How do I know what I’m talking about? Everyone claims their church is following the meaning of the scriptures, how can I know which one is?
There can be a real disconnect when discussing fundamental
beliefs; to the point where you can freeze up trying to explain how you know. So,
it’s tempting to just go along with whatever church is socially advantageous to
us. That’s not the path that Jesus’ disciples took and is sure to miss many treasures
Christ has for us when we find his kingdom Mat 13:44-46. On the other hand,
when we contend for the faith once delivered, can we do it with humility but
without compromising our confidence?
This essay is longer than most of mine because I want to
pause and get under my own skin as it were. Instead of taking for granted our
ability to interpret the Bible, let’s ponder why it makes sense for us to trust
our interpretations that fly in the face of long-established traditions of men
in other orders. Let’s consider what we think truth is, and then what knowing looks
like. Then let’s consider what popular philosophy says and the path of society on
that basis to contrast it with my own worldview. Next, to explain the way in
which I rely on the Bible, I’ll place it in context of the whole skill of
knowing. From there, I want to show why I believe the common person, not the educated
philosopher, is better able to interpret scripture truthfully.
What Truth Is
The answer to how we know depends on what truth is. If we
don’t begin with a knowledge of truth, how in the world would we go about
finding it? Have you ever been asked what the difference is between a water
pump and a bull’s tail? If you said you didn’t know, you got the response, well
I know not to send you for a pail of water! In other words, if we didn’t
already know what truth is, we wouldn’t know what to look for. So, we start
with an idea of truth that we take as a starting point. Everyone does. If
anyone tells you they are being completely neutral and unbiased, they are
simply ignorant of their own prejudices (or are as clueless as someone pumping
water with a bull’s tail). If our starting point is wrong, we will fill our
pail full of BS, so all you can do is answer the hard questions consistently
according to the starting point to see if the answers are real and meaningful.
If the starting point doesn’t allow a consistent and meaningful account for basic
things we know, it’s BS.
I start with this: the Bible on my desk is true. Now turn to
John 14:6 and Jesus says, “I am the way, the truth, and the life”. Who is he? Read
John 1:1-5 where his name is the Word—or Reason. He created everything—matter/energy
and law/order—from the beginning, and our life and light are in him. This is a
radical claim requiring our unconditional surrender to his authority. The
Apostle Paul says it like this in Col 1:16,17: For by him were all things
created, that are in heaven, and that are in earth, visible and invisible,
whether they be thrones, or dominions, or principalities, or powers: all things
were created by him, and for him: And he is before all things, and by him
all things consist. That consistency
is how things cohere, or hold together, that is, all the diverse facts that can
be known have their meaning based on their relationship to the Creator and Word
of God. Again, in Col 2:3 he says of Christ: In whom are hid all the
treasures of wisdom and knowledge.
So, the big takeaway: Truth is fundamentally and eternally
personal. Truth is the relationship that three divine persons have where they
completely know each other and love each other constantly and faithfully. When
people say Christ is truth personified, it implies that truth is first
impersonal and then Christ personified it. But I think for us to heal our
understanding of knowledge, we need to realize that truth is personal and
knowing is fundamentally a personal relationship. So, I don’t say Christ is
truth personified; Christ is the truth but in philosophy man has
de-personalized truth to hide God.
Scriptural Precepts of Knowledge
So, what does Scripture say about knowledge? First, it
begins with the fear of God, Pr 1:7. This forces us to decide at the outset of
our reasoning process, who or what we are ultimately faithful to. Truth is
related to the English word betroth. Truth has a connotation of pledge and
faithfulness (being true). Reason is a tool that allows us to judge the
veracity of conclusions based on their faithfulness to premises. Human reason cannot
rely on its own authority but is dependent on the premises it uses. Proverbs
calls us to pledge faithfulness to God from the beginning of our reasoning
process. Starting anywhere else leads to foolishness.
