Ongoing revelation – should the canon be open? September 29, 2009
Posted by Damian in Biblical Exegesis and Interpretation, Church and Christian History, Judaism and Christianity.Tags: God, apocrypha, talmud, christianity, judaism, revelation, scripture, old testament, Eschatology, Exodus, Mishnah, christ, desert fathers, inspiration, canon, canonicity, Enoch, Church fathers, magisterium, ongoing revelation, rabbinic judaism, christ benchmark, Caanan, canaanite, canaanite genocide, God-breathed, nature of scripture, Apostles, ecclesial deism, ecclesial theism, Martin Hengel
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A few posts over the past month have had me thinking on the issue of canon. Yes, I know I’ve written on canon before. But this time I wasn’t wondering about canon formation. I’ve been thinking about canon closure. Why was the canon closed? What does it mean that the canon is closed? What is inspiration? These are the kind of questions I’ve been thinking about.
Firstly, a disclaimer: These are not finished thoughts. This is why everything is framed in questions. These aren’t my stated beliefs, I’m simply exploring, and I’d like all those who read it to comment so we all can explore it further.
In a comment on Jeff’s site, I’ve been speaking about how I read scripture as an ‘ongoing revelation’ to Israel:
The best analogy to me is to compare the revelation of scripture to a journey as a Christian. When you first meet God, most of us have a very simple and (to be honest) ignorant view of who God is. But, as you grow as a Christian, you discover more aspects of God, and this continues as your life as a Christian continues. If you’d always blogged, you could probably trace the ongoing process of discover, and you might go back to things you’d written years before, and disagree with them. But all of it is revelation. All of it is the product of your relationship with God. Scripture is a record of this process in the nation of Israel. If you look further back, the revelation is only partial. They’re a little ignorant. They project a lot of their understand of gods onto God. But they learn, and they get to know God better.
Jeff also asked me about how I know which parts to ‘trust’ and which parts not to. My response was that, as Christ is our most complete revelation of God, we, like the nation of Israel before us interpreting Torah through the prophets, interpret the Old Testament through Christ. However, as I thought more on the subject, I wondered: Was Christ our most recent revelation in the New Testament? Or were the apostles our most recent revelation of God?
This reminded me of something Bryan Cross wrote, on Ecclesial Deism (an interesting article if you’re interested in Catholicism):
Deism refers to a belief that God made the world, and then left it to run on its own. It is sometimes compared to “a clockmaker” winding up a clock and then “letting it run.” Deism is distinct from theism in that theism affirms not only that God created the world, but also that God continually sustains and governs all of creation. Ecclesial deism is the notion that Christ founded His Church, but then withdrew, not protecting His Church’s Magisterium (i.e., the Apostles and/or their successors) from falling into heresy or apostasy. Ecclesial deism is not the belief that individual members of the Magisterium could fall into heresy or apostasy. It is the belief that the Magisterium of the Church could lose or corrupt some essential of the deposit of faith, or add something to the deposit of faith.
Now, whilst I’m not Catholic, and hence not an ecclesial theist in Bryan’s sense, I wouldn’t say that I am an ecclesial deist either. I certainly believe that God continually sustains and governs his church in some sense, which is why I tend to be very Catholic in many respects (and hence why I attend a very Catholic Anglican cathedral). Thinking of concepts such as canon in this light (although I know this is not the application Bryan intended) yields some realizations that our stance on the canon has theological implications. If God continually sustains and governs his church, why did His revelation stop at St John’s Revelation? Mike Bird quoted Martin Hengel, who asked a similar question about the Old Testament canon:
Does the church still need a clearly demarcated, strictly closed Old Testament canon, since the New Testament is, after all, the ‘conclusion’, the goal and the fulfilment of the Old? Indeed, does not one face an essential contradiction if one, in an unhistorical biblicism, clings to a limited ‘Hebrew’, or better pharisaical, ‘canon’ from Jabneh? Must not the Old Testament remain a degree open to the New? [...]
The origin of Christianity as well as of rabbinic Judaism after 70 CE becomes at all historically interesting and comprehensible only through this literature, which includes in a wider dimension also Josephus, Philo and the Pseudepigrapha. One portion of this literature was preserved, sometimes unwillingly, by Christian tradition; the other comes to light now in the Qumran texts.
The great interest that this rich ‘post-biblical’ Jewish tradition finds among Jews and Christians could perhaps be assessed as a sign of the relative openness of the ‘canon’ in both directions, given the fact that Jews and Christians parted conclusively only after the destruction of Jerusalem toward the end of the first century CE.
