On Barth’s Christologically Conditioned Doctrine of Biblical Inerrancy

Karl Barth is often derided by evangelicals and contemporary Reformed orthodox types for rejecting a doctrine of biblical inerrancy and its underlying fount in a doctrine of Divine-verbal inspiration. This reception of Barth is understandable insofar that Barth does in fact say that he rejects the modern development known as inerrancy. But what shouldn’t be taken from this is that Barth somehow is holding hands with the Teutonic higher critics of the Bible; he is not! In fact, Barth is desirous, in a sense, of rescuing the Bible from the fires of Mordor as those are stoked by the ā€˜Bible critics.’ I would contend that it can be argued that Barth has a higher view of Scripture, formally, than even those who claim to affirm a doctrine of biblical inerrancy and its attendant understanding of Divine inspiration.

Barth firmly believes that the Post Reformed orthodox theologians were intent on securing the veracity and infallibility of Holy Scripture; this can be seen, as Barth underscores, the ā€˜Protestant Scripture Principle,’ which became the formal principle of the Reformed reformational theology. Barth was of the mind that the early Reformed theologians were eager in safeguarding the Bible from her early critics within early modernity (as that was fomenting in the 16th and 17th centuries, respectively). But just as the Fundamentalists of the 20th century built a theology upon their reaction to the higher critics of the 19th century, thus allowing the higher critics to set the agenda and categories and questions that ā€œneeded to be responded to,ā€ similarly, I would argue that Barth maintained that the earlier and middle Reformed theologians allowed the early and developing rationalists of the time to set the agenda and categories and questions that ostensibly needed to be responded to. As such, in Barth’s mind, even those purportedly committed to the Protestant Scripture Principle, its defenders no less, so allowed their categories to be sublimated by their counterparts, that they ended up denuding the category of revelation itself vis-Ć -vis Holy Scripture, such that Holy Scripture lost its ā€œHolyā€ character by being relegated to the level of just another profane book.

Barth writes,

We must not forget that the transition from biblical to biblicist thought does involve the transition to a rationalism—supranaturalistic thought it is in content. Therefore the relationship of theology to the truths of revelation which it has taken from the Bible is no longer the relationship to an authority which superior to man. It has fundamentally the same assurance and control with regard to them as man as a rational creature has in regard to himself, his experience, his thinking and therefore his world, believing that he is the master of himself as subject and therefore of his objects, or of his own relation to them.

As is well known the supreme achievement of the older Protestant orthodoxy was the doctrine of the verbal inspiration of Holy Scripture as developed in the later 17th century and given confessional status in the Helvetic Formula of Concord in 1675. There can be no doubt, however, that this was not merely worked out as a bulwark against a growing rationalism, but that it was itself, not an expression of an over-developed faith of revelation, but a product of typical rationalistic thinking—the attempt to replace faith and indirect knowledge by direct knowledge, to assure oneself of revelation in such a way that it was divorced from the living Word of the living God as attested in Scripture, pin-pointing it, making it readily apprehensible as though it were an object of secular experience, and therefore divesting it in fact of its character as revelation.

The irremediable danger of consulting Holy Scripture apart from the centre, and in such a way that the question of Jesus Christ ceases to be the controlling and comprehensive question and simply becomes on amongst others, consists primarily in the fact that (even presupposing a strict and exclusive Scripture principle) Scripture is thought of and used as though the message of revelation and the Word of God could be extracted from it in the same way as the message of other truth or reality can be extracted from other sources of knowledge, at any rate where it is not presumably speaking of Jesus Christ. But if Scripture is read in this way, the Scripture principle will not stand very long. Secretly the book of revelation is being treated and read like other books; and the question cannot long be denied whether the message we gather from it cannot be gathered from other books either by way of addition or even basically; whether the truths of revelation in the Bible are not of a series with all kinds of other truths; whether in them we do no simply have concretions of what is revealed concerning God and His will to all other men as such and by nature, of themselves, by the dictate of their reason? If Jesus Christ is seen to be the whole of Scripture, the one truth of revelation, this question cannot even be put, let alone given a positive answer. There is no other book which witnesses to Jesus Christ apart from Holy Scripture. This decides the fact that only in Holy Scripture do we have to do with the one and the whole Word and revelation of God. But if we do not see this, it is inevitable that the question of other sources of revelation should be put, and that sooner or later it should be given a positive answer.[1]

