Are Anabaptists guilty of a cultish approach to theology? Do we all have to be historical scholars to understand the Bible? As we did in the last episode, we’ve been responding to some of the comments that we got on the very first episode we ever did with Anabaptist Perspectives, and that was with Dean,
And on this one we’re going to be diving in specifically about how we interpret scripture. Again referring – and we talk about this in a previous episode with Dean, but the Anabaptist hermeneutic – an uncomplicated view of scripture. So Dean, I’m going to start
With a comment that we got on YouTube from someone who saw that first episode we did with you, and I’d love to hear your thoughts on that, and the name of that episode is The Essence of Anabaptism
Which you can find on our channel. So this person comments and says, “I recommend that pastors have an extensive course on textual criticism, learn Hebrew, Greek and understand the cosmology of a Jew living in the late second temple period. Without understanding the textual history of how
The Bible and Canon came to be we are putting the cart before the horse. Having a philosophy that takes the scripture fundamentally and literally is not good. When reading Genesis 6:2 what exegesis do you apply? Fallen angels or the line of Seth? Whichever one you choose how can you prove it?
How does one reconcile the translation source text variances between Byzantine, Alexandrian, Textus Receptus, Septuagint, a Masoretic text, Sumerian Pentateuch, and the Dead Sea Scrolls?” Sorry that was a bit of a mouthful. “The fact is that every single Christian Bible out there today is an eclectic text. Translators had to cherry-pick between manuscripts
To finalize their translation.” So yeah. This is an interesting perspective coming in on your episode there, Dean. It’s not a specific question so to speak, but yeah. What do you think of this? How would you respond to this person?
It’s an incredibly packed question with lots of different pieces to it, but it’s a good question, and it kind of all represents a concept of maybe a lower biblical criticism – not higher criticism, but textual criticism which is valid. I think these are good arguments that need to be made,
And they’re good questions that we all need to ask. We don’t all need to, but at least it’s healthy to ask. We have a class up here at Sattler where Finny goes into a lot of details on
Some of those things, but I’ll try to give you just a little bit of where I come out on this. The bottom line is that it is good for us to know our Bible and to know what some of the critics are saying about the Bible. As I said in the other question
No argument that has lasted more than 500 years is stupid, and these questions on textual criticism and higher criticism maybe they’re not 500 years old – well, some of them are – but they’re still very old, and they’re still very valid. A lot of your line of reasoning with the question that was
Asked goes down the line of a sort of a critical text model. He used the word eclectic. This is the Alexandrian idea that the ancient text and that kind of a trajectory, and I used to be there. You know me. I’m a historical theologian, so the older the better
Was something that I kind of hung on to, and you do kind of end up in a bit of a ditch where I think it sounds like maybe our question is coming from that ditch. Where do you ever end? You’ve
Got this eclectic Bible that has this piece and that piece and that piece, and you’re using all these methods together, and you end up with the Alexandrian text, the critical text which makes up a lot of like New American Standard, NIV, and some of those types. Revised Standard Version. Some
Of those. It’s not a bad argument, but in general we would reject that based upon what’s called the Majority Text or the Byzantine text and for good reasons. It’s for very good reasons. Is that the arguments that are behind the eclectic approach, they’re just putting together all these pieces.
It never ends, and it begins to just be circular reasoning that just – well it comes to a point that I just don’t follow the hermeneutic or the method they’re using, so for instance. What is the oldest should be the best. Well, the place where they were the oldest were mainly
Around in Alexandria. Well, Alexandria is also one of the driest climates. They’re also the place where you had the most place where there was Gnosticism and that kind of a thing, and sometimes because something is preserved doesn’t mean it was the thing that was most used,
So for instance I’ve got some Bibles – some eclectic Bibles that I hardly ever touch, but I have them for a different version and different type of thing, and I put them here on my shelf,
But my Bibles were much more worn out. I write in it, and all that kind of a thing, and so just to say because they found this in some monastery more of these more ancient texts then
Usurps the other more Majority Text group. I don’t follow. Also some of the reasoning is like if it’s shorter than it should be used, and so like the woman caught in adultery is left out of some of the Alexandrian eclectic texts where the Majority Text has that. Again the argument just doesn’t
Follow, and if you look at that, it really comes down to a lot of times where I think if you look at areas that has to do with Christology or the divinity of Christ or particularly even the human
