Must
I Learn How to Interpret the Bible?
By D. A. Carson
Alliance
of Confessing Evangelicals, Inc -
Hermeneutics is the art and science of interpretation; biblical
hermeneutics is the art and science of interpreting the Bible.
At the time of the Reformation, debates over interpretation played
an enormously important role. These were debates over interpretation,
not just over interpretations. In other words, the Reformers
disagreed with their opponents not only over what this or that
passage meant, but over the nature of interpretation, the locus
of authority in interpretation, the role of the church and of
the Spirit in interpretation, and much more.
During the last half-century, so many developments have taken
place in the realm of hermeneutics that it would take a very long
article even to sketch them in lightly. Sad to say, nowadays many
scholars are more interested in the challenges of the discipline
of hermeneutics itself, than in the Bible that hermeneutics should
help us handle more responsibly. Ironically, there are still some
people who think that there is something slightly sleazy about
interpretation. Without being crass enough to say so, they secretly
harbor the opinion that what others offer are interpretations,
but what they offer is just what the Bible says.
Carl F. H. Henry is fond of saying that there are two kinds of
presuppositionalists: those who admit it and those who don't.
We might adapt his analysis to our topic: There are two kinds
of practitioners of hermeneutics: those who admit it and those
who don't.
The fact of the matter is that every time we find something in
the Bible (whether it is there or not!), we have interpreted the
Bible. There are good interpretations and there are bad interpretations,
but there is no escape from interpretation.
This is not the place to lay out foundational principles, or to
wrestle with the "new hermeneutic" and with "radical
hermeneutics." [For more information and bibliography on
these topics, and especially their relation to postmodernism and
how to respond to it, see my book The Gagging of God: Christianity
Confronts Pluralism, esp. chapters 2-3 (Grand Rapids: Zondervan,
1996).] I shall focus instead on one "simple" problem,
one with which every serious Bible reader is occasionally confronted.
What parts of the Bible are binding mandates for us, and what
parts are not?
"Greet one another with a holy kiss": the French do
it, Arab believers do it, but by and large we do not. Are we therefore
unbiblical? Jesus tells his disciples that they should wash one
another's feet (Jn 13:14), yet most of us have never done so.
Why do we "disobey" that plain injunction, yet obey
his injunction regarding the Lord's Table? If we find reasons
to be flexible about the "holy kiss," how flexible may
we be in other domains? May we replace the bread and wine at the
Lord's Supper with yams and goat's milk if we are in a village
church in Papua, New Guinea? If not, why not? And what about the
broader questions circulating among theonomists regarding the
continuing legal force of law set down under the Mosaic covenant?
Should we as a nation, on the assumption that God graciously
grants widespread revival and reformation, pass laws to execute
adulterers by stoning? If not, why not? Is the injunction for
women to keep silent in the church absolute (1 Cor 14:33-36)?
If not, why not? Jesus tells Nicodemus that he must be born again
if he is to enter the kingdom; he tells the rich young man that
he is to sell all that he has and give it to the poor. Why do
we make the former demand absolute for all persons, and apparently
fudge a little on the second?
Obviously, I have raised enough questions for a dissertation or
two. What follows in this article is not a comprehensive key to
answering all difficult interpretive questions, but some preliminary
guidelines to sorting such matters out. The apostolic number of
points are not put into any order of importance.
(1) As conscientiously as possible, seek the balance of Scripture,
and avoid succumbing to historical and theological disjunctions.
Liberals have often provided us with nasty disjunctions: Jesus
or Paul, the charismatic community or the "early catholic"
church, and so forth. Protestants sometimes drop a wedge between
Paul's faith apart from works (Rom 3:28) and James' faith and
works (Jas 2:4); others absolutize Galatians 3:28 as if it were
the controlling passage on all matters to do with women, and spend
countless hours explaining away 1 Timothy 2:12 (or the reverse!).