Barth is attempting to correct what he sees as a misstep made early on by the scholastics Reformed in their attempt to protect and elevate Holy Scripture; and this, based upon what he takes to be the wrong foundations. As clearly indicated by Barth’s above passage he believes that it is only when Holy Scripture is grounded in and framed by its reality in Jesus Christ that it can maintain its elevated and ā€˜Holy’ status as the written Word of God for humanity, for the church. Barth’s concern is always to unhitch the holiness of God from our own fallen and abstract speculations, and instead to ground them in the holy and elevated revelation of God’s triune life for the world in the second person of the Trinity, Jesus Christ. His critique of the normal receptions and understandings of the scholastics Reformed up to and including contemporary Reformed and evangelical theology cuts across this whole swath.

Conversely, Barth isn’t out to destroy the veracity or authority of Holy Scripture. Au contraire, he is seeking to provide a truly evangelical basis and theory of revelation for Scripture’s elevated status as the place where its gladhands are securely connected to its reality in the big-Hand of the Father as that is extended to us in the pierced hands of Jesus Christ. I think Barth might, at times, overextend himself when he refers to biblical inerrancy (see his Gƶttingen Dogmatics and Evangelical Theology: An Introduction), and come off sounding like he rejects the absolute veracity and holiness of the Bible. But even in the short passage we just read from him, it ought to become immediately apparent that this was not Barth’s intention whatsoever. In fact, if Barth’s critique is sound, and I think it is, it is the ostensible stalwarts of a biblical inerrancy and verbal inspiration, the contemporary Reformed and evangelicals among us, who unwittingly lower Holy Scripture’s provenance into the wastelands of the rationalists (Socinians) and higher biblical critics. Barth offers an alternative theory of revelation, inclusive of biblical revelation, particularly as he articulates that in his threefold form of the Word of God (and please understand, dear reader, that the scholastics Reformed first developed what has been identified as a fourfold form of the Word of God—so the heuristic is not a novelty developed by Barth, per se). Give him a fair hearing, and not a distorted one based upon his antagonists. Barth has a higher view of Scripture, based upon his christologically conditioned theory of revelation, than do, ironically, his critics on this very subject.

[1] Karl Barth, Church Dogmatics IV/1 §60 [368-69] The Doctrine of Reconciliation: Study Edition (London: T&T Clark, 2010), 11.

A Running Thought on Biblical Inerrancy

I am still a doctrinal (fundamentalist) evangelical in many ways. On a doctrine of biblical inerrancy: I am so committed to the intent that ā€œinerrancyā€ intends to communicate that I’m beyond an inerrantist. My view of Scripture is ā€œcontextedā€ Christologically and thus soteriologically such that any type of abstract philosophical frame for a doctrine of inerrancy simply will not do. My view is confessional and even via antiqua, as I see an ontology of Holy Scripture funded protologically by God’s free election to be for the world in Jesus Christ. In a theological taxis then, my doctrine of Scripture has its antecedent reality in the gracious fact that God has chosen to speak for the world in His Son (Deus incarnandus). Scripture is an ordained and primary aspect of His speech for us, and continues to be by the illuminating work of the Holy Spirit—as the Spirit speaks the Words of Christ to us afresh anew. Scripture in this frame, as it becomes soteriological, is a dialogical experience wherein I am mortified and vivified as I encounter the voice of the living God in Jesus Christ, thus being deconstructed and reconstructed over and again into the image of God’s image pro me in Jesus Christ. It is as I engage in this fellowship with the Word that its clarity becomes brighter and brighter as I stand closer and closer to its brightest Light in the face of Jesus Christ. So my doctrine of Scripture, as can be seen, is greater than not lesser than the intention that an evangelical doctrine of inerrancy intends to communicate (against the higher critics etc).

