Top Ten Bible verses

Cribbing from John Hobbins and Doug Chaplin. Click ‘full post’ for my favourite texts.

Not necessarily in order (and quoting from memory).

“I came that they might have life and have it in all its fullness”
“In the beginning was the word, and the word was with God, and the word was God”
“Love one another as I have loved you”
“The creation waits with eager longing for the revealing of the children of God”
“Not everyone who calls me Lord will enter the Kingdom, but those who do the will of my Father in heaven”
“You did not choose me, but I chose you, and appointed you to go and bear fruit, fruit that will last”
“The spirit will lead you into all truth… and the truth shall set you free”
“Come to me all who labour and are heavy laden and I shall give you rest, for my burden is easy and my yoke is light”
“No longer do I call you servants… I call you friends”
“And there shall be no more crying, no more mourning, no more pain any more, for the former things have passed away. And the one on the throne said ‘Behold, I make all things new'”

An unsurprising emphasis upon the fourth gospel.

Is Christ Divided? session 16

1 Corinthians 13

Is Christ Divided?
Notes for the house groups on 1 Corinthians.
Week sixteen, beginning Sunday 4 November: 1 Corinthians 13

Main theme: The priority of love

Questions to prompt discussion

1.What is love? What does the culture think love is? And how is Christian love something different?
2.What is the role of this chapter in the argument of the letter as a whole? In other words, how does this chapter sum up what has gone before?
3.Paul describes things that may get in the way of love for the Corinthians – can you think of things which get in the way of love for the church in Mersea? What can we do to become more loving? Are there any disciplines which help?

Supplementary thoughts:
The English word ‘love’ does not necessarily capture the full flavour of the Greek word ‘agapē’ which Paul is using in this passage (the KJV translates it as ‘charity’ but that’s not necessarily an improvement!). We tend to use the word ‘love’ for all of these different senses: eros – love linked to an appreciation of beauty, often with sexual desire but not always (“Platonic love” is still erotic in this sense); philia – friendship, formed by a common attachment to a shared purpose; and agapē – general compassion and benevolence. The Bible develops the language of agapē significantly, not least in the Johannine writings (God is agapē – 1 John 4.8). Our wider culture also has a rather indistinct and romantic notion of love which is, again, dissimilar from the Christian notion of agapē.

The chapter looks back to the arguments over matters seen as important in Corinth (eg spiritual gifts, social hierarchy) and forward to the resurrection (chapter 15). It splits into three distinct sections: vv 1-3 that the absence of love makes otherwise noble endeavours worthless (note that the endeavours increase in import progressively); vv 4-7 describe what love is (note the active character of what is described, it’s not an inward sentiment); vv 8-13 articulate the eternal quality of love (foreshadowing the resurrection). There is some academic speculation that this passage is not written by Paul, because it is quite different in style to the rest of the latter. However, given the natural fit of the subject matter with the content and purpose of the letter as a whole I see no reason to doubt Pauline authorship. Tom Wright makes the interesting point that Paul could never have written such a passage unless he could have counted on the Corinthian church recognising him in it, ie that they knew Paul as someone who displayed such loving character.

Notes on verses
v3 – cf Mark 10.21
v 6 – cf 5.1-8
v12 – a mirror would have been highly polished metal at this time
v 13 – a consistent theme in Paul, cf Romans 5:1-5; Galatians 5:5-6; Colossians 1:4-5; 1 Thessalonians 1:3, 5:8.

Is Christ Divided? session 15

1 Corinthians 12

Is Christ Divided?
Notes for the house groups on 1 Corinthians.
Week fifteen, beginning Sunday 28 October: 1 Corinthians 12

Main theme: Spiritual gifts and the relatedness of the body

Questions to prompt discussion

1.What does St Paul mean when he says that no-one can say ‘Jesus is Lord’ except by the Holy Spirit?
2.Are there parts of the Body that you are aware of which have a tendency to say ‘I don’t need you’?
3.What is your role in the Body? What do you understand an apostle, or a prophet, or … to be?

