Saturday, August 18, 2007

Book Review 1: Seized by Truth

Time to move on with my book reading. Over the next few weeks (mostly on weekends), I want to run through Joel Green's new book, Seized by Truth: Reading the Bible as Scripture. I am very sympathetic to the thrust of Green's thoughts in these books. I've been surfing the same waves he is, although we land in slightly different places on the shore.

This weekend I want to look at his first chapter: "Reading the Bible, Reading Scripture." The basic thesis of this chapter is one that I myself have made a number of times: "Reading the Bible is not necessarily the same thing as reading Scripture" (3). Green mentions the dryness that can accompany the methodical pursuit of the original meaning. He concludes, "The best methods rightly used guarantee neither a Christian interpretation of the Bible nor a reading of the Bible as Christian Scripture" (10). He goes on: "Paradoxically, they might even get in the way of a Christian interpretation of the Bible or a reading of the Bible as Scripture."

By the way, does he have Asbury's famous English Bible Method of Jack Traina and David Bauer fame or Ben Witherington in the back of his mind when he says, "Others have embraced scientific methods, urging that we can and ought to derive "what it means" from "what it meant"--and indeed, that the only way to know " what it means" is by first establishing "what it meant"--leading to a hermeneutical motto like this one: observation leads to interpretation, and interpretation to application" (17)?

Green goes into the obstacles that stand in the way of biblical understanding: the fact that we have to read one word at a time and can't get the whole picture simultaneously, the fact that language is selective in what it tells and so leaves gaps, the ambiguity of language, the fact that language is culturally embedded. I've mentioned some of these in the first chapter of my Who Decides What the Bible Means?, which will be available on Amazon in about a month.

You'll hear echoes of Keith Drury in Green's mention of biblical studies' tendency to dissect the biblical text like a frog. Scientific methods of biblical interpretation treat the Bible as an object (which I think it inevitably is, see an argument I made once upon a time). Nevertheless, the result is, as Green claims, to divide the text from us, its world from ours.

Green's answer is to lead us from this conceptualization of modernity into a more postmodern conception (see here for my own description of the progression from pre to post-modernity in biblical hermeneutics). He wishes to deny the chasm between the text and us.

In the final section of the chapter, Green dives into one of his more recent interests, namely, cognitive science and how it affects our memory and knowing. He talks about how believing is seeing in the sense that our presuppositions shape what we see in the world. His goal is to reform the way our brains believe so that we will read the Bible as Scripture rather than as object.

The chapters that follow will make what he means by this a lot clearer. I think many of you will find it very attractive, even if I'm not sure if I can go there completely myself.

3 comments:

Angie Van De Merwe said...

I don't believe I am a "biblical" Christian...I am more interested in the book on Paul right now...

Angie Van De Merwe said...

This morning some things came together...There are "realms" of governance that maintains an ordered structure. Our form of government represents the best type, as far as man made in God's image. But, as you have pointed out, there are defenciencies in maintaining the values that represent the ideals of a free society...Those ideals of our founding Fathers were based on natural rights. And now can be understood as human freedoms, i.e. human rights...That is the natural order of government...In the Church, government is to also "help" form those under its care into the "image of God"...Today's understanding of the "image of God" should be the "moral models" of justice, love, mercy, forgiveness, self-control (fruit of the "spirit")...those are represented in different ways and manifest in different measures according to the "call" of the individual within the community of faith and the broader community of "mankind"...That is exciting to understand that all of life is a gift to be given back and an understanding that all of life revolves around the Maker of heaven and earth...therefore it is not about "religion", nor "text", not "culture"...but "LIFE" itself...there is or should be freedom within "law"...protection of individual liberties that would inhibit tyranny, depostism, etc...

I am so grateful for all of you guys in the religion department that have added to, been patient with, and suffered through all of my rantings and ravings...

Formation of the individual within contexts of family, and society..

I am still not a "blblical Christian" in that sense..

Ken Schenck said...

Angie, you've helped inspire me to think some about the blessings of living in America. I might blog some on another one of my blogs sometime soon...

Hope you're enjoying DC!