1. Divine
Revelation: How God Speaks to Us
Christianity
is a religion of the Word, not of a book! The Word is a Person - Jesus Christ.
He is God’s "final word" on everything. Through Jesus,
God has
revealed everything He wanted to reveal to us about who He is and what He
intends for our lives. God’s revelation of Himself comes to us in three ways:
- Scripture (the Bible)
- Tradition (especially the
liturgy of the Church - the Mass and the sacraments)
- The Magisterium (the Church’s
teachings, such as its dogmas and creeds)
The Holy
Spirit is at work through all three channels - He inspires Scripture, animates
the Church’s living Tradition, and guarantees the teaching of the Church’s
Magisterium (Catechism, nos. 81-82).
2. Reading
and Interpreting the Scripture: The Three Rules
Because
God’s revelation comes to us through these three channels, we must remember
three important criteria for reading and interpreting Scripture:
a.The
Content & Unity of Scripture:
Though
Scripture is made up of different books, we can’t read them as separate books.
We have to read each one in light of the rest, keeping in mind that Jesus
revealed that there is a unity in God’s plan for the world, as that plan is
revealed in Scripture.
St.
Augustine used to say that: "The New Testament is concealed in the Old,
and the Old Testament is revealed in the New." What he meant is that Jesus
showed us how the things that God says and does in the Old Testament pointed to
what He says and does in the New. In turn, what Jesus says and does in the New
Testament sheds light on the promises and events we read about in the Old.
b.The
Church’s Living Tradition:
We must
always read Scripture within the context of the Church’s Tradition. That means
that we should always see how the Church interprets certain Scripture passages,
especially in the prayers and readings it uses for the Mass and for special
feasts in the Church.
c.Analogy
of Faith:
The same
Holy Spirit who inspired the Scriptures also safeguards the Church’s teaching
authority. That means that if we’re going to read and interpret Scripture
properly - the way God intends it to be read - we have to make sure our
interpretations don’t contradict the interpretations found in the Church’s creeds
and other statements of doctrine.
3. Scripture
is Divine: Inspiration
As you can
tell by now, there’s no other book like the Bible. The Church teaches that just
as Jesus was "true God and true man," the Bible is truly a work of
human authors and at the same time is truly the work of God as the divine
author.
This is the
mystery of the divine "inspiration" of Scripture (see 2
Timothy 3:16). The word "inspired" in the Greek, literally
means "God-breathed." And that’s a good way to think about the
inspiration of Scripture. Just as God fashioned Adam out of the clay of the
earth and blew the breath of life into him (see Genesis 2:7),
God breathes His Spirit into the words of the human authors of Scripture and
makes them the Living Word of God.
The way the
Church explains it, it happened like this: The human authors used their
literary skills, ideas and other talents in writing the pages of the Bible. But
while they were writing, God was acting in them so that what they wrote was
exactly what He wanted them to write (see Vatican II’s Dei
Verbum, scroll down to nos. 11-12: Catechism, nos. 105-107).
The human
writers were "true authors" of Scripture, and so was God.
Because God
is its co-author, and because God cannot err or make mistakes, we say that
whatever we read in the Bible is true, free from "error" and has been
put there for our salvation. This is called the "inerrancy" of
Scripture.
This is a
very complicated concept that we can’t explain fully in this class. But it’s
important to always read the Bible on its own terms. The Bible doesn’t set out
to teach modern history, science or geography or biography. So we shouldn’t try
to compare what it says about the creation of the world, for instance, to what
modern science teaches us.
That doesn’t
mean the Bible is ever wrong. The Bible, entire and whole, is true and without
error - not only in what it teaches about faith and morals, but also what it
says about historical events and personages. It will never lead us astray. But
we have to interpret it responsibly - we have to understand that it is giving
us history and natural events from a "religious" and divine
perspective, and often uses symbolic language.
4. Scripture
is Human: The Bible as Religious Literature and History
Practically
speaking, the "divine-human" authorship of Scripture means we have to
read the Bible differently than we approach other books.
When we read
the Bible we must remember that it is the Word of God told in human language.
It’s important that we understand the "human element" of Scripture.
As we’ll see, this human element can’t really be separated from the divine
element.
But it’s
important when we read the Bible to remember that it is:
Literature: The
Bible uses literary forms, devices, structures, figures, etc. We must look for
the "literary" clues that convey a meaning.
Ancient: The Bible is ancient. Its not written like modern literature. It’s meaning is wrapped up with the way the ancients looked at the world and recorded history. Although they were interested in recording history, they were not interested in "pure history." History was more than just politic, economics and wars - it had a deeper significance.
Religious: Today people think of religion in terms of personal piety. Not so for the ancients. The word "religion" comes from the Latin, "religare," - "to bind together." For the ancients everything - culture, history, the economy, diplomacy - was bound together by the religion. The Bible gives us history, but it is religious history. It is history from God’s perspective.
Ancient: The Bible is ancient. Its not written like modern literature. It’s meaning is wrapped up with the way the ancients looked at the world and recorded history. Although they were interested in recording history, they were not interested in "pure history." History was more than just politic, economics and wars - it had a deeper significance.
Religious: Today people think of religion in terms of personal piety. Not so for the ancients. The word "religion" comes from the Latin, "religare," - "to bind together." For the ancients everything - culture, history, the economy, diplomacy - was bound together by the religion. The Bible gives us history, but it is religious history. It is history from God’s perspective.

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