“The purpose of Scripture is not merely to give us an authoritative list of things we must believe but also to exhort us, command us, inspire our imaginations, put songs in our hearts, question us, sanctify us, and so on” (John Frame, The Doctrine of the Knowledge of God, 78).
Monthly Archives: February 2014
The Bible is Infallible and Normative Language
“The Bible is language. It describes itself. Not only is it preinterpreted by God (as all facts are), but it also interprets and describes its own facts. And Scripture’s self-interpretations and self-descriptions are infallible and normative; in the most important sense, they cannot be improved upon” (John Frame, The Doctrine of the Knowledge of God, 78).
Devotional Discernment
Rev. Lane Keister’s recent musings on exercising discernment regarding one’s devotional reading.
We do not want Faulkner [“stream of consciousness”] theology. . . . So read books that will make you stretch. Read books where you will not automatically understand everything that is said, but where you have to grow in order to understand. Read books where you might need a dictionary of theology terms handy. Read Calvin’s Institutes, Berkhof’s Systematic Theology, Shedd’s Dogmatic Theology, and get what you can out of it, which is a lot more than you might think. Then ask questions so that you will grow. If you are not growing, then your students won’t grow either. So work through that tough bit of theology with a pipe between your teeth and a pencil in your hand! You might find your heart singing the praises of God more often than you might think.
All that to say, I haven’t read either Berkhof’s ST or Shedd’s DT. Yikes!
Reading Notes: The Shape of Sola Scriptura by Keith A. Mathison
Mathison, Keith A. The Shape of Sola Scriptura. Moscow: Canon Press, 2001.
KM’s The Shape of Sola Scriptura appears to be highly derivative of works by Heiko A. Oberman. KM regularly cites and footnotes Oberman works, listing five of Oberman’s works in the Bibliography: The Dawn of the Reformation (1986); Forerunners of the Reformation: The Shape of Late Medieval Thought (1967); The Harvest of Medieval Theology: Gabriel Biel and Late Medieval Nominalism (1963); Luther: Man Between God and the Devil (1989); The Reformation: Roots and Ramifications (1994). I’ve never read anything by Oberman.
KM’s “Tradition 0, I, II, & III” lingo propels much of KM’s argumentation. The bulk of the verbiage, Tradition I, II, III, are derived from Oberman (see pp. 32-33; 133-135), the remaining term, “Tradition 0”, is an expansion by Alister McGrath of Oberman’s terminology (p. 126).
KM’s chief aim is to correct and clear-up the contemporary equivocation of Tradition I and Tradition 0. For example, KM states:
The numerous ways in which sola scriptura has been misused have provided its critics with further evidence of the practical “unworkability” of the doctrine. . . . Roman Catholic and Orthodox apologists have been effective in their criticisms in large part because of the fact that most Protestants have adopted a subjective and individualistic version of sola scriptura that bears little resemblance to the doctrine of the Reformers. As long as Protestants attempt to maintain this defective version of sola scriptura, and as long as this version of the doctrine is allowed to be identified as the Protestant position, Roman Catholic and Orthodox apologists will continue to effectively demolish it and gain frustrated seekers (p. 14).
It is important to realize that there were two very different versions of the sola scriptura principle which were advanced during the sixteenth-century Reformation. The first concept, advocated by magisterial Reformers such as Luther and Calvin, insisted that Scripture was the sole source of revelation, the sole infallible authority, but that it was interpreted in and by the communion of saints according to the regula fidei. Tradition in the sense of the traditional interpretation of Scripture was not discarded. This is the view for which we are using the term “Tradition I.” The second concept, advocated by many of the radical Reformers, insisted that Scripture was the sole authority altogether. Not only were medieval “traditions” disregarded, but tradition in the sense of the regula fidei, the testimony of the fathers, the traditional interpretation of Scripture, and the corporate judgment of the Church were discarded as well. The interpretation of Scripture, according to this concept, was a strictly individual matter. This is the concept for which we are using the term “Tradition 0.” Unless these two positions are carefully and consciously distinguished, the kind of confusion that has prevailed in the debates of the last five hundred years will continue (p. 128).
