Revelation and Inspiration - The Classical Model PDF
Revelation and Inspiration - The Classical Model PDF
Revelation and Inspiration - The Classical Model PDF
1-2, 7-28
Copyright@1994 by Andrews University Press.
FERNANDO L. CANALE
Andrews University
1. Theological Models
Springs, MI: Andrews University Press, 1987); Rent5 Latourelle, Theology of Revelation.
I d d i n g a Commentary on the Constitution "Deiw h m " of Vatican 11 (Staten Island, NY:
Alba, 1966)) 87-309, Abraham, 111-113; Avery Robert Dulles, Models of R d a t i o n
(Maryknoll, NY: Orbis, 1992)) 21; Robert Karl Gnuse, The Authority of the Bible: Theories
ofInspiration, Revelation, and the Canon of Smipture (New York: Paullst Press, 19851, 6-62;
and Bruce Vawter, Biblical Inspiration (Philadelphia, PA: Westminster, 1972).
'Ian G . Barbour, Myths, Models, and Paradigms (New York: Harper & Row,
1974), 300.
6David Tracy, Blessed Rage for Order The New Pluralism in Theology (San
Francisco: Harper & Row, 1988), 22. For further literature on models, see, e.g., Frederick
Fe&, Lmzguage, Logic and God (New Yo& Harper, 1961); Ian Ramsey, Modds and
Mystery (London: Oxford University Press, 1964); and id., Christian Discourse (London:
Oxford University Press, 1965).
'Tracy, 23.
REVELATION AND INSPIRATION 9
Ibid.
"Ibid., 29.
true and proper sense, belongs to God done,, for eternity, we said, follows upon
unchangeableness (immutabrlitatem)" (Summa theologica, 1.10.3), and eternity is timeless
(Aquinas, Summa contra gentiles, 1.15.3; Summu theohgica, 1.10.2 ad 3; 1.10.4; 1.10.4 ad
2 and 3; 1.10.3; 1.10.1). For a commentary on Augusthe's timeless conception of God,
see William Thomas Jones, A History of Western Philosophy, 5 vols., 2d ed. (New York:
Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1969-1975), 2:88-93.
Vawter remarks that the Fathers' view of Scripture was influenced not only by
the Hellenistic culture but also by Palestinian Judaism, which had already assimilated
Greek culture (35-36). He concludes that "the fact remains that it was among men with
very lide of the Biblical sense of historical religion that the Church's doctrine of
inspiration was destined to be discussedw(36). About two centuries earlier than Augusthe,
Origen appears to have shared the classical view. Accord;ng to Enrique N d o n i , Origen
believed that revelation (he called it "divine illumination") "operatesin a double way. On
the one hand, it energizes the n a d faculties of the prophets" ("Origen's Concept of
Biblical Inspiration," B e Second Century 4 [1984]: 14). "On the other hand, it operates by
offering an apprehensible aspect of the divine mysteryn (15).
261bid.,76. It is beyond the scope of this article to describe the spec& views of
sbenth-century Protestant Reformers, a topic which would require a complete study in
its own right. I should point out, however, that Ruokanen's volume about Luther (see n.
19, above) is instructive on the subject. In this article, the Protestant tradition will be
represented by the views of certain present-day conservative Christian scholars, especially
Carl F. H. Henry.
REVELATION AND INSP1RATION 13
Divine Activity
"Benoit, 44.
''Aquinas, Summa theologica 2a-2ae, 171.1, ad 4. ScuKon points out that for
Aquinas, this elevation of the mind was inspiration and that consequently "Thomas did
not discuss scriptural inspiration as we understand it" (36).
Human Activity
430hn Henry Newman, On the Inspiration of Scripture, ed.J. Derek Holmes and
Robert Murray (WashingtonD.C.: Corpus, 1967), 108-109.For an overview of Newmanys
thought and his idhence on Catholic thought, see J. D. Holmes and R. Murray,
"Introduction,"in ibid., 3-96.
"Ibid., 2:321.
18 FERNANDO L. CANALE
Thus, for Henry, what the prophet receives from God through
historical means is "cognitive truths" and these he puts into
propositional form as Scripture is written. But biblical statements as a
whole must not be identified with propositional revelation, for what
Scripture contains is, rather, "a body of divinely given information
actually expressed or capable of being expressed in proposition^."^^
501bid., 3:457. Henry is aware that the Bible presents a God who freely and
actively intervenes in human history (ibid., 2:25 1). He is correct in af6rm;lg that Jesus'
cross and resurrection must be understood as belonging to human spatio-temporalhistory
(ibid., 2:289, 321). But, one may ask,how can an eternal (timeless) transcendent being act
in history and time?According to Henry "the answer given by biblical theism is that God
acts by predestination" (ibid., 648). But, one should not forget that within the content
of Henry's theological tradition predestinationinvolves "morethan simply a temporal and
historical election" (ibid., 678); "what the Bible afEirms is God's pretemporal,
superhistorid eternal election" (ibid.). In other words, the existence of the universe is
grounded "on the eternal plan of the unchanging God who is free to decree as he pleases
and who in his 'good pleasure' decrees a space-timematrix that by his willing becomes as
necessary as God himself" (ibid.). Moreover, since "God's decree is preceded l o g i d y by
his intrinsic self knowledge, unless it be the case that his decree and his self-knowledgeare
identical or that the decree is part of his self-knowledge"(ibid.), and since "the external
universe is itself God's implementationof his purpose" (ibid.), it follows that Henry agrees
with Plato's basic ontologid structure accord;ng to which historical re+ is the
temporal duplication of the eternal one. The order of divine causes and activities, then,
are not performed from within the temporal order but rather from the timeless one.