Supplementary thoughts:
Remember that Paul is struggling with a community that has become stratified in various ways, with some members looking down on others (and ponder the meaning of the word ‘members’ in this sense!) Here Paul is explicit about a central Christian teaching that is only implicit in other places (eg Gal 3 26-29). All the baptised stand at the same level before God; Christianity is therefore profoundly egalitarian, and this spiritual root underlies much of what is taken to be “Modern” ethics and human rights language. Paul is insistent that, not only does every member of the body have a role, but the ones who are most culturally scorned have a greater honour. One of the most important elements in Paul’s argument is the insistence that we cannot live without each other. For a contemporary example, consider what would happen if we no longer had waste disposal services provided by the council!!

One of the ongoing struggles between different Christian groups centres on the role of ministers, whereby the “priest” is seen as either occupying or claiming a ‘higher’ role. There seems little Scriptural justification for elevation upwards, but plenty – as here – for a discrimination sideways, so that the different parts of the body can function together and accomplish God’s purposes. With respect to spiritual gifts Paul is arguing here (as elsewhere) that Spirits have to be discerned and put to the test. We will return to this them when we look at chapter 14.

Notes on verses
v 1 – ‘spiritual gifts’ could also be translated ‘spiritual people’
v 3 – bear in mind that saying ‘Jesus is Lord’ was an extremely political claim, with the potential of execution for the one saying it
vv 4-6 – one of the principal sources for the development of Trinitarian doctrine
v12 – note the strong linking of the church with Christ
v28 – compare with Romans 12.6-8, Ephesians 4.11

Is Christ Divided? session 14

Catching up on these. 1 Corinthians 11.17-end

Is Christ Divided?
Notes for the house groups on 1 Corinthians.
Week fourteen, beginning Sunday 5 October: 1 Corinthians 11.17-end

Main theme: How to share communion

Questions to prompt discussion

1.What sort of meal is Paul describing in this passage? What resemblance does it have to our ‘Holy Communion’ service? Are any differences a spiritual problem? Or is our present practice a logical consequence of Paul’s argument (ponder especially v34)?
2.What is Paul criticising the Corinthians for? What are the ways in which people do similar things today?
3.What does it mean to eat or drink ‘in an unworthy manner’? What does it mean not to recognise the body of the Lord in the bread and wine?

Supplementary thoughts:
Corinthian society, as already discussed in previous weeks, was highly stratified. What appears to be happening is that, in line with social customs at the time, some of the wealthier members of the church were ‘hosting’ a Lord’s supper which was reinforcing the existing social divisions (possibly by having a separate room in which to eat, as well as higher quality food and drink). For Paul this is wholly opposed to the nature of koinonia.

This passage is the earliest account of the Lord’s supper that we possess. It might be worthwhile comparing the accounts here with those in the synoptic Gospels (Matthew, Mark and Luke – John doesn’t relate the episode in the same way). There are various ways in which Paul emphasises the importance of the rite – doing it wrongly causes more harm than good (v17), leading to physical sickness and death (v30) and placing the eternal destiny of the soul in jeopardy (v27-32) by becoming guilty of Christ’s execution (v27).

Notes on verses
v19 – this may be an ironic or sarcastic statement on Paul’s part
v 20 – ‘the meal relating to the Lord’
v28 – may be specific to the faults being described (ie not a call for general confession)
v29 – “the body of Christ” can refer to both the consecrated elements of bread and wine and to the gathering of believers; in this context it is likely to be more the latter which Paul has in mind
v33 – ‘wait for each other’ may be better translated in terms of looking after each other as honoured guests rather than specifically being time-centred, ie treat each other well.

The esse of the church

This might have been titled ‘Starting to leave the ABC’, as I am continuing to muse on and digest Rowan’s recent letter… Click ‘full post’ for text.

What is an apostle – what does it mean to be an apostolic church (as claimed in the creed)? ‘Apostle’ literally means one who is sent – as when early in his ministry Jesus sent his disciples out in pairs to preach to the people of Israel – but more commonly it means to be a witness to the resurrection. This after all is the historical origin of the church, and that is the sense in which St Paul is an apostle, following Road to Damascus experience.

