Monday, April 20, 2026

Abraham In Jewish Tradition And Pauline Theology

(i) The Jews regarded Abraham as the great founder of the race and the pattern of all that a man should be. Very naturally they ask, "If all that you say is true, what was the special thing that was given to Abraham when God picked him out to be the ancestor of his special people? What makes him different from other people?" That is the question which Paul is going on to answer.

(ii) Paul has just been seeking to prove that what makes a man right with God is not the performance of the works that the law lays down, but the simple trust of complete yieldedness which takes God at his word and believes that he still loves us even when we have done nothing to deserve that love. The immediate reaction of the Jews was, "This is something entirely new and a contradiction of all that we have been taught to believe. This doctrine is completely incredible." Paul's answer is, "So far from being new, this doctrine is as old as the Jewish faith. So far from being an heretical novelty, it is the very basis of Jewish religion." That is what he is going on to prove.

(iii) Paul begins to speak about Abraham because he was a wise teacher who knew the human mind and the way it works. He has been talking about faith. Now faith is an abstract idea. The ordinary human mind finds abstract ideas very hard to grasp. The wise teacher knows that every idea must become a person, for the only way in which an ordinary person can grasp an abstract idea is to see it in action, embodied in a person. So Paul, in effect, says, "I have been talking about faith. If you want to see what faith is, look at Abraham."

When Paul began to speak about Abraham, he was on ground that every Jew knew and understood. In their thoughts Abraham held a unique position. He was the founder of the nation. He was the man to whom God had first spoken. He was the man who had in a unique way had been chosen by God and who had heard and obeyed him. The Rabbis had their own discussions about Abraham. To Paul the essence of his greatness was this. God had come to Abraham and bidden him leave home and friends and kindred and livelihood, and had said to him, "If you make this great venture of faith, you will become the father of a great nation." Thereupon Abraham had taken God at his word. He had not argued; he had not hesitated; he went out not knowing where he was to go ( Hebrews 11:8). It was not the fact that Abraham had meticulously performed the demands of the law that put him into his special relationship with God, it was his complete trust in God and his complete willingness to abandon his life to him. That for Paul was faith, and it was Abraham's faith which made God regard him as a good man.

Some few, some very few, of the more advanced Rabbis believed that. There was a rabbinic commentary which said, "Abraham, our father, inherited this world and the world to come solely by the merit of faith whereby he believed in the Lord; for it is said, 'And he believed in the Lord, and he accounted it to him for righteousness.'"

But the great majority of the Rabbis turned the Abraham story to suit their own beliefs. They held that because he was the only righteous man of his generation, therefore he was chosen to be the ancestor of God's special people. The immediate answer is, "But how could Abraham keep the law when he lived hundreds of years before it was given?" The Rabbis advanced the odd theory that he kept it by intuition or anticipation. "At that time," says the Apocalypse of Baruch (Baruch 57:2), "the unwritten law was named among them, and the works of the commandment were then fulfilled." "He kept the law of the Most High," says Ecclesiasticus ( Sir_44:20-21 ), "and was taken into covenant with God.... Therefore God assured him by an oath that the nations should be blessed in his seed." The Rabbis were so in love with their theory of works that they insisted that it was because of his works that Abraham was chosen, although it meant that they had to argue that he knew the law by anticipation, since it had not yet come.

Here, again, we have the root cleavage between Jewish legalism and Christian faith. The basic thought of the Jews was that a man must earn God's favour. The basic thought of Christianity is that all a man can do is to take God at his word and stake everything on the faith that his promises are true. Paul's argument was--and he was unanswerably right--that Abraham entered into a right relationship with God, not because he did all kinds of legal works, but because he cast himself, just as he was, on God's promise.

"If our love were but more simple,

We should take him at his word;

And our lives would be all sunshine,

In the sweetness of our Lord."

It is the supreme discovery of the Christian life that we do not need to torture ourselves with a losing battle to earn God's love but rather need to accept in perfect trust the love which God offers to us. True, after that, any man of honour is under the life-long obligation to show himself worthy of that love. But he is no longer a criminal seeking to obey an impossible law; he is a lover offering his all to one who loved him when he did not deserve it.

Sir James Barrie once told a story about Robert Louis Stevenson. "When Stevenson went to Samoa he built a small hut, and afterwards went into a large house. The first night he went into the large house he was feeling very tired and sorrowful that he had not had the forethought to ask his servant to bring him coffee and, cigarettes. Just as he was thinking that, the door opened, and the native boy came in with a tray carrying cigarettes and coffee. And Mr Stevenson said to him, in the native language, 'Great is your forethought'; and the boy corrected him, and said, 'Great is the love.'" The service was rendered, not because of the coercion of servitude, but because of the compulsion of love. That also is the motive of Christian goodness.

Excerpt from William Barclay’s The Letter to the Romans, Daily Study Bible

Thursday, April 9, 2026

Disemboweling Jeff Mirus' Historical Revisionism On The Acceptance Of The Four Gospels

  • Discussion:
          -Early Christian history is often more textured than the tidy narratives built on it. Mirus’ reading of Charles E. Hill is one such case, where careful historical evidence becomes an overstated theological conclusion:

          “Hill… shows that the four gospels were universally regarded as authoritative from the beginning.”