REVELATION AND INSPIRATION 19
5JFor a good historical survey of advocates of the dictation pattern, see Luis
Alomo Schokel, B e Inspired Work.. Smpture in the Light of Language a d Literature, tram;.
Francis Ma& (New York: Herder and Herder, 1965), 66-72.
621bid.,3:3107 and 3105. Also Aquinas, Strmm thedogica, 2a-2ae, 173.4; 3.62.2 ad 1.
&In its third session (April 24, 1870), the First Vatican Cound promulgated the
"Dogmatic Constitution concerning the Catholic Faith," which, in its second chapter
states that the Roman Catholic church holds the Bible "not because, having been put
together by human industry alone, they were then approved by its authority; nor because
they contain revelation without error; but because, having been written by the inspiration
of the Holy Spirit, they have God as their author and, as such, they have been handed
down to the Church itself" (Henry Denzinger, 7he Sources of Cathdic Dogma, trans. Roy
J. Deferran, from the 30th ed. of Denzinger's Enchiridion Symbolorurn [St. Lo&, MO:
Herder, 19571, 1787). On November 18, 1965, the Second Vatican Cound promulgated
its "DogmaticConstitution on Divine Revelation," which, upholding the traditional view
of Trent and other authorities, states that "in composing the sacred books, God chose men
and while employed by Him they made use of their powers and abilities, so that with
Him acting in them and through them, they, as true authors, consigned to writkg
everythingand only those dungs which He wanted." Therefore, "since everything asserted
by the inspired authors or sacred writers must be held to be asserted by the Holy Spirit,
it follows that the books of Scripture must be acknowledged as teaching firmly, faithfully,
and without error that truth which God wanted put into the sacred writings for the sake
of our salvation" (Walter M. Abbott, ed. 7he Donrments of Vatican 11,trans. and ed.
Joseph Gallagher [New Yo& G d d , 19661, Dei Vmhm, 3: 11).
%ee Abraham, 4.
FERNANDO L. CANALE
66MillardJ. Erickson, Christian 'Iheology (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker, 1990), 216,
359.
Ybid., 357-359.
%erne& S. Kantzer, " C d v h and the Holy Scriptures," in Inspiration and
Intevpretution, ed. John F. Walvoord (Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 1957), 141.
human personality, as (to use an old but valuable technical term) concursive; that is, as
exercised in, through and by means of the writer's own activiv, in such a way that their
t.hding and writing was both free and spontaneous on their part and divinely elicited and
controlled, and what they wrote was not only their own work but also God's work"
("Fundamentalism " and the Word of God: Some Evangelical Pritt~~pIes[Grand Rapids, MI:
Eerdmans, 19581, 80); Costello, 18; and Randall Basinger and David Basinger, "Inerrancy,
Dictation and the Free WiU Defence," EQ 55 (1983): 178. Regarding the meaning and
significance of the various terms, see &o R. A. Finlayson, "Contempomry Ideas of
Inspiration," in Redation and the Bi& Contemporav Evangelical Thought, ed. by Carl
F. H. Henry (Grand Rapids, MI.: Baker, 1958), 223.
75Foran introduction to the dictation theory, see Vaivter, 59-61; Forestell, 385;
Klug, 15; Kantzer, 137-139; Gnuse, 49; Abraham, 116; Packer, 95; Barton, 721; and
Costello, 12-16. Regarding the Verbal Plenary theory, see Gnuse, 10-11, 27; Klug, 14, 16;
Newman, 150; Kern R. Trembath, Evangelical l%eories of Biblical itupiration. A Review
and Proposal (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1987), 8-27; Barton, 720-722; Nash, 381;
REVELATION AND INSPIRATION
and Henry, "Divine Revelation," 257. For information on the limited verbal inspiration
approach, see, e.g., Gnuse, 34-41; Scullion, 27-28; Finlayson, 223-224; Ruokanen, 9-17,33,
35-36; 72-74; 115; Costello, 27; and Ddes, Models, 41.
'%ee Gnuse, 23, and Forestell, 386. The latter points out that "in the 20th
century, apart from some fundameadst sects, the doctrine of Biblid inerrancy is
abandoned because of modem Biblical criticism. Where inspiration is still
mentioned, no attempt is made to explain its nature or its effects."
26 FERNANDO L. CANALE
78Rega& the need to integrate the accounts of revelation and inspiration in any
model that may properly set forth the epistemological origin of Scriptures, see, e.g.,
Finlayson, 223-224.
""No distinction of inspiration exists between parts of the Bible. All are inspired,
dthough not for the same immediate purposes" (Henry, "Divine Revelation," 257).
theologica, 2a-2ae, 173.2; KZug, 16; Scullion, 40; Schokel, 55; Forestell,
82S~mma
384.
REVELATION AND INSPIRATION 27
6. Conclusion
"Aquinas opens his S ~ m m aTheologica by clearly stating that "it was necessary
for the salvation of man that ce& truths which exceed human reason should be made
known to him by divine revelation," and he closes his &st article by concluding that "it
was therefore necessary that, besides philosophical science built up by reason, there should
be a sacred science learned through revelation" (1.1). Even though Augusthe believed in
verbal inspiration so as to state that "these sacred books, are the works of God's way in
leadmg the believer to the understanding of eternal truths. We must study
"Scriptures-explained Augustine-, which adapt themselves to the backwardness of
infants, whom they nou&h in the first place by humble belief in the historical deeds
accomplished in the temporal order for our salvation, and subsequently strengthen in
order to lift them up to the sublime understanding of things eternal" (ibid.).
Consequently, "a man who is resting upon faith, hope and love, and who keeps a fuln
hold upon these, does not need the Scriptures except for the purpose of instructing
others" (On Christian Doctrine, 1.39.43).
28 FERNANDO L. CANALE