Second, we are commanded to love God with all our mind, Mt
22:37. There are two elements I want to highlight: love and mind. Love is the
driving force behind knowledge and mentally reflecting on how we know things should
include examining ourselves for any rebellion against God. We probably don’t
get this from our culture, but we should keep a clear distinction between
mental effort and knowing. Applying our mind is part of knowing, but knowing is
also much more. While it may be tempting to separate love and knowledge into
independent categories, I say we can only understand knowing in terms of love. When
it comes to knowing God, including which church is his bride, he initiates the
relationship Mt 11:27. Then once we know our Heavenly Father, we are commanded
to love him. This essay is an effort to love the Lord with all my mind, and it
will hopefully lead to a better handle on truth that I can keep even with the
adversity of the world is beating against me.
Third, we are called to not be conformed to this world but
be transformed by the renewing of our mind, Ro 12:2. Knowing God renews our mind,
and it transforms us out of line with the world. There is a worldly way to
know, and a godly way to know. A case in point here is 1Co 8:1-2. By studying
this passage, we can see the wrong way to know is for pride (so I can be right),
but the right way is to love God and man. I find in my nature the pride of life
and must check myself when I find myself arguing for the glory of being right—this
in conformity with the world 1Jn 2:16. If we love our neighbor, then we want
them to come to the truth on their own terms. If we argue them into submission,
we could divide them from their own conscience and that will leave them worse
off than before we “brought” the truth to them.
This is always the consequence of forcing unity. We are
careful not to pressure anyone to agree with us so they won’t look stupid, because
the smartest people are on our side, because they will have an easier life, or
God forbid, they will be fined or chastised. This has been common in history
but none of those things brings real unity. The only motive that draws people
together in the truth is love from the heart where conscience is.
In 1 Co 8, Paul is speaking about those who know that there
is nothing wrong with eating meat sacrificed to idols and how they should
behave to those who don’t have that knowledge. He says that if they eat because
they accept that you are right, but don’t see it for themselves, they are
sinning against their own conscience. This is a key insight into what it means
to teach someone the truth. Paul would rather give up eating meat rather than have
his brother defile his conscience! Loving your brother means persuading his conscience,
not just getting his assent. If that brother stops trusting his own conscience,
he loses something God gave him to guide him and that’s dangerous.
Beware of Philosophy
Now, we need to heed a warning given by the Apostle Paul in
Colossians 2:8. Beware lest any man spoil you through philosophy and vain
deceit, after the tradition of men, after the rudiments of the world, and not
after Christ. Notice he didn’t say ignore or avoid philosophy; he said
beware lest any man spoil you through philosophy. Even if you’re not conscious of
it, philosophy we hear could spoil our walk in the faith. There are many trying
to spoil our stand for the truth, so beware. Philosophy is a worldly discipline
that seeks a foundation for our knowledge or wisdom of the world around us. It
is self-consciously independent of divine revelation and as such results in
serious confusion. In a manner of speaking, we could adopt a “philosophy” based
on scriptural precepts, but for this discussion, I use the word philosophy to
describe the discipline of establishing wisdom independent of God which is the
Col 2:8 sense.
Knowing is unavoidably religious at the root. The process of
studying something, or defining something, is a process of relating one
particular thing, or set of particulars, to the rest of creation (the cosmos). To
question what a thing is, is to question what it means or how it relates to
other things known. Therefore, the philosophical drive to establish certain
foundations to our knowledge, goes about finding the coherence of all things.
In other words, what is the central truth or key, through which all things can
be related.
René Descartes, the father of modern philosophy, famously
doubted everything he had ever heard in search of indubitable truth. What he
decided was that in the act of doubting he was asserting his existence as a
thinker. Therefore, he concluded that he exists based on his thinking (or
doubting). That is the famous “I think, therefore I am”. 300 years later,
Bertrand Russel demonstrated that this argument “smuggled in the I” and
therefore is begging the question of personal existence. Russell showed that a
more consistent form of the argument is: There are thoughts, therefore I am;
which obviously does not follow. So, in essence, Descartes prejudicially
believed in himself as the thinker to justify his own existence. Descartes made
himself, as a rational thinker, the “I AM THAT I AM” that God claims for only
himself.