My Thinking on Inerrancy

*Let me repost something that I wrote a little while ago now. This is prompted by a commenter, and emailer of mine; I will follow this post up with a more direct answer to the question that this emailer has provided me with in a forthcoming post.

bible-cover-page.jpgI was recently asked by Brian LePort to fill out a questionnaire on my view of Biblical Inerrancy. He posted my responses to his questions,Ā here. But I thought I would repost what I wrote here at my blog as well. So that’s what the following represents.

Do you use the wordĀ ā€œinerrancyā€Ā to describe your understanding of Scripture? Why or why not? (If not, can you explain yourĀ ā€œdoctrine of Scripture?ā€)
Ā I grew up ardently advocating for this terminology; it has only been over the last few years that I have taken a different approach to my doctrine of ScriptureĀ vis-Ć”-visĀ an ontology of Scripture. While maintaining my identity as an Evangelical (Reformed) Christian, and some of the received history that this entails (including the intention that inerrancy sought to capture–e.g. the trustworthiness of Scripture); I would probably eschew emphasizing the language of inerrancy relative to my position (even though I remain sympathetic to it, and those who still feel the need to use it).
In a nutshell: I see Scripture within the realm of soteriology (salvation), and no longer (as the classically Reformed and Evangelical approach does) within the realm of epistemology (or a naked Philosophy). Meaning that I think a proper doctrine of Scripture must understand itself within its proper order of things. So we start with 1) Triune God, 2) The election of humanity in the Son (Covenant of Grace), 3) Creation, Incarnation (God’s Self-revelation), 4) The Apostolic Deposit of Christian Scripture (e.g. the New Testament re-interpretation of salvation history [i.e. Old Testament] in light of its fulfillment in Christ). This is something of a sketch of theĀ orderĀ of Scripture’s placement from a theological vantage point (I don’t think the tradition that gave us inerrancy even considers such things). So I see Scripture in the realm of Christian salvation (sanctification), and as God’s triune speech act for us provided by the Son, who comes with the Holy Spirit’s witness (through Scripture). Here is how John Webster communicates what I am after:
First, the reader is to be envisaged as within the hermeneutical situation as we have been attempting to portray it, not as transcending it or making it merely an object of will. The reader is an actor within a larger web of event and activities, supreme among which is God’s act in which God speaks God’s Word through the text of the Bible to the people of God, as he instructs them and teaches them in the way they should go. As a participant in this historical process, the reader is spoken to in the text. This speaking, and the hearing which it promotes, occurs as part of the drama which encloses human life in its totality, including human acts of reading and understanding: the drama of sin and its overcoming. Reading the Bible is an event in this history. It is therefore moral and spiritual and not merely cognitive or representational activity. Readers read, of course: figure things out as best they can, construe the text and its genre, try to discern its intentions whether professed or implied, place it historically and culturally — all this is what happens when the Bible is read also. But as this happens, there also happens the history of salvation; each reading act is also bound up within the dynamic of idolatry, repentance and resolute turning from sin which takes place when God’s Word addresses humanity. And it is this dynamic which is definitive of the Christian reader of the Bible. [[John Webster, “Hermeneutics in Modern Theology: Some Doctrinal Reflections,”Ā Scottish Journal of Theology,Ā 336]
So I see Scripture as God’sĀ second WordĀ (Jesus the first and lastĀ Word) for His people the Church. From this perspective inerrancy becomes a non-starter, since Scripture is no longer framedĀ apologetically;Ā but instead,Ā Christically,Ā and positive witness for the Church.
If you were to provide a brief definition of the doctrine of inerrancy what would it include?
Millard Erickson has provided the best indexing of innerancy[s]; he has: 1)Ā Absolute Inerrancy,Ā 2)Ā Full Inerrancy,Ā and 3)Ā Limited InerrancyĀ (see Millard Erickson, ā€œIntroducing Christian Doctrine [abridged version],ā€ 61). Realizing that there is nuance then when defining a given inerrancy; I would simply assert that inerrancy holds to the plenary verbal inspiration of Scripture; meaning that Scripture is both Divine-human speech, or Divine revelation (or God’s Words). And since God cannot lie, Scripture must be totally without any error; because if it has error then God has lied.
Can there be a doctrine of inerrancy divorced from the Chicago Statement on Biblical Inerrancy? If so, what are theĀ ā€œpracticalā€Ā consequences? If not, why?
I think the Chicago Statement, given its recognition for literary and genre analysis of the text of Scripture has effectively allowed for the possibility of qualifying inerrancy to the point that you might end up with my current view ;-).
How does your doctrine of Scripture impact your hermeneutics? Can you use Genesis 1-11 as a case study/example?
I would simply say that I see Genesis 1–11 as the first instance of the LORD’s first Word of grace;Ā viz.Ā we have God introduce himself as the personal God who created, and for the purpose of creation communing with him by and through the Son (Gen. 3:15). So, no, I don’tĀ  follow Henry Morris and the Institute of Creation ResearchĀ  in defending a wooden literal reading of this section of Scripture. I see it literally, but as God’sĀ  introduction of himself to his Covenant people such that His people might know what he intends for his creation;Ā viz.Ā that we commune with him through the Son. It is through thisĀ purposeĀ for creation that all other idolatrous parodies (like those in the Ancient Near East) fall by the way side and are contradicted by creation’sĀ  true purpose,Ā in Christ.
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I would recommend John Webster’s little book:Ā Holy Scripture: A Dogmatic Sketch.Ā His book articulates and informs my view on this like no other I have ever come across.
I would be interested in knowing what you think about my response; and like to hear what your own view is on this issue. I am highly sympathetic to the impulse that charged the construction of inerrancy (i.e. to defend the reliability of Scripture as God’s words to humanity), but I ultimately think there are better ways to frame Scripture rather than from the defensive and largely reactive posture that gave inerrancy rise. To be totally frank; when I read Scripture I still cannot but read it as if (because I believe this to be the case) it is indeed completely accurate relative to the standards of accuracy it originally intended to be accurate by ;-).

