It has been
suggested by sectarians and brethren alike that any use of human
reasoning ability in arriving at an understanding of the Bible makes any
such conclusions suspect. We are told that no one should bind any other
than direct statements as limits of fellowship. Specifically, inferences
and examples are to be excluded as binding authority from the Scriptures
because we must use human intellect to tell which, if any, examples and
inferences have that binding force. This use of the human intellect, we
are told, thrusts any conclusions we reach into the realm of opinion and
should never be made a test of fellowship. Among sectarians, it is
stated thusly: "No one can see the Bible alike. You interpret it your
way and I will interpret it my way. One way is just as good as another.
" Among brethren, there is a call for a "new hermeneutic" which would
exclude a but direct commands or statements and which would permit the
same situation as that describing the sectarians. In fact, some brethren
are rejecting any "doctrine" as important, accepting only the deity of
Christ as a limit to fellowship. The argument common to both groups is
that our reasoning is faulty, unity upon God's word is impossible and
that fellowship must be inclusive of every position short of the
rejection of Jesus' deity. While sectarians have occupied this position
for centuries (resulting in permissiveness toward every kind of error),
it is disconcerting to see brethren embrace such a fallacy. We need to
see clearly that God has required the use of human reasoning in
understanding his will.
Absolute Truth
If truth is
relative (subjective), each man is right in what he believes, regardless
of the Bible or of the belief of others. Humanism advocates the
relativity of truth to the individual and his circumstances. They aver
that stealing is wrong only if you believe it to be wrong; abortion is
wrong only if it hurts your conscience; incest is wrong only if it is
wrong for you (however, it might be right for another). To them, "man is
the measure of all things." Truth, therefore, is to be changed to fit
the circumstances.
But the truth is
not relative, it is absolute (objective). The world is round even if I
maintain that it is flat. Baptism is for the remission of sins whether I
understand that, disagree, or have never heard about it. Jesus Christ is
the Son of God whether I concur or not. In other words, truth does not
need my permission or consent to be truth. It is truth and will be truth
with or without my acceptance or obedience.
God has spoken
(Heb. 1:1,2). His spoken Word is truth (Jn. 8:32; 16:13). And God
requires of me that I understand his word. "Whereby, when ye read, ye
can perceive my understanding in the mystery of Christ" (Eph. 3:4).
"Wherefore be ye not foolish, but understand what the win of the Lord
is" (Eph. 5:17). "And now I commend you to God, and to the word of his
grace, which is able to build you up, and to give you the inheritance
among all them that are sanctified" (Acts 20:32). Such Scriptures could
be multiplied: Jude 3; 1 Corinthians 4:6; 2 Peter 1:3; Galatians 1:6-8;
2 John 9-11, et al.
Lest I be charged
with believing in "perfectionism" (that one knows every answer to every
question), let me state that God's word has built into it an area in
which brethren may hold different judgments (opinions) and still be in
fellowship (Rom. 14), but that we must agree on matters of faith
(Jude
3). But many are guilty of relegating every item of faith into the. area
of opinion, making nonsense of the gospel of Christ.
If truth is
absolute (arid it is), then I must seek to understand it lest I fall
short of what God has said to us. And it should be noted, that absolute
truth has been given to mankind for his benefit. It is relevant to our
needs, given by inspiration to safe-guard its contents, having a purpose
(the salvation of our souls), and it will judge us (Jn. 12:48). It is
folly to say that man cannot understand the instruction given
specifically to us by God. Is God not able to speak to us on our level,
in an understandable manner? Is he not able to create a creature capable
of receiving communication from his Maker? Either view is an indictment
of God and his wisdom and/or ability. As the pioneer preacher Benjamin
Franklin put it, "The Bible as it is, is addressed to man as he is, that
he might become what God would have him to be." Yes, brethren, I am
charged with understanding the will of God and it requires of me that I
use the native intelligence placed there by God at the creation. Adam
understood more than the deity of God. He understood the revelation of
the divine will and was held accountable for the violation of it. There
was no one around to tell Adam that eating the forbidden fruit was right
if he thought it to be right, except the Devil. The same God has spoken
to the descendants of Adam and we had better listen, for we are
accountable.
Reason Limited
Only to Direct Statements?
It is affirmed
that we are able to understand direct statements and commands by our
human reasoning but not examples or inferences. "Inferences," we are
told, require human reasoning to decide when one is "necessary." Also,
we have to decide when one example is binding and another is not.
