personalist philosophy
centred on freedom and LOVE, and D. MacKinnon
(1913–94), who explored the relationship between
idealism and realism from a theological perspective,
represent a continuation of this interdisciplinary feature of Scottish theology (see PERSONALISM).
Over this same period, however, the dominant tendency in Scottish theology has been to work with a
narrower focus on theology as a discipline founded on
REVELATION, again with a particular eye for developments in
continental theology. Figures such as P. T. Forsyth (1848–
1921) and H. R. Mackintosh (1870–1936) reflected
continental kenotic understandings of Jesus Christ (see
KENOTIC THEOLOGY), while later figures such as D. Baillie
(1887–1954) and J. Baillie (1886–1960) exhibited a
certain continental liberalism in their theology (see
LIBERAL THEOLOGY). The influence of R. BULTMANN and
D. BONHOEFFER was noticeable on the work of theologians
such as R. G. Smith (1913–68) and J. Macquarrie (1919–
2007). Arguably the most famous Scottish theologian of
the past century, T. F. Torrance (1913–2007), was particularly influenced by the theology of K. BARTH, which he
brought into constructive dialogue with his own reappropriation of the patristic tradition.
N. M. de S. Cameron et al., eds., Dictionary of Scottish
Church History & Theology (T&T Clark, 1993).
J. Macleod, Scottish Theology in Relation to Church History since the Reformation (John Knox Press, 1943).
T. F. Torrance, Scottish Theology: From John Knox to John
McLeod Campbell (T&T Clark, 1996).
PAU L T. N IM M O
S CRIPTURAL R EASONING ‘Scriptural reasoning’ refers to an
approach to the study of the sacred texts of Judaism,
Christianity, and Islam first introduced in Charlottesville, Virginia, and Cambridge, England, in the 1990s by
the Society for Scriptural Reasoning, whose founding
members included D. Ford (b. 1948), D. Hardy (1930–
2007), and P. Ochs (b. 1950). The approach is characterized by (1) the corporate study of SCRIPTURE (2) by
scholars who are also practising adherents of the three
religions (3) who meet regularly in small groups (4)
over a substantial period of time (usually two or more
years). Scriptural reasoning is thus an experiment in
corporate, inter-religious, Scripture study, rather than a
prescribed method of biblical analysis like, say, form,
redaction, or rhetorical criticism (see BIBLICAL CRITICISM).
Typically, a scriptural-reasoning study group proceeds
by selecting a set of Qur’anic and biblical verses for
common study, directing attention first to ‘plain sense’
grammatical and historical readings, then to issues of
canonical setting and history of interpretation, and,
finally, to theological assessment of the selected passages in light of each other. The process is then repeated
with a new set of texts. Participants label the interpretive activity generated by this dialogue ‘scriptural
reasoning’, and sometimes make it the object of theoretical analysis. Scriptural reasoning seeks to foster a
model of academic scriptural theology that allows participants to maintain the normativity of their own
traditions while engaging sibling traditions in a spirit
of hospitality, trust, and egalitarianism. Participants
are ‘first’ but not ‘final’ authorities with respect to the
Scriptures of their own tradition. Hence scriptural
reasoning is also a corporate exercise in letting go of
exclusive ownership of sacred traditions.
See also ISLAM AND CHRISTIANITY; JUDAISM AND
CHRISTIANITY.
R. K E N DAL L S O U L E N
S CRIPTURE Like the related Greek and Latin terms graphē
and scriptura, ‘scripture’ refers in the first instance to
464
S CRIPTURE
the act of writing or to the individual written record.
The term is partially synonymous with ‘inscription’.
Where the reference is to the Bible, ‘scripture’ is often
qualified by ‘holy’ to indicate the distinctive category of
writing that is intended. The general, non-religious
usage of the term survived into the nineteenth century,
but ‘scripture’ or ‘the scriptures’ finally become virtually synonymous with ‘the Bible’. If there is a distinction, it is that ‘Bible’ tends to refer to a single printed
volume whereas ‘Scripture’ highlights the phenomenon
of writing or textuality as such. A further significant
term, ‘canon’, draws attention to the boundary that
marks off those scriptures deemed to be ‘holy’ from
all other books or scriptures.
From the sixteenth century onwards, Protestant theology developed what came to be called a ‘doctrine of
Scripture’ whose individual topics might include Scripture’s INSPIRATION, authority, sufficiency, clarity, infallibility, or unity. This relatively late development is of
lasting theological value, but it tends to take for granted
the phenomenon of Scripture as such – as though
this were too obvious to be worthy of consideration.
To affirm the inspiration or authority of Scripture, in
opposition perhaps to those who seem to deny it such
attributes, is often to overlook the prior question about
Scripture itself. Of the various roles that Christian faith
and practice assign to written texts, the one assigned to
‘Holy Scripture’ would seem to be the most fundamental. But how is that role to be described?