Historically, many Reformed Baptists in England between the middle
of the eighteenth century and the middle of the twentieth so emphasized
God's sovereign grace in election that they became uncomfortable
with general declarations of the Gospel. Unbelievers should not
be told to repent and believe the Gospel: how could that be, since
they are dead in trespasses and sin, and may not in any case belong
to the elect? They should rather be encouraged to examine themselves
to see if they have within themselves any of the first signs of
the Spirit's work, any conviction of sin, any stirrings of shame.
On the face of it, this is a long way from the Bible, but thousands
of churches thought it was the hallmark of faithfulness. What
has gone wrong, of course, is that the balance of Scripture has
been lost. One element of Biblical truth has been elevated to
a position where it is allowed to destroy or domesticate some
other element of Biblical truth.
In fact, the "balance of Scripture" is not an easy thing
to maintain, in part because there are different kinds of balance
in Scripture. For example, there is the balance of diverse responsibilities
laid on us (e.g. praying, being reliable at work, being a biblically
faithful spouse and parent, evangelizing a neighbor, taking an
orphan or widow under our wing, and so forth): these amount to
balancing priorities within the limits of time and energy. There
is the balance of Scripture's emphases as established by observing
their relation to the Bible's central plot-line; there is also
the balance of truths which we cannot at this point ultimately
reconcile, but which we can easily distort if we do not listen
carefully to the text (e.g. Jesus is both God and man; God is
both the transcendent sovereign and yet personal; the elect alone
are saved, and yet in some sense God loves horrible rebels so
much that Jesus weeps over Jerusalem and God cries, "Turn,
turn, why will you die? For the LORD has no pleasure in the death
of the wicked."). In each case, a slightly different kind
of Biblical balance comes into play, but there is no escaping
the fact that Biblical balance is what we need.
(2) Recognize that the antithetical nature of certain parts of
the Bible, not least some of Jesus' preaching, is a rhetorical
device, not an absolute. The context must decide where this is
the case.
Of course, there are absolute antitheses in Scripture that must
not be watered down in any way. For example, the disjunctions
between the curses and the blessings in Deuteronomy 27-28 are
not mutually delimiting: the conduct that calls down the curses
of God and the conduct that wins his approval stand in opposite
camps, and must not be intermingled or diluted. But on the other
hand, when eight centuries before Christ, God says, "For
I desire mercy, not sacrifice, and acknowledgment of God rather
than burnt offerings" (Hos 6:6), the sacrificial system of
the Mosaic covenant is not thereby being destroyed. Rather, the
Hebrew antithesis is a pointed way of saying, "If push comes
to shove, mercy is more important than sacrifice. Whatever you
do, you must not rank the marks of formal religion in this case,
burnt offerings and other mandated ritual sacrifices with fundamental
acknowledgment of God, or confuse the extent to which God cherishes
compassion and mercy with the firmness with which he demands the
observance of the formalities of the sacrificial system."
Similarly, when Jesus insists that if anyone is to become his
disciple, he must hate his parents (Lk 14:26), we must not think
Jesus is sanctioning raw hatred of family members. What is at
issue is that the claims of Jesus are more urgent and binding
than even the most precious and prized human relationships (as
the parallel in Mt 10:37 makes clear).
Sometimes the apparent antithesis is formed by comparing utterances
from two distant passages. On the one hand, Jesus insists that
the praying of his followers should not be like the babbling of
the pagans who think they are heard because of their many words
(Mt 6:7). On the other hand, Jesus can elsewhere tell a parable
with the pointed lesson that his disciples should pray perseveringly
and not give up (Lk 18:1-8). Yet, if we were to suppose that the
formal clash between the two injunctions is more than superficial,
we would be betraying not only our ignorance of Jesus' preaching
style, but also our insensitivity to pastoral demands. The first
injunction is vital against those who think they can wheedle things
out of God by their interminable prayers; the second is vital
against those whose spiritual commitments are so shallow that
their mumbled one-liners constitute the whole of their prayer
life.
(3) Be cautious about absolutizing what is said or commanded only
once.
The reason is not that God must say things more than once for
them to be true or binding. The reason, rather, is that if something
is said only once it is easily misunderstood or misapplied. When
something is repeated on several occasions and in slightly different
contexts, readers will enjoy a better grasp of what is meant and
what is at stake.