Now one of the ways in which the church has understood itself to be in succession to the apostles is through the laying on of hands, whereby Peter and the apostles laid hands on the first Bishops, and they then laid hands on their successors down the generations. Now this is a deeply rooted biblical principle, whereby spiritual gifts are passed on in this manner. Consider Moses (Deut 34.9), St Peter (Acts 8.17) and the advice in Hebrews 6.1-2.

However, this is, to say the least, a source of some debates between different denominations. To put the question formally, is the laying on of hands the sine qua non of apostolic faith? This is a particular debate between the Church of England and the Methodist church – for the Methodist claim is that whilst there was no explicit transmission of apostolicity in terms of an episcopal laying on of hands and consecration, nevertheless the apostolic faith is preserved in the Methodist church. What might that mean?

Well, if the heart of apostolicity is witnessing to the resurrection then we can ask: what does it mean to be a witness? Surely the heart of witnessing to the resurrection is the transformation of life within the believing community, ie the presence of the fruits of the spirit. In other words, where there is the presence of love as a way of life, modelled on Christ’s own love for his community, then that is a sign that the apostolic faith is present. This would seem to be especially so when a way of life is modelled at great expense, eg martyrdom or other extreme sufferings.

So why am I musing on this at the moment? Consider Rowan’s letter to the Central Floridians, where he said:

The organ of union with the wider Church is the Bishop and the Diocese rather than the Provincial structure as such. Those who are rushing into separatist solutions are, I think, weakening that basic conviction of Catholic theology and in a sense treating the provincial structure of The Episcopal Church as if it were the most important thing… I should feel a great deal happier, I must say, if those who are most eloquent for a traditionalist view in the United States showed a fuller understanding of the need to regard the Bishop and the Diocese as the primary locus of ecclesial identity rather than the abstract reality of the ‘national church’.

Now I can understand what Rowan is getting at with these remarks – in one sense it is a straightforward declaration of catholic ecclesiology, one with which I have customarily been in instinctive sympathy. Yet what the remarks have clarified for me is an increasing awareness that this catholic ecclesiology is insufficient, and potentially harmful. I’m not about to become a congregationalist but I’m much more open than I have been to that perspective. In large part it’s the impact of spending time getting to know my colleagues in the other churches on the island (I’m chair of our Churches Together organisation). What I want to ask is: what is missing when this catholic ecclesiology is absent? Or, to put that differently, in what way (if any) is, say, a Methodist Christian lacking something? The answer I would want to try and explore would involve some sort of description of the wider church, ie that episcopacy in this catholic sense is precisely about acknowledging being a part of a wider whole, and acknowledging the boundaries of unity set up by that wider whole.

The trouble is that this wider whole is itself fragmented, the fundamental fragmentation coming in the 11th century between East and West. In this situation of brokenness an insistence on catholic unity can itself undermine the more fundamental purpose of witnessing to the apostolic faith itself. That is, the preservation of a catholic ecclesiology can itself prevent the Christ-like love which is the primary hallmark of apostolic witness. This seems especially likely in the US.

It seems particularly bizarre in Anglican terms to elevate this catholic ecclesiology above the national identity, for the Church of England was formed as national church; as I understand it, the CofE is in its self understanding ‘the church in England’, ie the catholic church as defined by national boundaries. (John Richardson has an extremely interesting post on this here with which I am in much sympathy. I often find myself in sympathy with John’s point of view, even when I disagree with him, which some might find surprising). I have often thought that, with regard to the Reformation debates, and the Roman Catholic dismissal of the validity of Anglican orders, the important point was the continuity of the church communities in place; in other words, that Christ remained present with his people no matter what was going on in the stratosphere of Kings and Popes. The real problem with that, though, is that the acceptance of other Christian denominations in the 19th Century was the most important change in Anglican ecclesiology – for that turned the Church of England from being simply the catholic church in this land into just another denomination.