Christian faith originates within the creative ferment
of Second Temple Judaism, where the concept of Scripture is inseparable from its communal function. That
Scripture is read and heard in community is no less
fundamental to its existence than its ‘writtenness’ – for
writing is a technology of long-range communication
and exists purely in order to be read and heard. As is
noted at the so-called ‘Council of Jerusalem’, Moses
(viz., the written text) is read each sabbath in synagogues in every city (Acts 15:21), and this social fact is
the model for the new institutional structures created
by Christian mission. There is no reason to suppose
that written texts are the special concern of the nonChristian Jewish community, and that within the early
Church they are superseded by the living apostolic
witness, as the letter gives way to the Spirit. On the
contrary, the written text itself becomes living address
every time it is read and heard. In its written existence
it is nothing other than the unlimited potential of such
living address – like a musical score, which exists only
with a view to live performance.
Equally fundamental is the preaching, teaching, or
instruction that follows the reading of Scripture, indicating that what is written, read, and heard relates not
only to communal worship on the sabbath or Sunday
but also to everyday life during the rest of the week.
Scripture exists in order to generate certain forms of
praxis. As Justin Martyr (d. ca 165) notes, when
passages from the Gospels or prophetic texts have been
read, it is customary for the president to ‘instruct and
exhort to the imitation of these good things’ (1Apol.
67). The reading and preaching of Scripture occurs
here within a Eucharistic context; conversely, the
EUCHARIST is constituted in part by the reading and
preaching of Scripture. In and through preaching, the
scriptural text comes to shape the everyday world,
providing a hermeneutical framework within which
encountered reality in its negative and positive aspects
may be interpreted. The interpretation of Scripture is
not an end in itself but enables Scripture to perform its
own hermeneutical function, and it needs to be both
read and preached if it is to do so.
As regards its origin, Scripture is held to be the work
of individuals designated ‘prophets’ (for the OT) or
‘apostles’ (for the NT), that is, of persons divinely
mandated to communicate God’s address to the world.
It is not just its pragmatic function but also its transcendent origin that constitutes the holiness of ‘the Holy
Scriptures’. Indeed, the pragmatic function is itself
grounded in the transcendent origin. Those who hear
as the holy writings are read, and who receive the
corresponding instruction, are themselves the addressees of the divine communication embodied in these
texts. They do not simply overhear an address intended
primarily for the prophet’s or the apostle’s contemporaries, with only indirect and tenuous relevance for later
generations. On that account, the calling of the prophet
or apostle would be to speak a word of limited scope,
fortuitously preserved and transmitted by the artifice
of writing. Such a view (according to which writing
deracinates speech from its living context) reflects the
assumption that speech and writing are somehow antagonistic to one another, and that writing must be downgraded and even denigrated if the essence of speech is to
be preserved. This deep-rooted assumption is already
attested in Plato’s (ca 430–ca 345 BC) Phaedrus, and
continues to affect and impair the discussion of Holy
Scripture to this day. In reality, prophetic and apostolic
speech is not limited but universal in its scope, for in
ISRAEL and in Jesus Christ God addresses not just individuals or select communities but the world. It is writing
that realizes this universal scope, serving speech by
indefinitely extending its communicative range through
both time and space. As already noted, however, this
writing exists in order to be converted back into speech
as it is ‘performed’ in reading and preaching. Writing
derives from prior speech and is oriented towards future
speech, and as such it is a fit mode of communication
for the God who has already spoken and who will speak
again on the basis of what was said before. It is only
when Scripture is abstracted from its proper communicative and communal context that it can seem to represent a sterile fixity rather than a living word.
It is already clear from this that the content of
scripture is inseparable from its form. Its content is
465
S CRIPTURE
divine address with universal scope, directed to every
new present on the basis of what was once said in a
specific past; and the textuality or ‘writtenness’ that
is Scripture’s most basic formal feature corresponds
closely to this content. Could a specific word
attain universal scope, and without detriment to its
particularity, in any other way than through the
technology of writing? If the Holy Scriptures are
‘the Word of God’ (as sixteenth- and seventeenthcentury Reformed confessions so emphatically
claim), then they are such on account of their writtenness, not in spite of it. ‘Writtenness’ is a necessary
though not a sufficient condition for Scripture to be
Word of God.
Divine address or Word of God is still, however, a
relatively abstract characterization of the content of
Scripture. It draws attention to the ultimate origin of
Scripture, and thus to the authority and significance
of what is said there, but we learn little from it of what
the scriptural word is actually about. That God speaks
is one thing; what God says is another. A second formal
feature becomes relevant at this point, and this is the
bipartite nature of Scripture in its Christian form.
