Tuesday, August 28, 2007

THE CLARITY OF SCRIPTURE

I would not have been able to understand the title of this blog five years ago. It wasn't until my Junior year in college that I read Martin Luther's "The Bondage of the Will". Luther served me well by explaining very simply and succinctly the doctrine of the perspecuity (clarity) of Scripture. He says,

"I certainly grant that many passages in the Scriptures are obscure and hard to elucidate, but that is due, not to the exalted nature of their subject, but to our own linguistic and grammatical ignorance; and it does not in any way prevent our knowing all the contents of Scripture...If words are obscure in one place, they are clear in another...I know that to many people a great deal remanis obscure; but that is due, not to any lack of clarity in Scripture, but to their own blindness and dullness, in that they make no effort to see truth which, in itself, could not be plainer."

God has given us His Word, so naturally He intends for us to understand it. This truth is so intuitive and presuppositional, that I don't feel the need to pull out individual verses to try and prove it (these verses are available however: Ps.19:4, 2Tim.3:16, 2Cor.3:15) The perspecuity of Scripture means several things:

1. The assertions of deconstructionists, Postmoderns, Neo-Orthodox-ers, and some Emergents that Scripture is something less than 'reliable propositional truth'--that is, WORDS which CORRESPOND with real TRUTH, are doomed.

2. As Christians, we can't shirk doctrinal responsibility by appeals to "mystery". It's true that Deuteronomy 29:29 says there are "secret things that belong to the Lord", but only after it talks about "the things that are revealed" being for us. Now don't get me wrong, we should never confidently affirm a belief that isn't represented in Scripture, either explicitly, or from clear implication--in other words, we should be extremely slow to speculate. I have no interest in trying to answer a doctrinal question which Scripture never asks/answers. However, it is our responsibility to hang on the every Word of our Savior, exhausting all our resources to understand His intended meaning.

3. Our rule for life and doctrine, faith and practice is found totally and only in the Bible. Church history is a wonderful resource for interpretation of those verses. My spiritual fathers give me precedent for so much (and this is an understatement!!) that I believe the Bible teaches. But at the end of the day, I am responsible to this book and this book alone. I shouldn't be scared (definitely cautious!!!) to part ways with Origen, Augustine, Aquinas, Luther, Calvin, or J.I. Packer for that matter. I am responsible to this Book alone.