Now, for exactly the reasons Hengel spoke of, I believe it’s incredibly important to remain abreast of both Old and New Testament apocryphal material. I’ve believed this (although practiced it imperfectly) for a while now. But I’ve never before thought about these in regards to the openness of the canon. After all, at the time they were written, none of the books currently in the bible were considered scripture; and there were plenty of books considered scripture by the writers of the bible, that are no longer in the canon. Surely this poses some problems for the canon as we know it? It suggests, after all, that the canon is a human invention – the canon references scripture outside of it, and does not speak of itself as scripture.
If God in fact continually sustains and governs his church, at least in the sense of its scripture, how do we account for the the texts that were once canonical and now are not? And how do we account for the gap in writings – have we had no new revelation of God in the past two thousand years? Now, the first question – how do we account for the the texts that were once canonical and now are not – might be answered by appealing to scripture’s nature as ongoing revelation. In a similar way to our learning that aspects of the Old Testament – slavery, sacrifice, genocide – are not what God desires through the New Testament, our ancestors learnt that Enoch did not describe God in the manner revealed to him. Boom! It was removed from the Canon (in many traditions, anyway). However, it does not explain why this didn’t happen to other texts that similarly had their revelations refined by the prophets and apostles that followed.
The second question – why have we had no new revelation of God in the past two thousand years – is the one I’m more curious about. In the rabbinic tradition, whilst the canon closed, it nevertheless has been ever-expanding. The Mishnah, and the Talmud were interpretations, and they in turn were interpreted, and that was recorded, and each generations wisdom and reading of scripture was recorded and commented upon by the next, each being regarded as a seed of revelation from God, to this very day. However, in Christian tradition, none of this writing has ever been considered as sacred or inspired in any way. In fact, it is almost as if the concept of ‘inspiration’ is one distant from any canonizing groups – the New Testament canon according to evidence that they were written by Apostles, rather than because it was considered ‘inspired’ by God.
I wonder, if we consider our scripture to be that which was inspired by God, then our scripture cannot end after the writings of the New Testament, and should not have a gap where the Apocrypha are. If Christ is the climax so far of God’s ongoing revelation of himself, perhaps – considering Christianity is an eschatological religion – this revelation will only be complete in the second coming. In which case, the same argument Hengel applied to the Apocrypha applies to everything written between then and the New Testament. The apostolic, church and desert fathers, the prayer books and Magisterium, sermons, scrolls, artworks and books, are all inspired by God, and are all scripture.
If this is the case, then how do we separate the wheat from the chaff? Good question. My suggestion is this: Whilst we may be awaiting a completed revelation of God, the benchmark of our own revelation is still Christ. If we read everything – Old Testament, Apocrypha, New Testament, and everything after it – through the lens of Christ (not called the Word of God for nothing), then that will separate truth from mistake and falsehood. This is something that is true even in the limited canon that we have – as is shown by the discussions that have been had recently about the Caananite genocide. If we are applying these judgments to our closed canon (and I hope we are, to avoid statements such as ‘the babies in the land of Canaan deserved to die’, or ‘God can kill whoever he wants, because he has ownership over everything’), then what is stopping us from reading other church texts in a similar way to how Rabbinic Judaism always has: Critically, but with a view to discovering God, and in our case, with Christ as our benchmark.
Even more evidence of feminine language in description of God September 24, 2009
Posted by Damian in Biblical Exegesis and Interpretation, Church and Christian History, Early Christian Belief and Patristics, Relating to God.Tags: Augustine, Augustine's Confessions, beyond gender, breast, Calvin, Confessions, el maleh rachamim, female God, feminine characteristics, feminine God, femininity, gender, God as mother, God is a mother figure, goddess, Gospel of Luke, Gospel of Matthew, Hebrew, holy spirit, is God male?, Isaiah, Job, julian, julian of norwich, Luke, masculinity, Matthew, mother hen, nooma, odes of solomon, Psalm, psalms, rechem, Rob Bell's She, shadow of your wings, she, shelter, shelter in the shadows of your wings, solomon, the breast of Jesus, womb, wombful, word-play
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The other week I was searching for uses of feminine language to describe God. It turns out I’m not the only one, and I found a few more usages at a few blogs around the ’sphere. Halden started by draw my attention to Melissa’s blog. She quotes Augustine:
My father and mother have abandoned me (Psalm 26:10). The psalmist has made himself a little child in relation to God. He has made God both his father and h is mother. God is our father because he created us, because he calls us, gives orders and rules us; he is our mother because he cherishes us, nourishes us, feeds us with milk, and holds us in his arms (Exposition 2 of Psalm 26, par. 18).