For Christians, though not for Jews, there is an ‘Old
Testament’ and there is a ‘New Testament’, and the
co-existence and inter-relatedness of the two canonical
collections make the Christian OT a fundamentally
different entity from the Jewish Tanakh – the Law
(Torah), the Prophets (Nebi’im), and the Writings
(Kethubim). Where Christian readers read these texts
alongside Jews, it is appropriate to regard them as a
‘Hebrew Bible’ shared by both communities. And yet,
where Christian faith operates on its own terrain, the
Old/New terminology is indispensable. It draws attention to the event in relation to which one collection of
writings is ‘old’, preceding that event and presupposed
in it, whereas another is ‘new’, following that event and
generated by it. In strictly chronological terms, there is
no justification for such absolutizing terminology.
Recent scholarship has tended towards late, post-exilic
datings for the OT texts, and the editorial processes
that shape their final canonical forms may in some
cases extend into the Christian era itself. Historically
speaking, the production of scriptural texts occurs
within a chronological continuum; Christians might
reasonably have adopted an extended scriptural canon,
comprising perhaps law, prophets, writings, and
gospels, rather than a bipartite one. Christian Scripture
is bipartite for theological more than historical
reasons. Its two major components are what they are
in relation to the event that both differentiates and
unites them: the event which the Gospels narrate as
the life, ministry, death, and RESURRECTION of Jesus, and
which PAUL construes as the singular divine act of the
world’s reconciliation.
That event is the core content of Scripture, and it
is attested already in Scripture’s bipartite form. For
Christian faith, Scripture is significant only in relation
to this event. When, in all four Gospels, JOHN THE BAPTIST
is introduced in scriptural language as the one who
‘prepares the way of the Lord’, he enacts the role of the
Christian OT as a whole, which is itself nothing other
than a preparing of the way of the Lord. When Jesus
himself comes onto the scene, he enters not some
neutral space but a context already shaped by Israel’s
Scriptures, with their testimony to the divine creation
of the world and election of Israel: both open-ended
events awaiting resolution. If, as Christians claim, Jesus
is the Scriptures’ ‘fulfilment’, he is no less dependent
on them than they on him. He and they mutually
interpret one another; neither party is self-interpreting,
that is, possessed of a self-evident significance that
cannot be otherwise and that needs no interpretative
engagement. And the agents of that mutual interpretation, of Scripture by Jesus and of Jesus by Scripture,
are the first Christians, from whose testimony the
writings of the NT derive. The NT, then, is the textual
space where the mutual interpretation of Jesus and
Scripture is enacted, and where the world itself is
transformed in light of this three-sided hermeneutical
event.
Once again, the form and the content of Scripture
here prove to be inseparable. And it is precisely the
most obvious and easily overlooked formal features –
writtenness, communal function, bipartite construction –
that turn out to be the most significant.
There are, of course, other such formal features. Two
that have recently attracted particular attention are the
genres of the biblical texts and the canonical limit. In
the first case, a particularly fruitful development has
been the rediscovery of the narrative form of many of
the biblical writings in its integral relation to their
content. In the second case, discussion is dominated
either by purely historical issues or by the assumption
that a canonical limit is inherently oppressive, and that
recovery of the texts and groups it marginalized is an
ethical obligation. Here, too, attention to the form/
content relationship might suggest a more constructive
way forward.
See also BIBLICAL THEOLOGY; HERMENEUTICS; INERRANCY.
466
B. S. Childs, Introduction to the Old Testament as Scripture (SCM, 1979).
H. W. Frei, The Eclipse of Biblical Narrative: A Study in
Eighteenth and Nineteenth Century Hermeneutics (Yale
University Press, 1974).
D. H. Kelsey, Proving Doctrine: The Uses of Scripture in
Modern Theology (Trinity, 1999 [1975]).
P. Ricœur, Hermeneutics and the Human Sciences: Essays
on Language, Action and Interpretation (Cambridge
University Press, 1981).
F. Watson, Text and Truth: Redefining Biblical Theology
(T&T Clark, 1997).
J. Webster, Holy Scripture: A Dogmatic Sketch (Cambridge
University Press, 2003).
F RA N C I S WAT S O N
Copyright © 2011. Cambridge University Press. All rights reserved.
T ONGUES
meta-narratives in terms of ‘the cultural logic of
capitalism’, in which anything and everything demands
acceptance as an articulation of freedom, and difference, though valued in principle, is not so much
engaged as left alone. One can find precursors to
contemporary expressions of this version of tolerance
in cultural anthropologists like F. Boas (1858–1942),
who articulated a nascent tolerance for difference
based on cultural plurality. Embedded within this version of tolerance, however, is a set of commitments
that entail proselytizing for it (e.g., arguing that people
should be left alone, that ‘freedom of choice’ should go
unquestioned) while at the same time rejecting other
forms of proselytizing (e.g. religious) as inherently
intolerant.
A second, thicker, and perhaps richer trajectory
within which to develop the idea of tolerance would
proffer not only acceptance of but also active engagement with the other. This approach would preserve the
place of tolerance at the heart of liberal democracy as
the political allowance for difference. For example, in his
ethics, T. Englehardt (b. 1941) has mad ...
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