Sola scriptura, when understood within the classical Protestant context of Tradition I, is not affected by Rome’s self-defeating criticism because it does not assert that Scripture is the only authority. It asserts that Scripture is the only inherently infallible authority. But although the Church is a fallible authority, Tradition I does not assert that this fallible Church cannot make inerrant judgments and statements. In fact, in the case of the canon of the New Testament, adherents of Tradition I would confess that the fallible Church has made an inerrant judgment. But do we believe this because a particular Church tells us so? No, we believe this because of the witness of the Holy Spirit, which was given corporately to all of God’s people and has been made manifest by a virtually unanimous receiving of the same New Testament canon in all of the Christian Churches. This is not an appeal to subjectivism because it is an appeal to the corporate witness of the Spirit to the whole communion of saints. The Holy Spirit is the final authority, not the Church through which He bears witness and to which he bears witness (pp. 318-319).
KM believes that “Tradition I” is “regula fidei as Tradition.”
KM believes that “the Church must affirm that Scripture is to be interpreted in and by the communion of saints within the theological context of the rule of faith [Tradition]” (p. 347).
KM believes that Truth (Scripture) and Tradition (rule of faith) can never be separated. There is, however, a distinct order: Scripture is the “only inherently infallible authority.”
In summary, I believe KM is essentially arguing that you cannot divorce truth from tradition—you cannot divorce Scripture from Scripture-being-interpreted-by-Christians-within-the-theological-context-of-the-rule-of-faith, e.g., “The early Church was therefore able to view Scripture and tradition as coinherent concepts” (p. 275); “The traditional apostolic rule of faith is the foundational hermeneutical context of Scripture” (p. 277); “If we confess the perspicuity of Scripture, then a confession of the ecumenical creeds inevitably follows. The ecumenical creeds are simply the written form of the confession of the faith of the universal Church. They are a confession of what the Church as a whole has read in the Scriptures” (279).
Reading this made me think of what Robert W. Jenson said in Canon and Creed, i.e., “For the sake of its integrity through history, the church must always remember that canon needs creed and creed needs canon, and that it is permitted to govern its discourse and practice by their joint import” (pp. 117-118).
Acquainted with Jesus Christ
“Seek to become acquainted with our Lord Jesus Christ. This is, indeed, the principal thing in Christianity. This is the cornerstone of Christianity. Till you know this, my warnings and advice will be useless, and your endeavors, whatever they may be, will be in vain. A watch that does not keep time is as useless as religion without Christ” (J. C. Ryle, Thoughts for Young Men, 47).
Prayer: A Concert of Voices (Craving God’s Help)
“When Satan afflicted the early church with fierce persecution, the New Testament church met corporately for prayer until the Lord heard their cries and filled them with boldness to continue preaching (Acts 4:24-31). Acts 4:24 says, “They lifted up their voice to God with one accord.” The Greek word used here actually means ‘a concert of voices'” (Joel R. Beeke, The Family at Church: Listening to Sermons and Attending Prayer Meetings, 44).
Tuesdays with Blaster at Tree & The Seed: TMWAJ – Tracks 16, 17, and 18
*I started this weekly review in 2012! I have been superlatively tardy. But, alas, it now comes to an end. BTW: This is one of my favorite punk rock records by the band Blaster the Rocket Man.*
Today’s installment is over Tracks 16, 17, and 18 of Blaster the Rocket Man’s 1999 release, The Monster Who Ate Jesus.
Go here for initial comments on album and the linear notes.
Go here for comments on Tracks 1, 2, and 3.
Go here for comments on Tracks 4, 5, and 6.
Go here for comments on Tracks 7, 8, and 9.
Go here for comments on Tracks 10, 11, and 12.
Go here for comments on Tracks 13, 14, and 15.
Track 16 – Venus at St. Anne’s
Surf-rock/rockabilly mashup with gang vocals, “Up! Up! Up! Up!” in concert with hand-claps. The underlined portion of the C. S. Lewis excerpt below are the only lyrics to speak of, both passionately and tersely delivered before a time change slowly paves the way to the song’s conclusion.
Up!
“I deny the charge. Foam-born Venus…golden
Aphrodite . . . Our Lady of Cyprus . . . I never
breathed a word against you. If I object to boys
who steal my nectarines, must I be supposed to
disapprove of nectarines in general? Or even of
boys in general? It might, you know, be stealing
that I disapprove of.”
– C.S. Lewis
Track 16 – Beehive Behave
Punk rock. Punk rock. Punk rock. The snare drum sounds like a stop-watch on Jolt! Lyrically witty, e.g., “Queen Bee says King me, honey.” Also, time change/bridge accents the allegorical observation: “Those worker bees buzz, buzz, buzz . . . No one knows why – it’s just – because . . .”