I looked for a way to gain the strength I needed to enjoy you, but did not find it until I embraced the mediator between God and humankind, the man Christ Jesus, who also is God, supreme over all things and blessed forever. Not yet had I embraced him, though he called out, proclaiming, I am the Way and Truth and Life, nor had I known him as the food which, though I was not yet strong enough to eat it, he had mingled with our flesh; the Word became flesh so that your wisdom, through whom you created all things, might become for us the milk adapted for our infancy (Confessions 7.18.24).
James K. A. Smith also mentioned in the comments a further reference in Augustine to ’suckling on the Breast of Jesus’ in his sermons on John or 1 John, but I couldn’t find evidence of it.
Charis drew my attention to Tim Bulkely’s e-book on the subject (Suzanne recently linked to it here), which ferreted out some scriptural language:
But I’ve calmed and quieted my soul, like a weaned child with its mother; my soul with me is like a weaned child. (Psalm 131)
But Zion said, ‘The Lord has forsaken me, my Lord has forgotten me.’ Can a woman forget the infant at her breast, or a loving mother the child of her womb? Though these can forget, I will not forget you! (Isaiah 49:14-15)
From whose womb did the ice come forth, and who gave birth to heaven’s hoarfrost? (Job 38:29)
O Jerusalem, Jerusalem, the city that kills the prophets and stones those who are sent to it! How often would I have gathered your children together as a hen gathers her brood under her wings, and you would not! (Luke 13:34 and similarly Matthew 23:37)
The Old Testament references to ‘Shelter in the Shadows of your wings’ may also be a similar reference, although it is less clear. Psalm17:8; 36:7; 57:1; 61:4; 63:7; and 91:4), and she goes into a lot of detail on how here.
And Dave Belcher in the comments to Halden’s post, mentioned mentioned Julian of Norwich (also mentioned by Doug Chaplin):
God chose to be our mother in all things
and so made the foundation of his work,
most humble and most pure,
in the Virgin’s womb.God, the perfect wisdom of all,
arrayed himself in this humble place.Christ came in our poor flesh
to share a mother’s care.Our mothers bear us for pain and for death;
our true mother, Jesus, bears us for joy and endless life.
And he also mentions the Odes of Solomon (which I was heretofore unaware of):
A cup of milk was offered to me, and I drank it in the sweetness of the Lord’s kindness.
The Son is the cup, and the Father is He who was milked; and the Holy Spirit is She who milked Him;
Because His breasts were full, and it was undesirable that His milk should be ineffectually released.
The Holy Spirit opened Her bosom, and mixed the milk of the two breasts of the Father.
Then She gave the mixture to the generation without their knowing, and those who have received it are in the perfection of the right hand.
The womb of the Virgin took it, and she received conception and gave birth.
So the Virgin became a mother with great mercies.
And she labored and bore the Son but without pain, because it did not occur without purpose.
And she did not require a midwife, because He caused her to give life.
She brought forth like a strong man with desire, and she bore according to the manifestation, and she acquired according to the Great Power.
And she loved with redemption, and guarded with kindness, and declared with grandeur.
Hallelujah.
Yet another commenter, Brad, mentions Calvin making references to God as mother as well – I’m not familiar with Calvin, but I’m sure there are readers who are, if you’re interested in ferreting out these references.
All in all, a good haul for the cause of feminine language in the Christian tradition to describe God!
More on feminine language in describing God September 16, 2009
Posted by Damian in Biblical Exegesis and Interpretation, Church and Christian History, Early Christian Belief and Patristics, Relating to God.Tags: beyond gender, el maleh rachamim, female God, feminine characteristics, feminine God, femininity, gender, God is a mother figure, goddess, Hebrew, holy spirit, is God male?, Isaiah, masculinity, nooma, psalms, rechem, Rob Bell's She, she, womb, wombful, word-play
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Just to update on the conversation that’s going on concerning feminine language (that I’ve been taking part in here, here and here): Peter Lopez piped in, wondering why anyone would choose to describe a human male in female language? The conversation going on there is interesting. Suzanne linked to Rachel Barenblat’s poem that uses feminine language in worship, and to Doug’s songs featuring feminine language. Suzanne also posts on how the ‘Judge of Widows’ is not a solely masculine name, based on allusions to the Song of Deborah, in addition to her ongoing discussion about use of ‘mother’ imagery in describing God.
I’m enjoying this conversation (and hope that more people choose to take part in it), because there some more uses of feminine language coming to light in the comments around the web. hiscrivener mentions research into the roots of the Hebrew ‘Shaddai’ in the ugaritic for ‘Womb’ (I’d love to hear more about that, if you’re reading this, hiscrivener).
