RE: [asa] Romans 1:20

From: John Walley <john_walley@yahoo.com>
Date: Sat Nov 17 2007 - 08:15:27 EST

Again, a very thoughtful and sensitive example of God's accommodation
towards us in how He reveals his word to us as weak and fragile souls. We
don't like to think of ourselves this way as long as our theology survives
the challenges of life, but imagine going through your own Job experience
and we would be as helpless and vulnerable as Augustine's "unfledged chick".

 
I recently ran across another example of using this maturity theme to
express the difference in how people receive God's written revelation while
searching for books on Amazon on the inerrancy doctrine. I found an out of
print book by an unknown theologian called "Toward a Mature Faith: Does
Biblical Inerrancy Make Sense" at the link below which sounded to me exactly
like the right way to handle this issue.

With all due respect to those on the list that differ, but I think the
answer to this conflict of those that cling to undue literacy in the
scriptures is that we all just need to grow up. And unfortunately, it is the
wedge of science and evolution that is driving the schism deeper, so we have
to undo that first before we can even begin to fix this other issue.

John

http://www.amazon.com/Toward-Mature-Faith-Biblical-Inerrancy/dp/0962761702/r
ef=pd_bbs_sr_5?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1195304386&sr=8-5

-----Original Message-----
From: asa-owner@lists.calvin.edu [mailto:asa-owner@lists.calvin.edu] On
Behalf Of mrb22667@kansas.net
Sent: Friday, November 16, 2007 10:50 PM
To: asa@calvin.edu
Subject: [asa] Romans 1:20

More thoughts on our various approaches to the importance of Scripture:

I'm finally at the end of Augustine's "Confessions" where things are
starting to
get interesting. Here is an excerpt I ran across that has bearing.

beginning p. 312 (book 12);
For just as a spring that rises in a small place is more fertile and with
its
various rivulets supplies a flow of water to a wider area than any one of
those
rivulets which, however far they flow, can be traced back to the one source,
so
the tale told by your appointed Dispenser [Moses], destined as it was to
benefit
so many later commentators takes what meaning he is capable of forming in
these
matters, some one meaning, some another, extracting it through various
complicated twists of language. Some, when they read or hear these words,
think
that God is like a man, or like some physical object endowed with immense
power;
and that he formed the sudden and unprecedented resolution to make two great
physical objects, heaven and earth, one higher, one lower. These objects
were
to be outside himself and, so to speak, at some spatial distance from
himself;
and that within them all things were to be contained. And when they hear
the
words, God said, Let there be... this or that, they think that his words had
beginning and ending, that they were pronounced over a period of time and
then
passed away; and that immediately after their passing away there existed
what
was commanded to exist, and so on in this vein, in accordance with the
things
familiar to us in our fleshly life. While such souls are still childish and
weak, they are nursed at the bosom of this low style of speaking as at their
mother's breast. Their faith is built up in the healthiest way, enabling
them
to have a sure and fixed belief that it was God who made all the living
things
their senses can behold as they look about themselves, in all their wondrous
variety. But should some soul disdain what it sees as the low style of
Moses's
words, and in pride and weakness reach out beyond the cradle in which it was
nursed, then, poor soul! a sad tumble it will have. Then, Lord God, have
mercy, and let not them that pass by (Lam. 1:12) trample on that unfledged
chick, but let it live, till it can fly.

<end excerpt>

Here, I think is the sensitivity so beautifully expressed that we should
have to
others in their various, probably faulty, approaches to the perfect Word.
And
our own (my own) is also subjected to this judgment. Not that Augustine
promotes an "anything goes" approach to interpretation. It's obvious he
despises falsehood and adores Truth. But he can show such patience for
those
who cling to simplistic faith! Enough for now... gotta run.

--Merv

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Received on Sat Nov 17 08:16:24 2007

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