Philosophy must find something to relate everything, if rationality
is possible. Human minds are finite, so people can quickly give up trying to
rationally ground knowledge and succumb to irrationalism. By irrationalism, I
mean the belief that there is no way to know the root truth that unites all the
facts of our experience. On the foundation of human wisdom, disputation (on the
most fundamental level) boils down to merely my opinion verses your opinion. This is subjectivism. The radical skepticism
that philosophers aim to avoid is unavoidable once subjectivism is adopted.
So, worldly philosophers have been searching for a rational theory
that can avoid absurdity when explaining all the various facets of experience.
The reason it hasn’t been successful after thousands of years, is because it prejudicially
rejects the God that created and maintains all things by the word of his power.
That doesn’t reduce to irrationalism because the omniscient God has revealed
what we need to know in his word. Deu 29:29, The secret things belong unto
the LORD our God: but those things which are revealed belong unto us and to our
children for ever, that we may do all the words of this law. I do believe
in rationality, but not in Rationalism. That means that we can reason through
things successfully with the right foundation, but Rationalism teaches that
that foundation is within the rationality of man (clear and distinct ideas).
When man’s rational program overreaches or breaks down (as
it invariably does over time), we are left with two mutually exclusive poles
that we are pulled toward. On the one hand, we are pulled toward dogmatism to
avoid subjectivism. This provides a kind of cohesion to fulfill our intuition
that the world is rational and truth is objective. However, this unity is based
on the traditions of men (who are finite and sinful), so there is no room for
individuals to conscientiously counter the dogma within the tradition because
disagreement itself is heresy. For some, our need for liberty of conscience becomes
obvious when they perceive the accepted narrative is false. Subjectivism reigns
when enough people reject the prevailing dogma and leave every person to do
what is right in their own eyes. The fruit of subjectivism is disorder and
chaos and simultaneously leads others to rally around a new dogma and repeat
the process all over. Ad Nauseum. I think this lens helps us understand much of
human history.
My Worldview
I believe the Bible gives us the truth we ought to rally around
but also requires patience when men naturally reject the truth. For those who
doubt the clarity and completeness of biblical revelation, I try to convince
them that the only way to avoid the logical extremes of the dogmatism-subjectivism
polarity is to submit to the shared, objective revelation from the very Creator
who teaches our spirits directly with power. To the traditional religionist, we
appear to be heretics that are relegated to (blind, unguided) subjectivism. To
the skeptic or individualist, we appear dogmatic as we submit unconditionally
to (unloving, uninspired) scripture. But to the believer, truth is found where
the external evidence of scripture rings in harmony with the internal testimony
of conscience.
The Bible teaches that God and only God exists
independently. God subsists in three persons relate to each other as Father,
Son, and Spirit. They have been loving each other constantly since eternity. Love
is as fundamental as existence. It was out of this abundance that he created
the world and loved us so we would live with him in his glory Eph 1:3-6.
So, everything is ordered and related by the Word of God. Secondly, man sinned
against God by refusing his absolute authority. This brought a curse, drove us away
from God, and keeps us from seeing the truth the way we ought to. Finally, we are
redeemed through the blood of Christ, and through him God has abounded wisdom
to us and shall gather us together in the end of time Eph 1:7-12. These truths furnish
a framework through which I understand the world.
Within this framework, knowing God depends on the moral condition
of the knower. We cannot know God, let alone identify his church, unless we’ve
been regenerated into spiritual life 1 Co 2. We love him because he first loved
us 1Jn 4:19. So those with a carnal mind, void of the Spirit of God, have no
hope of understanding because they remain under the curse of sin which is spiritual
death. For those that have been given spiritual life, there is still a danger of
blindness that must be overcome on the moral level before we can see the truth.