I’m coming to the conclusion that the Church of England is about to metamorphose. I was tempted to say ‘die’ but one of the things I ponder much is the high quality of people whom I see as potential ordinands (I’m Warden of Ordinands in this area of Essex). God is really much too busy with strengthening the resources of the church beneath the surface for the CofE to simply ‘die’; there’s also the small matter of establishment which acts like the lead keel allowing the yacht to withstand the harshest of storms. I wonder if there is a place that members of Fulcrum and Affirming Catholicism could stand in, as that might be the form which ‘inherits’ the structures of the CofE (see this post). A secondary question is: would I want to stand there? As time goes on I am more and more committed to the essential task of gathering the Body together – that’s what this current Learning Church sequence is really all about. Fragmentation is a sin – yet we are mired in sin and cannot avoid it. We are going to be forced to choose.

Anglo-Catholic Neuroses

Tim commented on my classification of a ‘Protestant Neurosis’ – my suggestion that for some people the pressure to interpret the Bible correctly can be overwhelming, because the right attitude to Scripture is seen as the hinge of salvation. As I’m not wanting to be at all partisan about this, and as I am quite convinced there are lots of Anglo-Catholic neuroses, I thought I’d identify one and ask people if they could think of any more! Working definition of a neurosis – seeing something as a salvation matter when it isn’t. All in the eye of the beholder of course…

The clearest one for me is to do with correct ritual and procedure – that, for example, if the priest touches something with their hands (other than the host) during the eucharistic prayer then it’s all gone wrong. The neurosis is: the Eucharist is only properly conducted when the presider keeps thumb and first finger pressed together from the point of washing hands through to the washing up at the end; and underlying that is precisely the post-Corpus Christi innovations of Eucharistic theology. An example of this in my own experience was when John Sentamu played his drums in the middle of the prayer at an area gathering in Stepney – it caused uproar amongst some of my more catholic brethren.

Any more? I’m sure there must be one involving cottas.

A response to Tim on Biblical bits

A response to Tim’s lengthy comment. My responses in italics.

First, I think it’s misleading to deal with inerrancy under the heading of sola scriptura. The two beliefs do not necessarily go together.

Fair point – I’ve restored the original title.

Certainly at the time of the Reformation (which, according to your title, is what you’re dealing with – which makes it a bit confusing when you go on to tell us that you’re dealing with ‘Modern Protestantism’) belief in inerrancy was common across the doctrinal divides, and many people who believed in inerrancy did not believe in sola scriptura.

I don’t think this is true. Allert makes the point that there was no specific doctrine of Scripture until the second half of the sixteenth century. Inerrancy as a concept, especially as it functions in something like the Chicago Statement, is a distinctly post-Reformation phenomenon. It needs to be distinguished from authority in particular.

Second, and still under the heading of inerrancy, quite frankly I think you’re setting up a straw man. Many people who say they believe in inerrancy (J.I. Packer, for instance) are well aware of the discrepancies you mention , and say quite clearly that they believe in inerrancy ‘according to the standards of the time’, which do not necessarily coincide with modern scientific exactitude. I know several fundamentalists (in fact, I’ve been rather lucky with my fundamentalists – they’ve mostly been fine people), and not one of them believes that ‘either Scripture is true in every conceivable sense OR God does not exist’.

On that last dichotomy, much is in the tone! I don’t actually expect anyone to believe that – but it is the logical consequence (or, perhaps instead of ‘God does not exist’ it’s ‘I cannot be saved’). Neil has made a similar point about inerrancy, but it seems to me to avoid the substance. If inerrancy is sufficiently compromised and qualified then it ceases to be a meaningful doctrine and may as well be abandoned (three cheers) and we return to the more traditional understanding. I think we need to talk about the authority and purpose of Scripture; language of ‘errancy’ assumes the scientific standards that I think are wholly inappropriate.

Third (and still under the heading of inerrancy), as one who has spent most of his Christian life in the evangelical community, I’ve yet to meet an example of what you call ‘Protestant neurosis’ – ‘individual interpretation, means all the weight on the individual – what if I get it wrong?! Oh doom!’ On the contrary, most of those who believe in the right of private interpretation are quite convinced that it’s their neighbours who are getting it wrong…!