This is a tune for punk rock purists. 😉 In true punk rock convention, the song clocks-in at under a minute and fifteen seconds with the concluding imperative — “Beehive Behave!!!”
Queen Bee!
Queen Bee!
Queen Bee says King me, baby (2x)
Her Royal Monstrosity
hovers above me
I suffer the sting
beware!
Beehive behave! (many times over)
Queen Bee!
Queen Bee!
Queen Bee says King me, honey
Hive Mind
is hope for mankind
Flesh begets flesh
begets . . .
Beehive behave! (again and again)
Those worker bees buzz, buzz, buzz…
No one knows why
it’s just
because . . .
Beehive behave! (to the end)
Track 16 – Baby Unvamp (is Making a Comeback)
This tune is the locus classicus of the Blaster the Rocket Man catalog. Musically: straight-forward punk rock, drum in the pocket. Feels (perhaps) somewhat Ramones-esque. Lyrically: just brilliant, just brilliant, man! The tune ends with repetitive chanting. Also, a couple John Milton quotes are thrown in for good measure. You don’t see that everyday in punk rock.
She’s comin’ back
She’s runnin’ back
But somewhere along the way
she decided to play the whore
in the mud once more
Forgotten what He shed His blood for
For her
She was burnin’ with a passion fire
that soon became a mire of sin
that locked her in
inside her self
“Thou are become (O worst imprisonment!)
The Dungeon of Thyself.”*
The chains chaffed
She bled until she said
Oh God what have I become?
“Myself my sepulcher. A moving grave.”*
I am a slave once more
A whore cryin’ at your feet
So incomplete . . .
Baby unvamp is making a comeback
She’s starting to run back
to the Father and the Son
The only One who loves her
unconditionally
with Grace and Mercy
She clings to the Cross of Death
The Cross of Life
Her only hope
The Cross of Christ
She remembers when she first met Him
She was kickin’ in a pool of her own blood
Coughin’ it up
When He picked her up
She gave self up
and He raised her up
Presented her to the Father
without blame
Made her His bride
Gave her His Name
Erased the shame
She’s not the same!
All we little unvamps
once were sluts, were whores, were tramps
But now we are the Bride
of Jesus Christ
She’s growing
She’s teething
and one day she’ll bite you till you’re dead!
dead!
dead!
Alive!
in Christ!
Forgiven.
* Both quotes from “Samson Agonistes” by John Milton
Well, that’s it. Sorta. Appended to Track 18 are some silly answering machine messages, candid “in the recording studio” dialogue, and a whimsical rendition of “March of the Macrobes.”
Sin
“There are two ways of coming down from the top of a ladder; one is to jump down, and the other is to come down by the steps: but both will lead you to the bottom. So also there are two ways of going to hell; one is to walk into it with your eyes wide open–few people do that; the other is to go down by the steps of little sins–and that way, I fear, is only too common. Put up with a few little sins, and you will soon want a few more” (J. C. Ryle, Thoughts for Young Men, 68).
The Debate of Nye and Ham: Reading Notes
A week ago Bill Nye (you know, The Science Guy) and Ken Ham (of AIG = Answers in Genesis) held a public debate at the Creation Museum. Kudos to all involved. The cultural pot has been stirred, indeed. There were several hundred-thousand viewers who watched the debate live via YouTube–you can go here to view the entire debate, complements of AIG. Since last week there has been a lot of post-debate fallout: blog posts here, newspaper articles there, post-debate interviews online and TV. For example:
- Articles at Ars Technica
- Nate Anderson’s long-feature survey of the debate.
- Ars’ visual tour of the Creation Museum.
- Eric Bangeman’s initial (short) opinion of the debate.
- At Mashable — a 4 minute recap of the debate.
- At BaylyBlog — Ben Burlingham sketches a Christian approach to witnessing to Scientists.
- At his blog: Dr. Ken Schenck sadly reflects on the debate.
- At his blog: Dr. Albert Mohler, who had a front-row seat at the debate, shares his thoughts.
- At reformation 21: Pastor Rick Phillips provides some excellent post-debate observations.
Happy reading!
Entry # 1 for “Tongue-in-Cheek Theology”
From the conclusion to this theological article at Monergism.com.
Perhaps a story from the life of Martin Luther would be instructive here: when some inquisitive theologian asked him what God was doing before he created the world, Luther quipped, “He was busy creating hell for foolish theologians who pry into such questions”. The response is a little tongue-in-cheek, of course, but perhaps there is some wisdom in it, particularly when we are addressing the lapsarian question.