2 Co 4:3-4 refers to those who have been blinded by the god of this world. I
think this can be applied to anyone who defers to human authority, or whatever
is more socially acceptable, than the humbling process of following Jesus with
their whole heart. Jesus’ disciples asked him why he spoke to the multitude in
parables (Mat 13:11-17). He did not intend to show them the kingdom. Why?
Because their hearts waxed gross and they shut their eyes. This goes back to
the sovereignty of God: He sets the terms and conditions for how we know him.
This challenges the notion that anyone can understand if we
just have the right information. However, it makes sense when you think about
it from a privacy standpoint. We all hide certain things about ourselves from the
public. There are certain things that only my wife is allowed to see.
Revelation is a choice, and if we have that choice, why wouldn’t God? Knowing God,
like any person, is intimate and can’t be done except on his terms.
Getting the Picture
The role of scripture is often misunderstood; so, to place
scripture where it belongs, let’s think holistically about knowing using sight
as an analogy. For an image to be seen, the subject must have the faculties
necessary, have contact with the image, and make a skilled effort to see the
image. Notice the three dimensions: the subject, the world, and the authority. The
subject is the man doing the knowing or seeing by analogy, the world is the
reality we know, and the authority provides guidance to the subject as he’s
trying to skillfully understand.
When you look around the world, you see various things that
you know. Yet, you know there is more and it’s calling you to figure it out. As
Jesus was coming to Bethsaida, a blind man was brought to him and Jesus spit on
his eyes and asked him if he saw ought. The man looked up and said, “I see men
as trees, walking”. Jesus put his hands on him one more time and he saw every
man clearly. Reality didn’t change when the man saw more clearly, but his
experience of the world became much richer. Likewise, knowledge enriches us. If
our eyes work, light is detected, but it’s just random noise until we know what
we’re seeing. The skill in knowing is integrating clues into an image that has
meaning. Once an image comes into focus for us, we know it and the integration
of the clues is so effortless that we may forget the clues even while relying
on them subsidiarily. Now we’re ready to learn more about the world by using
this new knowledge as a clue for our next integration effort.
I remember squirrel hunting with Paw Paw when I was a boy.
Squirrels don’t want to be seen and are very good at hiding, especially from a
boy that lacks skill in finding them. This is where the authority dimension is
evident. How do we find something we can’t see? Paw Paw was the authority on
squirrel hunting that I trusted. He knew where to find the squirrels and took
me to the forest that I didn’t know about. He knew how to train dogs and read
the clues they were giving us about where the squirrel had been. Even when Paw
Paw placed me where the squirrel was, all I saw was a tree with several forks,
branches, knots, and leaves. However, because of my faith in Paw Paw and his
witness of what was in that tree, I earnestly kept looking at all the clues he
had set before me trying to see what I couldn’t yet see. The more I struggled,
the more he tried to explain how to see it, but it was I who had to identify
the squirrel out of the shades of brown and gray in the tree top. Once I
finally saw the truth, it was exciting and continuing to see it was effortless.
If I had merely trusted that Paw Paw was correct and accepted where he said it
was, I would have missed the whole fun of the hunt. Believing the truth is
seeing for yourself what is really out there and there is joy when we share it
with others.
The Role of Scripture
The hunting example illustrates knowing, at least some key
aspects. Now consider authority in the church. Scripture tells us how to see
Jesus as Lord (Jn 5:39). When our church says the Bible is our only rule of
faith and practice, it doesn’t mean that individuals don’t benefit from other
authorities. Clearly my current state of knowledge has been immensely helped by
the teachings and examples of my parents, pastors, human authors, peers, and
others. Church tradition is very important. What it means is that the Bible is
the only authoritative rule that we are bound to observe. The Bible doesn’t
apply the truth to every question we face. It provides the guidance we need,
but we must responsibly apply the light of scripture to our situation. Ps
119:105 Thy word is a lamp unto my feet, and a light unto my path.