Aspect of Christ, you can almost – well you can many times see within these Alexandrian texts and some of these critical texts a Gnostic influence. I’m not saying they all are that way, or say that
This is all just a Gnostic Bible or something, but I came to the point where I just don’t trust it, so what I’ve received is the Majority Text which is based – you usually get like the King James,
The New King James. I’m not a King James only per se, but using this Majority Text is that we find in all different places separated by countries and cultures and different things this Majority Text. I will grant you it is much later of what we have from that textual type than the critical
Alexandrian text, but the Byzantine text gives us a more complete picture. It’s what I read in the early church when I read through the different early Christian writers. I see their references to the things that I find in the Majority Text, and this also gives a credence back to using that text
Type, so I don’t take it lightly, but I have found that that is something that I’ve used if that helps. I also use this hermeneutic. I don’t know if I’ve talked about this before. I use an acronym called SCAR. I’ve used the term “an apostolic quadrilateral” and the image I get is Thomas
Asking Jesus, I don’t believe you until I see the scar, so you know see the scar, and so I use an acronym. I know it’s bad writing. SCAR. So it goes like this. Here’s the way my interpretation goes:
Scripture is number one. Nothing. No doctrine from anybody. I don’t care if they’re Justin Martyr, Origin or anyone can be held as required for the faith if it’s not written in scripture, and I would define that scripture more specifically in the Majority Text, but in scripture. The next
Is “C” for Christocentric. I read the Bible and Anabaptists do in a Christocentric fashion. In other words if I have to choose between something that’s written by Paul or Jesus I will always take both of them. I never will explain away Paul or the Old Testament, but a Christocentric
Puts Christ as the top. It’s just the interpretive tool, the way I would read Christ through all of the scriptures. The last two I put on a different plane. “A” and “R” are antiquity and real.
Antiquity is where I would say that I try to in my interpretation of the scripture to find something in antiquity – the early church – and because of the belief that as in Jude 3 would say we should
“contend for the faith that was once for all delivered to the saints” and that keeping to this faith. Why I read the ancients, and why I’m a passionate historical theologian is because I’m trying to look at the antiquity to see what’s there, and that weighs a lot into my hermeneutic
Of how I interpret scripture, and then finally the most fluffy of these is real. In other words is this a practice that has gone on through the church through the course of 2000 years or is this
Just something that’s made up in the 21st century, and so I’m usually suspicious if some new guy says you know what? I’ve got a new way to translate the scripture that no one has ever done before, and
I’m like, yeah. I’d probably say – I’m not going to necessarily doubt him. If it’s scriptural, I’ll look at it. If it’s Christocentric, I’ll look at it, but I’m going to bring up a big amount of
Doubt, so I also give the benefit of the doubt to the Holy Spirit working through the church, but not at the level that I put scripture and Christology, so that’s my SCAR, and that’s the way it’s an interpretive tool that I use often.
Thank you, Dean, for giving that a little more context, and I guess a bit more nuance to what you were saying in that original interview. I find that helpful to understand okay, here’s a little more where you’re coming from, and I understand you in that original interview too. We were just
Kind of hitting the high points, and this is good to go in a little deeper with this, so in that vein, I’m going to read another comment that we got here from someone named Donald, and he’s had some disappointments with Anabaptism which you’ll see in this comment, so this is what Donald says:
“I am drawn to much of the Anabaptist theology, and yet totally repulsed by its profound implosions in practice. Having been ‘Anabaptist’ for over 40 years, it at its best has a solid core biblical theology yet somehow this theology seems encased with cultish
Feel that seems unwilling to critically analyze its own theology. The last 15 years has left me very disillusioned with the ‘vision.’ ” Harold Bender he’s saying. “The movement of peace has more fractures than less ‘peaceful’ movements. The movement of ‘scripture alone’ has moved from the
Gospel that brings peace to a gospel that equals peace. The movement that stood resolutely with the word of God and against society now redefines the word of God through the lens of society, but of course mentioning such things makes one disloyal and out of fellowship just like any good
Cult would do. Overall it seems like Anabaptism has more in common with pipe dreams than working theology.” So, he’s got a lot of pushback here for you. So yeah, I’d be curious what would you have to say to someone like Donald who sees this and is like this doesn’t work for me.
