Having Your Cake
Recently our studies in Today’s Word have focused on the rabbinic techniques of halachah and haggadah. Paul uses these techniques in his letters. We should not be surprised. After all, Paul was trained as a Pharissaic rabbi. What surprises most people is that halachah was always considered binding on the audience (since it was the direct application of the Torah – Law) but haggadah was always considered opinion, that is, not binding on the audience. This implies that there are statements in Paul’s letters (and in the other writers of the New Testament documents) that are not intended to be universal principles for all subsequent audiences. This implication bothers people. Suddenly it seems that we are thrown into a world where we aren’t quite so sure what we should follow and what is simply opinion. Something has to be done.
That “something” is what we call canonization. The Bible (all of it) is the canon of our faith. That means it is the rule of practice, the standard by which we live. We decide to make it so. Did you get that? It is not the canon because it comes to us and declares itself to be canonical. It is the canon because we adopt it as our only rule of faith and practice. That’s the same process that Muslims go through when they adopt the Quran as their canon. It’s the book that they live by.
Of course, this doesn’t mean that all canons are created equal. God’s Word is not merely an arbitrary choice. There are plenty of reasons to accept it as His Word, including evidence in the world, but that is a different topic. What we need to understand for this small discussion is that canon is not the same as inspiration nor is it the same as sacred text. We accept Paul’s letters as canon. That is a choice based on a whole lot of things, only one of which is our idea of inspiration and sacred text. But this does not imply that Paul considered his letters sacred text or even inspired. We have decided to treat them that way.
What this means is that Paul was just writing letters about real problems to real people. He employed all kinds of techniques, common to his time, to reach these people. So, there are cultural, contextual and rabbinic elements in all his letters. We must sort these out in order to understand what he meant, but we still hold his work (now) as canon.
Of course, since we believe the whole Bible is canon, that means all of it is the only standard of faith and practice. We are not free to ignore some parts and favor other parts. If we want Corinthians as canon, we must also accept Deuteronomy as canon. You can’t have it both ways – the proverbial cake problem. So, since Paul accepted the Hebrew Scriptures as canon (and so do we), we would expect that Paul would never say or teach anything that would violate his canon. And that’s where we run into exegetical difficulties (like 1 Corinthians 13). If it is all canon, then one part can’t say something that another part denies. We have to struggle with the text to show that it is consistent. That’s the job of the interpreter.
While we must never overlook the interaction of the Spirit in all this, it is not sufficient to simply say that the Spirit authored all the words and therefore they all have equal value. They have equal value as canon, not necessarily as sacred, inspired text. After all, Paul even says that some of his stuff is personal opinion. Who are we to tell him otherwise? He wrote it!
Skip
So, another “security blanket” (“Canon = Inspired Word of God”) bites the dust…but where does this leave us?
Hi Skip,
Interesting article as always, yet I am uncertain about what the exegetical difficulty of I Corinthians 13 is, so I can’t relate it to your message.
Thank you.
Linda & Kelvin Morales
Bayamon, Puerto Rico 00961
This is all so fascinating to me. I have wondered many times about the instances where Paul simply says that something is his opinion. This is the first time I have had my question addressed by someone I trust to speak the whole truth. I can’t wait to see what else is coming.
I am soaking in a great deal of word study and deeper meaning to YHWH’s inspiration on account of your insight. I follow the “canon” subject in this thought as well, only I get a glitch in my understanding when it comes to the Catholic Bible vs. Protestant. Where do the Apocryphal writings end up? and perhaps to a greater extent…Why? Do we classify them as more opinion-historical or biblically-historical? This may be deeper than I like, but thanks for the consideration of thought.
Without wishing to introduce a contentious “red herring”, I wonder, in the light of these “canonical vs. inspired” questions, what implications all this has, if any, on the doctrine of the Trinity…
Good question. One worth thinking about for the next 20 or so years.
Skip
Skip,
If Paul writes the “ALL scripture is inspired by God” and Peter writes in such a way in 2 Peter 3:14-18 alluding that he considered Paul’s writings to be scripture – Though admits that some of his teachings are difficult. I then do not quite understand what you mean by
“it is not sufficient to simply say that the Spirit authored all the words and therefore they all have equal value. They have equal value as canon, not necessarily as sacred, inspired text.”
What are you trying to express here? What am I missing?
Is my Greek way of thinking not allowing me to see variation in canon, inspiration, and scripture?
Thanks
Robert
If we had time, we could investigate all the interesting textual issues that surround the doctrine of inspiration. Some day. The main point here is that Paul did not recognize that he was writing sacred text when he dictated his letters to churches in trouble. He was simply writing about problems to people who needed instruction. Only years afterward did the Church recognize the value of Paul’s letters. The Church canonized these letters, not Paul – or Peter. They are canon because the Church saw that God was using Paul’s words to communicate God’s truth. But Paul doesn’t come to us like the prophets, saying “Thus says the Lord.” So, we have to be careful to distinguish the difference between inspired sacred text and canon. Canon make a text the rule (that’s what the word means) for the community. It does not necessarily make a text sacred. Why a text is sacred is a different story.
For example, the Constitution of the United States is the canon of our way of life (or at least it used to be), but we do not recognize it as sacred. A text is sacred because of its origin and its acceptance in a faith community. Please see Lee McDonald, “The Biblical Canon” for a really detailed study of how we came to accept the books that we now believe are the word of God in the Bible.
As for the equal value statement, what I mean is that just because words appear in a text, even if that text is considered sacred and it is canon, does not mean that they all have equal merit. For example, Paul himself says that some of what he writes is merely his opinion. We do not consider those opinions on par with his teachings. But we still consider them part of the sacred text and part of the canon.
This is really pretty complicated. Sorry.