The church wasn’t instituted by the Bible. She existed in
her present form when Christ was on the earth, and the Bible wasn’t finished
until later in the first century. I don’t think John finished writing until the
90’s A.D. So, not all church members had access to the Bible, and at least for
a few hundred years, there were some churches that didn’t have the entire canon
and yet they were still a church. Since these facts are used as evidence to
undermine scriptural authority over the church, a little clarity is in order.
The authority that established the church is the Word of God! The apostles
wrote down, with the help of the Holy Spirit (Jn 14:25-26, 15:26-27), what
Christ taught them (Lu 1:1-4, 1Jo 1:3). Everything they taught was based on
what God said, or it wasn’t authoritative. If a group of people were teaching
and practicing the truth that Jesus Christ taught, they were the church no
matter how many Bible copies they had in hand.
The Primitive Baptist Church holds that the King James
Translation of the Bible faithfully conveys all scripture (2Ti 3:16), no more
and no less. Therefore, all our preaching and articles of faith are based on
scripture. If any question ever comes up that genuinely cannot be answered by
scriptural principles, then there is no need for the church to supply the
principle. If an answer doesn’t contradict a scriptural principle, then liberty
on the question should not affect the peace of the church. Historical confessions
and writings play a valuable role in guiding us to the truth for certain
questions, but we don’t hold them on par with the Bible. We maintain that scripture
is sufficient to justify all our defining beliefs. In other words, the Bible is
the authority by which we judge the fitness of other authorities, including a
tradition from the church.
Interpretation
If we are clear on the role of scripture, we agree that the
Scripture is the word of God and is true, and of course, church teaching and
organization should be agreed with scripture. So, what about variant
interpretations? Reading history we learn about schisms and minority churches
refusing to fellowship the majority, state-established church. Should you look
to the scripture to interpret for yourself which church resembles the word of
God on the various points in question? Or should we look to the institutions
and decide which one had majority approval, imperial approval, or any other
non-scriptural factor and submit to that? Can a “layman” interpret the Bible for
himself given the competing interpretations presented from both sides? Please consider
who I believe can understand the true meaning of scripture and how.
I try to teach the way Paul taught in 2 Co 4: By
manifestation of the truth commending ourselves to every man’s conscience in
the sight of God. I want you to see the truth from God’s own words and love
it for yourself, not just surrender to a decisive conclusion that someone much
smarter than you has come to. On the other hand, if the “laity” are too
ignorant to understand the truth from the Bible based on a lack of philosophical
training, we must get assent based on the authority of church “clergy”; that
fits Paul’s description of walking in craftiness and handling the word of God
deceitfully. This is dogmatism because without faith in God’s word, one loses his
own internal guide and must accept the tradition of a group of men as his rule
of truth. If the subject matter were something like quantum physics, or Classical
Greek poetry; that would be alright. However, I’m arguing that the Bible was
given by God to guide all believers into a real relationship with him in this
life, so seeing Christ and identifying his church by scripture is not reserved
for the philosophically trained, but for the humble, faithful, and persistent.
Continuing in 2Co 4, we see that the gospel is hid to them
that are lost because the god of this world hath blinded their minds, lest the
light of the glorious gospel should shine unto them. Paul’s tactic is to preach
NOT OURSELVES, but Christ Jesus the Lord; and ourselves your servants for
Jesus’ sake. The light to see the glory of God comes from God, and we have this
treasure in earthen vessels, that the excellency of the power may be of God and
not of us. Does this sound like we need to get more philosophy to see the light
of the glory of God? Or does this sound like the true teachers are sent by God
to point you toward him so that you aren’t blinded by the great men of this
world? The struggle is not because doctrine is complicated, it’s because there
is a god of this world that wants you looking at men so that you miss the true
glory.