An Evangelical Calvinist vis-Ć -vis Inerrancy, and Other Things on Scripture

I wanted to provide some more, and in fact the conclusion, from Adam Nigh’s chapter in our edited bookĀ Evangelical Calvinism: Essays Resourcing the Continuing Reformation of the Church.Ā In Adam’s conclusion he summarizes well how it is that anĀ evangelical CalvinistĀ might approach Scripture. On Facebook, a friend, Derek Rishmawy, has been speaking a lot about the doctrine of inerrancy for evangelical Christians in the 21st century; in fact Derek quotes his favorite living theologian as saying: “Biblical inerrancy in the context of biblical illiteracy makes for a dangerous proposition. -Kevin Vanhoozer.” And he further points to this video presentation by Kevin Vanhoozer, which Vanhoozer made in lieu of being able to be physically present at the AAR panel discussion on inerrancy. And so given this up-tick, caused by Rishmawy, and given my reading of Adam Nigh, once again, from our edited book; I thought it apropos to quote Nigh at length, kind of in response to the kinds of categories and emphases being broached and approached once more because of Kevin Vanhoozer, Derek Rishmawy, and the rest of the panel at that AAR discussion on this topic of Scripture, and how Christians in the 21st century ought to engage with it. Adam has written (so let it be done šŸ˜‰ ):

Torrance offers us a rich account of what Scripture is, giving consistentĀ attention to its location in the divine economy, and helpful suggestionsĀ for how to interpret it according to its nature as testimony to Christ.Ā Through his approach, Scripture neither replaces Christ as the objectiveĀ reality of divine revelation nor stands irrelevant to our knowledgeĀ of God as a merely human expression of spiritual genius. Rather, it isĀ human testimony called forth by the Spirit of God to testify to the incarnateĀ Word and thus annexed by God to his own Word as he speaksĀ through it to us.