Therefore, since we have difficulty in deciding, it is concluded that it
is impossible to decide. Like the foolish mother that threw the baby out
with the bath water, some would throw out all inferences and examples.
But before we
deal with inferences and examples, let us back up a step. Is it not true
also that we must use human reasoning with direct statements and
commands as well? Are all commands binding on us today? What about the
Ten Commandments? If you do not bind the Sabbath today, why not? Did you
have to use some reasoning ability to determine that the law of Moses is
not bound today? Have you burned any incense or killed any animals as
sacrifices lately? Why not? Do you tithe? Do you observe Passover? Why
not? But, more basic than that, since your name is not found anywhere in
the Bible, how did you reason to the position that you have any
obligations at all toward God? Should only the ancients serve God?
The point that I
am making should be plain. Human reasoning is a necessity in determining
which commands or positive statements, or, in fact, if any of the Bible
is bound on us today. To state otherwise is to make the Bible into an
absurdity, and it is not the Bible that is absurd.
As proof that God
requires the use of human reason in understanding inferences, some
passages should be considered. When the Sadducees tried to trap Jesus
about the resurrection, he rebuked them for not reasoning and making an
indifference from what God implied. "But Jesus answered and said unto
di6n, Ye do err, not knowing the scriptures, nor the power of God. . .
Have ye not read that which was spoken unto you by God, saying, I am the
God of Abraham, and the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob? God is not
the God of the dead, but of the living" (Matt. 22:29-32). That "God was
not the God of the dead, but of the living" was an inference that the
Sadducees should have drawn from Scripture was obvious. Should it be
less obvious to us? Ignore this at your own peril: God holds us
accountable when he implies something that we should infer.
The parables also
teach by inference. In Matthew 21:33-45, the Pharisees "perceived" that
he spake of them (v. 45). Many of the parables contain implications by
God that we should understand.
In Hebrews
7:11-17, it is implied that the silence of the Scriptures is binding. I
have seen some treat this principle with disdain, but the objective
truth contained there will stand the carping of modern Sadducees. The
people to whom the writer addressed the letter understood the point, as
should any person who has read the Law. Jesus could not be priest on
earth. Why? Was there a command that excluded him? No, but an inference
was there that he could not serve since Moses "spake nothing" of the
tribe of Judah serving, Was this inference any less binding than a
stated command? Did it require human reasoning to understand it?
As for apostolic
examples, it is readily admitted that not all examples give binding
authority for us today. But are you sure that none of them do? Paul
said, "Be ye followers of me, even as I also am of Christ" (1 Cor.
11:1). "1 beseech you therefore, be ye followers of me" (1 Cor. 4:16).
"And ye became followers of us, and of the Lord" (1 Thess. 1:6). "For
ye, brethren, became followers of the churches of God which are in Judea
in Christ Jesus" (1 Thess. 2:14).
Were the first
century Christians not discerning enough to know that they had no
responsibility to follow churches that did wrong (like Corinth) or
apostles that did wrong (like Peter)? Don't you believe they could tell
the difference and follow Paul "as he followed Christ"? If not, what is
the force of these passages exhorting them to "follow" others? Were they
not to follow Paul because he was right? And was he not right because he
followed Christ? Would this be a sufficient background command to bind
the example on early Christians? Or on us?
"Now these things
were our examples" (1 Cor. 10:6). ". . . leaving us an example, that you
should follow his steps" (1 Pet. 2:21). ". . so walk, even as ye have us
for an example" (Phil. 3:17). Who says that examples do not bind? Did
you learn it from these verses?
Yes, it takes
reasoning power to know that we should follow some examples and not
follow others. Some examples are good and some are bad, but we can know
the difference. Also, some examples are of incidentals and some are
binding. But we can tell the difference because of the Scriptures and
because of the reasoning ability that God gave us.
Reverse the
Process
If you disagree
about the binding force of examples and inferences because it takes the
ability to reason (and our reasoning may be faulty), then you must also
apply this argument to direct statements and commands. I challenge you
to be consistent. And if commands have no binding force, let us face it,
the Bible is vain and empty and our faith is ludicrous.
Either the Bible
leads and guides through the power of the Holy Spirit in an intelligible
manner or it does not. God has addressed man on a level commensurate
with his ability to comprehend or he hasn't. Truth is absolute or it is
not. The choice is clear. "Wherefore be ye not foolish, but understand
what the will of the Lord is."
Guardian of Truth -
December 21, 1989