However, one major issue that continues coming up is the concept of ‘Who cares?’, or more astutely, ‘Surely we’re talking about physical attributes applied to a non-physical being (an anthropomorphism), so why the big deal?’. I think it is important for two reasons.
Firstly, because I fear (in the words of Rachel Barenblat in a comment on an earlier post) that our image of God might calcify, resulting in a mis-characterisation of God, or worse, injustice done in that mis-characterisations name. I think that if feminine language describing God were more prevalent, much argument regarding sexist, feminism, or male chauvinism in the church would be in turn less prevalent. I also think that at a personal level, feminine language describing God opens up avenues of relationship that otherwise would not be open (not limited by God, but by me).
Secondly, I think that publicising making it acceptable to use feminine language to describe God might minister in a new way to many women who otherwise miss out on an intimacy of association that they thus far miss out on. That intimacy should be there – it’s not new – women are made in God’s image. But they’re not encouraged to think of the parts of God that image is based on. I think that’s important.
But, I feel that tradition is important, so rather than simply create language to describe God, I’d prefer to search out existing language; people like Doug and Sue have shown that it exists. I hope I’ve clarified any confusion on why I’m interested in the topic.
Why the hate for Graham Phillip’s Moses Legacy? September 14, 2009
Posted by Damian in Ancient Near Eastern Thought, Church and Christian History.Tags: bible, graham phillips, historical reliability, historicity, inerrancy, kamose, Moses, moses legacy, propaganda, scripture, thutmoses
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Claude Mariottini posts about Graham Phillips’ The Moses Legacy, which theorises that Moses was two historical persons (Thutmoses and Kamose), combined by scribes into the Moses we know of in the bible. However, I was surprised by the off-hand way that Dr. Mariottini dismissed Phillips:
What can I say about such a preposterous theory about Moses? This theory has no merit. Phillips’ views can only be accepted if one is willing to completely distort the Biblical record. [...] Although the name or the work of Moses are not mentioned in any records from the Ancient Near East, and although no Egyptian monument or text mentions his name, gives a record of his birth, or tells about his work in delivering Israel, the biblical traditions are still reliable source material about Moses and his work. Although the debate will continue about the historical reliability of the biblical text or the existence of Moses, there is no compelling reason to deny that the Moses of the Bible was the Moses of the Bible.
It seems Dr Mariottini is committed to a somewhat inerrant view of scripture. Whilst a little convoluted, Phillips’ theory is reasonable considering it’s likely the Moses stories were written hundreds of years later, by those who likely had other interests than creating objectively accurate documents. But – and it’s a big but – I could be missing something major. Aside from a commitment to the historical reliability of the biblical text (and archaeological evidence such as this), are there reasons why Phillip’s theory should be dismissed?
Examples of feminine language in Christian tradition September 9, 2009
Posted by Damian in Church and Christian History, Early Christian Belief and Patristics, Relating to God.Tags: beyond gender, el maleh rachamim, female God, feminine characteristics, feminine God, femininity, gender, God is a mother figure, goddess, ha-rachaman, Hebrew, holy spirit, is God male?, Isaiah, masculinity, nooma, psalms, rechem, Rob Bell, Rob Bell's She, root fallacy, she, womb, wombful, word-play
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Doug Chaplin responded to my post on Gender-bending consciousness-raisers, and Suzanne McCarthy posted in response to Doug’s original post (although she’s been writing a series on the subject, it seems), in addition to Rachel Barenblat writing further in the comments section on her own views on the matter.
Doug posted two songs used in the Anglican tradition, which featured language such as:
Jesus, like a mother you gather your people to you; you are gentle with us as a mother with her children.
Often you weep over our sins and our pride, tenderly you draw us from hatred and judgement. [A Song of St Anselm]
and
God chose to be our mother in all things and so made the foundation of his work, most humble and most pure, in the Virgin’s womb. [A song of Julian of Norwich]
Suzanne quoted Jacob of Serugh:
(God) created creation, and like a compassionate mother (yaledta) he carries it, his hidden power acting with strength; just as a mother does not grow weary of her son, so God never gets weary, for a mother’s compassion is bound up in love for her child. The Godhead is indeed a compassionate mother (emma), and he carries the world like a child, in great love.
It’s great to find evidence within different Christian traditions of an openness to the use of feminine language to describe God. If anyone else is familiar with examples of feminine language used to describe the Godhead (or parts thereof), I’d appreciate linking or referring me to it – the more the better. If you don’t mind, I’ll try to post everything you find, because I think this is worth collecting in one place.


