January-February 1999 Question
Is the Bible inspired?
Dr. Cobb's Response
Like so many questions asked of process theology,
the answer is that it
all depends on what the questioner means. If the question comes
from one
who thinks in very conservative categories, the answer must be an emphatic
"No!" The words of the text were not dictated by God.
Certainly the hand
of the writer was not controlled by God. And even in the more
modest sense
proposed by some proponents of divine inspiration of Scripture,
that God
protected the authors from error, the emphatic "No!"
remains. The Bible is
full of errors of fact, of moral judgment, and of theological
teaching.
But if the word "inspired" is being
used as in ordinary language outside
the conservative theological tradition, then the situation is
quite
different. We say that someone's performance in a concert or
in a play was
inspired. We speak of poets as inspired. Even a preacher may
be inspired. That is, people may be moved by the Spirit in extraordinary ways.
They may
be so totally caught up in what they are doing that they are
not
consciously controlling their actions. What results exceeds the
best
product of their ordinary voluntary acts.
A writer may find that sometimes the words
"just flow." A composer may
feel that the music "comes to her." Inspiration in
this sense is rare
enough to be greatly prized, but it is common enough that many
of us
experience it to some extent. Indeed, it is not altogether discontinuous
from quite ordinary experience.
Process thought affirms that at a very basic
level all life is inspired.
That is, there is no life at all except as God's Spirit participates
in
constituting us. It is that participation of the Spirit that
leads to our
being, in each moment, something more than the deterministic outcome
of the
forces from the past that also play so large a role in shaping
us. The
times when we think of ourselves as inspired are those when this
creative
novelty contributed by God's Spirit plays a particularly strong
and effective role and is less inhibited than usual by the other
causal factors
in our lives. So process theology affirms not only that the common
use of
the language of inspiration is meaningful but that the inspiration
is truly
the work of God.
When we think in this way, there is no reason
to be skeptical of claims
that many passages in the Bible are inspired. Indeed, it would
be
artificial to think that ancient Hebrew poets and prophets experienced
inspiration less often than our contemporaries. The contrary
is a reasonable guess. Our contemporaries are on the whole less intentionally
open to God that were the Hebrews, and it is at least plausible
to suggest
that openness to God's inspiration is conducive to it. Also the
results
that come down to us show many indications of inspiration.
The high ration of inspired passages in the
Bible is partly due to the
process of selection. No doubt there was much very ordinary writing
in
ancient Israel. What we now have was selected by the community
through the
centuries. That a community selects on the whole the more inspired
parts
of what is available is to be expected.
What follows from the judgment that much of
the Biblical writing is
inspired in this sense? Certainly not that it is free from cultural
influence or class bias or patriarchal perspective! The writings
are
thoroughly human, and that means just as conditioned as any writings
by the
contexts in which they arose. But to be conditioned is not to
be wholly
determined. It is the element of transcendence over that determination
where we find the work of the Spirit. And there is much of that
creative
transcendence in the Bible.
What follows from this judgment is that we
do find God's truth transmitted
to us in very earthen vessels. The texts we encounter deserve
our deepest
respect. Of course they should be studied by all critical methods,
but
when the assumptions of the critic are reductionistic, then we
must be open
to more than the critic finds.
But is this to be said only of the Bible?
Certainly not. There is
inspiration in the writings of the ancient Greeks and Hindus
and Chinese as
well. There is inspiration also in the writings of Shakespeare
and Goethe
and of contemporary poets and dramatists as well. All this deserves
our
respect and listening.
Hence the question of the uniqueness of the
Bible cannot be answered by
the category of inspiration. It must be answered in terms of
the
importance for us of the history of Israel. That history consists
of
events and their interpretations inextricably connected. Without
inspired
interpretations the events would not be important to us today.
But without
unusual events the inspired writers would not be more important
than the
inspired writers of other communities. For us, as Christians,
the most
important events are those that surrounded the person of Jesus.
If it had
not been for these events the history that has shaped us would
have been a
very different one.
These events would not have been possible
apart from inspired
interpretations of previous events. We cannot appropriate them
today apart
from interpretations, and if these are not inspired, our tradition
will
die. Thus inspiration is involved at every point.
So my answer, as a process theologian, is
that "Yes, the Bible contains
much inspired material." The healthy continuance of our
Christian
tradition depends on our intense appreciation of that material
and
continual recurrence to it. It depends, equally, on our distinguishing
inspiration from any notion of inerrancy. And finally it depends
on our
inspired interpretations of that inspired material through relating
it to
all the wisdom we can gain from other sources.
Today, we may be inspired to reject some of
the ideas that are found even
in the most inspired passages of scripture. We have been inspired
to see
through patriarchy, for example, a patriarchy that pervades the
Bible. In
this and other respects, we must preach against the Bible. But
if this
negation is to be healthy, it must be qualified in two respects.
First, we
should continue also to listen to the truth even in those passages
that we
feel have done most harm and continue to be most dangerous. And
second, we should recognize that, at least for many of us, the
call to attack Biblical
ideas is grounded in just that tradition we attack. For example,
when we
attack particular ideas of the prophets, our doing so continues
the
prophetic tradition. We may be taking the inspiration of the
Bible most
seriously when we are most free to critique its specific teachings.
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