All I can say is that I’ve dealt with different people! Perhaps it’s something about being a non-evangelical, that people who are wanting to come out of a culture are likely to say different things to someone outside of that culture. The same would apply in reverse of course.

(And by the way, the catholic position holds to private interpretation just as strongly – the pope’s private interpretation! Very few people who say that the church is the authoritative interpreter of scripture really mean what Paul means by ‘the Church’ – they mean ‘the hierarchy of the church’).

I think that’s a caricature of the RC position; my view is moving closer to the Pauline with time (partly because I’ve been surprised by how much I disagree with the catholic logic of RW’s letter to the Central Floridians)

‘Church experienced most important and formative growth WITHOUT the “Bible”’ – this is hugely misleading. You give the impression that there was wide disagreement about the NT canon until the 4th century, when in fact as you know there was in fact substantial agreement early on.

That’s why “Bible” is in scare-quotes – I’m trying to distinguish between ‘Scripture’ and ‘The Bible’.

Furthermore, the early church considered the OT (as reinterpreted by Jesus and the apostles) to be authoritative, and also considered itself to be under the authority of the apostolic witness.

The early church had a different OT to the one we now have; and ‘the apostolic witness’ was bound up as much with the community, worship and rule of life as it was with Scripture.

I’d be very interested to see an instance from the first 5 centuries, even before the finalisation of the canon in the 4th century, of a bishop or council considering himself or itself as having the authority to set aside a clear teaching from the documents of what we now call the NT.

Not sure what such an example might be – you seem to be asking for an example of the church doing something that the church didn’t agree with, as it is the rule of orthodoxy which determined the selection of texts (I don’t know if there is one or not) – but Allert discusses a Bishop allowing a church to study the Gospel of Peter, and use it in worship, and only intervened when it became clear that the teaching from it was heretical (docetic). 3rd Century I think.

Similarly, your list of the things that the Bible ‘significantly post-dates’ is true only if you restrict the word ‘Bible’ to mean ‘the final agreement on the canon in the 4th century’. But in fact, as you know, the church submitted to the authority of the vast majority of those writings long before the 4th century. In fact, I would contend that all of the biblical documents were written, and accepted as authoritative by at least a portion of the early church, long before the universal acceptance of any of the things you mention here (with the possible exception of weekly communion).

Well, that would be an interesting discussion to have. Gospel of John, for example, is generally considered an end-of-century text, and you certainly had Bishops by then (whether they were Bishops as we understand them is also an interesting question…) My point is as much about whether it makes sense that a community should uphold as sacred a text which – in certain views – outlaws the embedded practices of that community.

I am of course in complete agreement with your statement that Jesus is the Word of God in the truest sense, and that his authority is paramount over all other claimants (including scripture). But I note that in your own beliefs, when it comes to a specific example of the teaching of Jesus – nonviolence and love for enemies – you are not prepared to give him that authority – you prefer the OT and classical reason!

Well that’s a whole different issue, but at the heart of my perspective is an acceptance that I’m mired in sin, and that sometimes it is more sinful to try and be sinless. It’s a paradox but I don’t see any way out of it as yet.

Finally, I’d be interested to know where you locate classical Anglicanism on this spectrum. Would you not agree that ‘sola scriptura was held by all the Anglican reformers and is the position assumed by the 39 Articles and the Book of Common Prayer, while the view that you are advancing was precisely the view that the Anglican reformers were objecting to in Roman Catholicism?

Er… short answer to the latter question is no. Doug Chaplin has been doing some excellent writing on this recently – I’d particularly refer you to this post. I think Anglicanism is the whole spectrum, at least ideally, and that’s certainly what I’d argue for.

Scalded

God is having a go at me.

It’s disturbing, exhilarating, disconcerting and strangely comforting all at the same time.

I’ve got much more to say about this but it may have to wait until I’m back from retreat in 2 weeks time before it is coherent.

In particular, those who were at the Learning Church this morning won’t believe it, but I didn’t know that the story of Zacchaeus was set for tomorrow.

Forgive the language but I’m convinced God is laughing his arse off at me right now.