How does this construal of Scripture’s ontology and the hermeneuticĀ it engenders relate to the doctrinal concerns of Evangelical Calvinism?Ā The differentiation between the divine Word and the human words inĀ Scripture in their unity in God’s redemptive economy along with a focusĀ on the personal and transcendent nature of Scripture’s content liesĀ squarely behind Evangelical Calvinism’s focus on theo-logic over againstĀ a purely deductive logic in the work of theology. Evangelical CalvinismĀ does not begin with logical propositions read off the surface of theĀ biblical text and then work through deductive syllogism to systematicĀ statements about God. Such a theological method assumes a causal necessityĀ at work in God’s relations with his creation. Instead, EvangelicalĀ Calvinism seeks to indwell the Scriptures and grasp the inner logic ofĀ God’s gracious self revelation mediated in them, developing doctrinalĀ formulations that faithfully reflect both the coherence and the mysteryĀ of the gospel. Therefore, for example, while Evangelical Calvinism discoversĀ in Scripture that Christ died and accomplished atonement for allĀ humanity, it does not affirm universal salvation, though that might beĀ a legitimate conclusion operating on formal deductive logic, nor doesĀ it back away from the universal reach of Christ’s atonement by readingĀ the limited subjective appropriation of atonement on behalf of humanityĀ into the eternal will of God through a doctrine of limited atonementĀ precisely because such conclusions assume a causal necessity determiningĀ God’s actions that is foreign to the testimony of Scripture and,Ā indeed, to God’s being. Instead, Evangelical Calvinism recognizes thatĀ while the atonement accomplished in Christ applies to all humanity, theĀ reality of sin that keeps so many from belief cannot be worked into aĀ logical continuity with God’s grace but must be left unsystematized as anĀ utter irrationality over which, however, God will ultimately triumph andĀ against which he has struck the decisive blow in the person and work ofĀ Jesus Christ.

Of greatest importance in matters of biblical interpretation andĀ doctrinal formulation, the majesty of God as it is exposed to us by theĀ Spirit in the person of Jesus Christ through Scripture’s attestation of himĀ must continually send the church into a posture of reverence and prayerĀ before the God whose objectivity and intelligibility we can never exhaustĀ but only enter into ever greater engagement with. [Adam Nigh, “The Depth Dimension of Scripture: A Prolegomenon to Evangelical Calvinism,” inĀ Evangelical Calvinism: Essays Resourcing the Continuing Reformation of the ChurchĀ eds. Myk Habets and Bobby Grow (Euguene: OR, Pickwick Publications, 2012), 90-2.]

What I like about the way Adam concludes his sketch and development of a Torrancean and Evangelical Calvinist conception of Scripture, is that he doesn’t leave it in the abstract; instead he offers an example of how a lively and Christ-centered approach to Scripture ought to operate in relation to the development of Christian dogma. Usually, inerrancy, even of the kind that Vanhoozer articulates (as I understand him), comes from a conception of Scripture that too often conflates the propositions of Scripture, with the person of Scripture’s given-ness and reality. And this conflation, usually, flows from Ā premises about ‘revelation’ that reduces it, at least at an entry-point level, to propositions, and propositions that are seeking to be attached to the person that they bare witness. And so, usually, a schema of logical-deduction is followed wherein the propositions are squeezed for all their worth, with hopes that they will finally produce the God-revealed truth that stands behind them structurally. And so what happens is that, good intentions notwithstanding, the Scripture becomes proposition bearing instead of person bearing; they end up breaking off into our finely tuned logical deductions about what the text is intending to communicate, instead of breaking off in the reality of its triune and dynamic life revealed and given in the person of God’s Son, Jesus Christ.

So it is a matter of approach and regulation. Who gets to regulate the approach and givenness of Scripture? Is it the interpreter abstracted from the text’s reality? If so, we will have to invent logical deductive schemata, and approach Scripture as if it is a book, primarily of propositional reality. Or is it the Self-interpretation, Self-exegesis of God (cf. John 1.18) who gets to regulate the way we engage with the text of Scripture? If so, then we won’t have to invent logical deductive scheming in order to access and interpret Scripture; instead as Nigh has concluded, we will be able to live in the space presented to us by God in Jesus Christ; a space that is not able to be manipulated or ‘handled’ by our own machinations. To the contrary! It will be a space where in dialogical relation, and prayerful mode, that our thoughts, our deductions will be confronted (and, usually, contradicted) by the logic of God’s grace Self-revealed in Jesus Christ.