Worldly education is kind of a liability that makes it harder
to see the truth. 1Co 1:17-31 17 For Christ sent
me not to baptize, but to preach the gospel: not with wisdom of words, lest the
cross of Christ should be made of none effect. 18 For the
preaching of the cross is to them that perish foolishness; but unto us which
are saved it is the power of God. 19 For it is written, I will
destroy the wisdom of the wise, and will bring to nothing the understanding of
the prudent. 20 Where is the wise? where is the scribe? where is
the disputer of this world? hath not God made foolish the wisdom of this world?
21 For after that in the wisdom of God the world by wisdom knew
not God, it pleased God by the foolishness of preaching to save them that
believe. 22 For the Jews require a sign, and the Greeks seek
after wisdom: 23 But we preach Christ crucified, unto the Jews
a stumblingblock, and unto the Greeks foolishness; 24 But unto
them which are called, both Jews and Greeks, Christ the power of God, and the
wisdom of God. 25 Because the foolishness of God is wiser than
men; and the weakness of God is stronger than men. 26 For ye
see your calling, brethren, how that not many wise men after the flesh, not
many mighty, not many noble, are called: 27 But God hath chosen
the foolish things of the world to confound the wise; and God hath chosen the
weak things of the world to confound the things which are mighty; 28 And
base things of the world, and things which are despised, hath God chosen, yea,
and things which are not, to bring to nought things that are: 29 That
no flesh should glory in his presence. 30 But of him are ye in
Christ Jesus, who of God is made unto us wisdom, and righteousness, and
sanctification, and redemption: 31 That, according as it is
written, He that glorieth, let him glory in the Lord.
One of my favorites is in Matt 11:25-26 after Jesus
expresses frustration with the cities he and John had been preaching to. They
didn’t repent. The Jesus said, I thank thee, O Father, Lord of heaven and
earth, because thou hast hid these things from the wise and prudent, and hast
revealed them unto babes. Even so, Father: for so it seemed good in thy sight. It
pleases God to reveal truth unto babes that he hides from the “wise and
prudent”. Jesus told his disciples in Mat 18:3, Except ye be converted, and
become as little children, ye shall not enter into the kingdom of heaven. The
moral of this story is that education and intelligence is not how God reveals
his truth or his kingdom. But this does not mean to just believe whatever you
want to believe!
Jesus promised that For every one that asketh receiveth;
and he that seeketh findeth; and to him that knocketh it shall be opened (Mat
7:8). Solomon says (Pro 25:2) It is the glory of God to conceal a thing: but
the honour of kings is to search out a matter. This tells me that although
from the most elementary levels we know Christ as Lord and we can identify his
presence, there is a growth and clarity that we should be seeking with zeal and
perseverance. The parable of the sower in Mat 13/Mar 4/Luk 8 shows that the
word is like a seed that can bear fruit. To get a good crop of fruit, you need
not only to be introduced to the truth, but you need to understand, study, and apply
focus. There is an enemy that wants to keep the truth from bearing fruit in
your life and is successful in most people (Mat 7:12-14). You know Christ, so surround
yourself with mentors and teachers that help you understand the word of God as
your servants for Christ’s sake.
Conclusion
The conclusion is that identifying the church isn’t nearly
as difficult as some make it. The difficulty is with pride, and those that rest
on their own wisdom are farthest from the truth. By the mercies of God, he has given
us a home in this world that does not conform to this world, wherein we hear
and believe the gospel of his grace, our hearts are comforted, being knit
together in love unto all riches of the full assurance of understanding Col 2:2.
We read the scripture as the very words of God and find that contradictions and
variance in interpretation can be resolved on principles contained in scripture.
The ideal of widespread unity and agreement throughout the world cannot be
expected because men are driven by lust and pride and everyone is fighting the
confusion and darkness due to that. However, we draw comfort from the promise our
Lord gave in Lu 12:32: Fear not, little flock; for it is your Father’s good
pleasure to give you the kingdom.
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