That is why the famous "baptism for the dead" passage
(1 Cor 15:29) is not unpacked at length and made a major plank
in, say, the Heidelberg Catechism or the Westminster
Confession. Over forty interpretations of that passage have
been offered in the history of the church. Mormons are quite sure
what it means, of course, but the reason why they are sure is
because they are reading it in the context of other books that
they claim are inspired and authoritative.
This principle also underlies one of the reasons why most Christians
do not view Christ's command to wash one another's feet as a third
sacrament or ordinance. Baptism and the Lord's Supper are certainly
treated more than once, and there is ample evidence that the early
church observed both, but neither can be said about foot washing.
But there is more to be said.
(4) Carefully examine the biblical rationale for any saying or
command.
The purpose of this counsel is not to suggest that if you cannot
discern the rationale you should flout the command. It is to insist
that God is neither arbitrary nor whimsical, and by and large
he provides reasons and structures of thought behind the truths
he discloses and the demands he makes. Trying to uncover this
rationale can be a help in understanding what is of the essence
of what God is saying, and what is the peculiar cultural expression
of it.
Before I give a couple of examples, it is important to recognize
that all of Scripture is culturally bound. For a start, it is
given in human languages (Hebrew, Aramaic, Greek) and languages
are a cultural phenomenon. Nor are the words God speaks to be
thought of as, say, generic Greek. Rather, they belong to the
Greek of the Hellenistic period (it isn't Homeric Greek or Attic
Greek or modern Greek). Indeed, this Greek changes somewhat from
writer to writer (Paul does not always use words the same way
that Matthew does) and from genre to genre (apocalyptic does not
sound exactly like an epistle). None of this should frighten us.
It is part of the glory of our great God that he has accommodated
himself to human speech, which is necessarily time-bound and therefore
changing. Despite some postmodern philosophers, this does not
jeopardize God's capacity for speaking truth. It does mean that
we finite human beings shall never know truth exhaustively (that
would require omniscience), but there is no reason why we cannot
know some truth truly. Nevertheless, all such truth as God discloses
to us in words comes dressed in cultural forms. Careful and godly
interpretation does not mean stripping away such forms to find
absolute truth beneath, for that is not possible: we can never
escape our finiteness. It does mean understanding those cultural
forms and by God's grace discovering the truth that God has disclosed
through them.
So when God commands people to rend their clothes and put on sackcloth
and ashes, are these precise actions so much of the essence of
repentance that there is no true repentance without them? When
Paul tells us to greet one another with a holy kiss, does he mean
that there is no true Christian greeting without such a kiss?
When we examine the rationale for these actions, and ask whether
or not ashes and kissing are integratively related to God's revelation,
we see the way forward. There is no theology of kissing; there
is a theology of mutual love and committed fellowship among the
members of the church. There is no theology of sackcloth and ashes;
there is a theology of repentance that demands both radical sorrow
and profound change.
If this reasoning is right, it has a bearing on both foot washing
and on head-coverings. Apart from the fact that foot washing appears
only once in the New Testament as something commanded by the Lord,
the act itself is theologically tied, in John 13, to the urgent
need for humility among God's people, and to the cross. Similarly,
there is no theology of head-coverings, but there is a profound
and recurrent theology of that of which the head-coverings were
a first-century Corinthian expression: the proper relationships
between men and women, between husbands and wives.
(5) Carefully observe that the formal universality of proverbs
and of proverbial sayings is only rarely an absolute universality.
If proverbs are treated as statutes or case law, major interpretive
and pastoral errors will inevitably ensue.
Compare these two sayings of Jesus: (a) "He who is not with
me is against me, and he who does not gather with me scatters"
(Mt 12:30). (b) "...for whoever is not against us is for
us" (Mk 9:40; cf. Lk 9:50). As has often been noted, the
sayings are not contradictory if the first is uttered to indifferent
people against themselves, and the second to the disciples about
others whose zeal outstrips their knowledge. But the two statements
are certainly difficult to reconcile if each is taken absolutely,
without thinking through such matters.