I guess I’d say “ouch” first of all. I mean he’s talking about his 40 years of experience, so who am I to say that it’s not real? He’s talking about his pain. He’s talking about what he’s experienced
In his church, so wow, I’m sorry. I will say this, Donald. I will say this first of all. There’s nothing, nothing harder to do in my life than church. I was working over in Lesvos, and I’m so excited to bring some of these Muslims through
To Christ and try to get them into the church, and then I see them getting offended by very little things. I’m like “wow” if you got offended by that, you’ve got a lot to go through, and I don’t know how to say this. I’ll say this that God uses the
Church in a sanctifying way that is just a cross. I mean it really is, and if we go into the church, and I didn’t get from his letter. I got from his letter more of personal pain. I mean it didn’t
Seem just accusations. I mean it sounded like someone who’s trying and like I’ll be disloyal and that type of a thing. I have found that with most circles that I’m surprised is when I’m charitable, but honest people will actually want to sit and talk, and that bubbling all this up inside and
Having these objections and having these things I want to believe that you would find that your ministry and your church would be more receptive than you think they would be. You’re not a young man. You’ve been in this at least 40 years, and so you’re going to say back ‘You don’t know
My church.’ Maybe, but I do think we got to be honest. I do think we got to be transparent. And God I think does call us to what the Anabaptists calls a gelassenheit. It’s the emptying that Jesus
Talks about. This have this mind within you that was also in Christ Jesus, Paul says. This kenosis. This only way to survive in one of these kind of churches. On the other hand I don’t think we’re supposed to be empty-minded and just you know go through this because you know some things are
Wrong, and we’re human beings, and we make a lot of mistakes, and we’ve done a lot of dumb things, and I’ve been in a lot of situations myself that have been toxic, but I do think that talking
Through those things and being really honest is the way to go, and then allowing yourself to hear and say reason, and so I’m challenged about this way we’re looking at peace that’s we just end up becoming. Peace is the gospel. I totally agree with you. When I was first becoming a
Conscientious objector liberal pacifism, and it’s sort of peace gospel stuff almost derailed me. I believe that the factions and the things that are bad too, so yeah. John the Baptist. He’s in jail, and you know he would have heard maybe I guess, or he would have at least heard
Of the Luke 4 passage that Jesus said that I come to set the captives free. John the Baptist sitting in jail now who would have known more than anyone. “Behold the Lamb of God who comes to take away the
Sins of the world” is setting in jail, and he’s like, so where’s the setting the captive free part? I’m in jail and about to lose my head, and that’s when he sends his own disciples to go ask Jesus, ‘Are you the one?’ What Jesus says there I think is really profound. You know,
Firstly tell him I did these things, and then he says, ‘Blessed is he who is not offended in me.’ Blessed is he who is not offended. Offense. Being offended is the way Satan works in the church,
And we’ve got to go past that, and Jesus is somehow saying, I’m there with you. This is part of it. I’ll walk through this with you. Be honest. Be real and don’t get offended and don’t lose the faith. Jesus is with you there just like he was with John the Baptist,
And he’ll see you through it, but yeah. Thank you for that honest pushback. I think it’s good. Yeah, thanks for tackling that. These are hard things. You know, Donald, if you’re watching this, we’d love to hear back from you a follow-up comment, and yeah, I think you had a really
Good point there, Dean. I mean human beings can be a bit messy and complicated and inconsistent and sometimes not very nice to each other, and there’s a lot going on there, and I think Donald
Is pointing out this is an area that all of us can – we can always be growing in this where we can say one thing, and it sounds all nice and idealistic, but then when it’s walked out day
To day there’s some real gaps there. Yeah, I know that is definitely the case for my own life. Yeah, it can look really good, but then sometimes it’s not 100% of what it should be. Well, thank you for
Taking the time to come in here, Dean, and answer some of this feedback from that very first episode we did. What was that? Four years ago I would say about now. Wow! Time moves on, but yeah, would
You have anything else you would like to share with our audience before we end this episode? Just one last thing. I was thinking as I just answered the one question there, and I was giving my SCAR, and all that about the hermeneutic. All that to say
The question was back about the simplistic reading of scripture. I believe the Word of God without complicated interpretation, and the words of our Lord is meant to be put into practice. You don’t need a SCAR or a hermeneutic. You don’t need to understand the Byzantine and Alexandrian
Text. I mean I think it’s good for us. I don’t hide from those questions like he was asking. I like for us, our students up here to ask those questions and come up with sound answers to the postmodern liberal world that we’re fighting against. However the scriptures do tell us to
Receive it as a child, and so taking the Word of God and just making it applicable in your life and using it as a blueprint I really think is the genius of Anabaptism. It’s the genius of Christianity. It’s the genius of the early church. Is just that simplistic and beautiful keeping of
Jesus, and I honestly can’t imagine anything that we would do that we’re just honestly obeying the Word of God. On Judgment Day I think that’s what’s really going to matter. Lord, I did this because this is what you said, and holding on to that and doing that and being real
With that is the emphasis that I really want to leave not the being able to explain our way out of the Alexandrian text. That’s good to know, but just taking it as a child and obeying Jesus like a
Child is beautiful, and I encourage us all to keep doing that. It’s a journey. Let’s keep doing that. Thank you for joining us for this episode. We invite you to join our monthly partner program. Monthly partners are key to the financial sustainability of Anabaptist Perspectives.
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