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Before delving into specific biblical doctrines, we need to first think about what the bible is. In this lecture you’ll learn what the bible says about itself, some reasons to believe God inspired it, as well as the major types of biblical scholars and how they approach scripture. This episode, along with the last one, serves to round out the introduction to this course.

—— Notes ——

bibliology: one’s understanding about the bible

what is the bible?

a library of 66 books

written by 40 people

how should you interact with it?

claims that God inspired the bible

Matthew 1.22-23

Mark 12.36

Acts 1.16

Acts 3.18

Acts 4.25

Acts 28.25-26

Hebrews 3.7

Hebrews 10.15-17

2 Timothy 3.16

2 Peter 1.16-21

Revelation 1.1-2

reasons why I believe the bible is genuinely inspired

it claims it

predictive prophecy

unflattering honesty

medical insights

martyrdom

archeology

some more reasons

ear-marks of eye-witnesses

historicity of the resurrection of Jesus

changed my life

incredible preservation

survived some Israelite and Judean kings who disregarded it (Manasseh->Amon->Josiah)

survived 70 year exile in Babylonia

survived Antiochus Epiphanes who tried to destroy the Torah

survived destruction of Temple in a.d. 70

survived destruction of Jerusalem in a.d. 135

survived several Muslim empires

survived all the crusades

OT survived in high quality manuscripts (Aleppo, Leningrad, DSS, LXX)

Diocletian tried to destroy the NT

NT survived in over 5,000 Greek mss

531 language for whole bible, 1329 languages for NT

dichotomy today between bible-believing and bible-critical approaches to doctrine

refer to youtube video of my lecture on Losing Faith from 500

enlightenment gave rise to intense philosophical and biblical criticisms

most bible professors in most secular universities examine the bible from an atheist worldview

some Christians affirmed these criticisms but tried to save Christianity

Schleiermacher (1822): feeling of absolute dependence; entering into Christ’s perfect God consciousness

Albrecht Ritschl (1852): kingdom of God = community of brotherly love (focus on Jesus’ ethics not miracles)

Adolf Harnack (1886): fatherhood of God, brotherhood of man, worth of each soul, love rather than law

Walter Rauschenbusch (1917): social gospel movement—focus on humanitarian needs

other Christians dug in and fought the criticisms

John Locke (1695) published The Reasonableness of Christianity

William Paley (1802) early proponent of intelligent design

Charles Hodge (1874) defended infallibility and attacked Darwinism

Fundamentalist Movement (1910)

In 19th and 20th centuries the liberals and conservatives fight it out

major denominations split (Methodists, Baptists, Presbyterians, Lutherans)

as universities go liberal and biblical conservatives leave and start new schools

1806 Harvard splits to form Andover Theological Seminary

1908 Lyman Stewart started BIOLA; he’s the man who funded the 1910 “The Fundamentals”

1929 Princeton splits to form Westminster Theological Seminary

1976 Liberty University Founded as Lynchburg Baptist College by Jerry Falwell

1978 Regent University Founded as Christian Broadcasting Network University by Pat Robertson

four types of bible scholars today

non-religious (majority)

liberal Christians (mainline denominations)

evangelicals

Catholic/Orthodox

views of inspiration (list all 6 and describe for quiz)

skeptical view (entirely a human creation, containing truth and error)

the authors of the bible interpreted their experiences and told stories on the basis of what they believed God was and had done.

mixed view (partially of human origin, containing truth and error)

God inspired some parts of the bible but not others

typically the parts of the bible rejected are those that conflict with present day views of morality, history, and science

limited inspiration (partially of divine origin, containing truth and error (but not doctrinal))

the bible holds authority with regard to belief and practice, but not with regard to history or science

infallible but not inerrant

inerrant (of divine origin, containing truth only)

superintendence view: God had worked with those who wrote the bible, giving them experiences and understandings such that when they came to write, they communicated the truths/concepts God wanted (though not exact words)

superintendence plenary verbal view (every word is exactly what God wanted)

dictation view: God dictated the exact words he wanted written even if the writer didn’t understand them, making God the sole author and everyone else mere secretaries

views 1-2 put the reader over the text, at least part of the time

views 3-4 put the reader under the text, all of the time

if you are over the text, you have a say in whether or not what it says is correct

if you are under the text, when the bible disagrees with what you think, you are wrong and it is right

furthermore, depending on your view for inspiration, you will have a different methodology when it comes to forming bible doctrines

for this class we assuming the bible is true as it relates to doctrine (compatible w/ views 3 and 4)

this is necessary to do biblical theology as opposed to liberal theology (ex. of Ehrman saying each gospel author had a different christology!)

principles of biblical theology

Ask God for help to illuminate scripture through his spirit.

Be willing to change if the preponderance of the biblical evidence turns out to challenge what you currently believe. The truth has nothing to fear.

Don’t insist on figuring everything out. It’s better to live with uncertainty when it comes to a particular doctrine or practice than to force yourself to adopt a position that you know is flawed.

Collect all the verses on the subject. This is best achieved by reading through the entire bible with your particular doctrine in mind. Alternatively, the internet or bible software can aid you in gathering the relevant texts.

Take into consideration the history of redemption. In other words, don’t insist that something must remain unchanged from an earlier part of the bible to a latter section.

Work to arrive at a position that has the greatest explanatory scope.

Include others in your study. Invite criticism of your position. Iron sharpens iron (Prov 27.17).

Figure out how to live this out today. What good are your beliefs if you don’t apply them to life?

—— Links ——

See other episodes in this Theology Class

Find more Restitutio classes here

For more on correct bible study, listen to Interview 28: Exegetical Fallacies with Jerry Wierwille or these on bible interpreation

Learn about the Atlanta Bible College