Or consider two adjacent proverbs in Proverbs 26: (a) "Do
not answer a fool according to his folly..." (26:4), or (b)
"Answer a fool according to his folly..." (26:5). If
these are statutes or examples of case law, there is unavoidable
contradiction. On the other hand, the second line of each proverb
provides enough of a rationale that we glimpse what we should
have seen anyway: proverbs are not statutes. They are distilled
wisdom, frequently put into pungent, aphoristic forms that demand
reflection, or that describe effects in society at large (but
not necessarily in every individual), or that demand consideration
of just how and when they apply.
Let us spell out these two proverbs again, this time with the
second line included in each case: (a) "Do not answer a fool
according to his folly, or you will be like him yourself."
(b) "Answer a fool according to his folly, or he will be
wise in his own eyes." Side by side as they are, these two
proverbs demand reflection on when is the part of prudence to
refrain from answering fools, lest we be dragged down to their
level, and when it is the part of wisdom to offer a sharp, "foolish"
rejoinder that has the effect of pricking the pretensions of the
fool. The text does not spell this out explicitly, but if the
rationales of the two cases are kept in mind, we will have a solid
principle of discrimination.
So when a well-known parachurch organization keeps quoting "Train
up a child in the way he should go, and when he is old he will
not depart from it" as if it were case law, what are we to
think?
This proverbial utterance must not be stripped of its force: it
is a powerful incentive to responsible, God-fearing, child-rearing.
Nevertheless, it is a proverb; it is not a covenantal promise.
Nor does it specify at what point the children will be brought
into line. Of course, many children from Christian homes go astray
because the parents really have been very foolish or unbiblical
or downright sinful; but many of us have witnessed the burdens
of unnecessary guilt and shame borne by really godly parents when
their grown children are, say, 40 years of age and demonstrably
unconverted.
(6) The application of some themes and subjects must be handled
with special care, not only because of their intrinsic complexity,
but also because of essential shifts in social structures between
Biblical times and our own day.
"Everyone must submit himself to the governing authorities,
for there is no authority except that which God has established.
The authorities that exist have been established by God. Consequently,
he who rebels against the authority is rebelling against what
God has instituted, and those who do so will bring judgment on
themselves" (Rom 13:1-2). Some Christians have reasoned from
this passage that we must always submit to the governing authorities,
except in matters of conscience before God (Acts 4:19). Even then,
we "submit" to the authorities by patiently bearing
the sanctions they impose on us in this fallen world. Other Christians
have reasoned from this passage that since Paul goes on to say
that the purpose of rulers is to uphold justice (Rom 13:3-4),
then if rulers are no longer up- holding justice, the time may
come when righteous people should oppose them, and even, if necessary,
overthrow them. The issues are exceedingly complex, and were thought
through in some detail by the Reformers.
But there is of course a new wrinkle added to the fabric of debate
when one moves from a totalitarian regime, or from an oligarchy,
or from a view of government bound up with an inherited monarchy,
to some form of democracy. This is not to elevate democracy to
heights it must not occupy. It is to say, rather, that in theory
at least, a democracy allows you to "overthrow" a government
without violence or bloodshed. And if the causes of justice cannot
do so, it is because the country as a whole has slid into a miasma
that lacks the will, courage, and vision to do what it has the
power to do. What, precisely, are the Christian's responsibilities
in that case (whatever your view of the meaning of Romans 13 in
its own context)?
In other words, new social structures beyond anything Paul could
have imagined, though they cannot overturn what he said, may force
us to see that the valid application demands that we bring into
the discussion some considerations he could not have foreseen.
It is a great comfort, and epistemologically important, to remember
that God did foresee them but that does not itself reduce the
hermeneutical responsibilities we have.
Dr. D. A. Carson teaches New Testament at Trinity Evangelical
Divinity School and has more than twenty books to his credit.
Among them are Showing the Spirit, Exegetical Fallacies, Divine
Sovereignty and Human Responsibility, How Long O Lord: Reflections
on Suffering and Evil, and Matthew in The Expositor's Bible Commentary.