          Hill’s work does not establish universality, but early prevalence. That is an important distinction. The four gospels appear early and widely, but the surviving evidence does not allow us to speak of a uniform, empire‑wide consensus. The second‑century church was geographically dispersed, often isolated, and lacked any centralized mechanism for enforcing doctrinal or textual conformity. The Gospel of the Hebrews among Jewish‑Christian groups, the Gospel of Peter in Syria, and the long‑standing use of the Diatessaron in the East all demonstrate that the textual landscape had a degree of diversity to it.

          “Christians never regarded themselves as having a choice about which gospels to accept.”

          This statement imports later canonical consciousness into a period that did not yet possess it. Early Christians did not think in terms of “choosing” or “not choosing” gospels, but received the texts available to them, evaluated them based on apostolic connection, and used them in worship. That is not the same as believing that no choice existed. The presence of alternative texts in some regions, such as the Gospel of the Egyptians or the Gospel of the Ebionites, shows that early Christians did encounter competing claims, even if they did not frame those encounters in later canonical terminology. Jeff Mirus oversimplifies a far more complex historical process.

          “This acceptance depends on Apostolic authority… which Protestants cannot account for.”

          Apostolic authority is indeed central to the recognition of the gospels. Apostolicity is a historical question: Who wrote this text? What community received it? How early is its attestation? These are matters of evidence, not ecclesiastical decree. The Muratorian Fragment, for example, appeals to authorship and internal coherence rather than to magisterial pronouncement. Even Irenaeus, who strongly emphasizes apostolic succession, argues from public teaching and historical continuity, not from an infallible adjudicator. The claim that Protestants “cannot account for” apostolic authority ignores the fact that apostolicity is established through historical inquiry, not institutional fiat.

          “Hill proves that the four gospels were accepted everywhere, always, and by all.”

          What Hill demonstrates is that the four Gospels were widely used and highly regarded across many regions by the mid‑second century. The persistence of alternative traditions, such as the Diatessaron’s dominance in Syria until the fifth century, shows that the fourfold gospel did not immediately displace all competitors. Hill’s argument is historical and descriptive. Mirus' interpretation is theological and expansive. The two should not be conflated.

          “Derivative works like harmonizations show that only the four canonical gospels were used.”

          Harmonizations reveal which texts were most influential, not which were officially sanctioned. Tatian’s Diatessaron includes the four Gospels because they were the texts most widely circulated in his environment, not because a council had declared them exclusive. Meanwhile, other communities produced harmonizations or expansions based on different texts, such as the Gospel of the Hebrews. The absence of apocryphal harmonizations in surviving manuscripts cannot be taken as evidence that they never existed. Manuscript survival is notoriously uneven.

          “The four gospels were handed down from the beginning.”

          In a general sense, this is true: the four gospels have deep roots in the earliest Christian communities. But Jeff Mirus uses this phrase to imply a continuous, centrally supervised transmission, which does not reflect the historical reality. The early church was a network of local congregations, not a unified administrative body. Texts circulated through missionary activity, personal correspondence, and regional exchange. The fact that the four gospels eventually became dominant does not mean they were transmitted through a single, uninterrupted chain of institutional oversight. The long‑standing use of the Diatessaron in the East is a reminder that “handing down” was a diverse and sometimes uneven process.

          “Acceptance of the gospels depends on Apostolic authority… which requires a living authority to resolve disputes.”

          This argument assumes that disagreement necessitates an infallible adjudicator, a premise that does not hold in other areas of Christian life or historical inquiry. The early church resolved disputes through councils, correspondence, and communal discernment, not through a single, centralized authority with unilateral power. The Quartodeciman controversy, for example, was not settled by papal decree but through regional synods and ongoing debate. The existence of disagreement does not prove the necessity of an infallible Magisterium. It simply reflects the normal process by which the church has always wrestled with doctrinal and textual questions.

          “Jerome and Augustine disagreed… so how was the dispute resolved without a Magisterium?”

          Late‑antique canon questions were not settled by authoritative decrees, but by the slow convergence of local practice, liturgical usage, and the copying habits of scribes. Jerome continued to distinguish the Hebrew books from the others, Augustine continued to defend the broader list, and both positions coexisted within the Latin West for generations. What eventually emerged was not the product of a single adjudicating authority but the cumulative effect of ordinary ecclesial life. The persistence of divergent Eastern and Western canons only underscores that no universal mechanism existed to impose uniformity. This question rests on a false premise.

          “Protestants cannot explain how Scripture, Tradition, and Magisterium form a seamless whole.”

          This statement presupposes the very framework it claims Protestants cannot explain. The "seamless integration of Scripture, Tradition, and Magisterium" is a Catholic construct, not a historical given. The early church’s textual history is marked by diversity, regional variation, and gradual convergence, not by a single, unified triad of authorities. To assert the Roman Catholic model as the only coherent one is to assume the conclusion in advance. Protestant scholarship affirms the value of tradition and the importance of historical continuity, but it does not require a later ecclesial structure to validate the authority of Scripture.

          “Hill’s work validates the Catholic understanding of authority.”

          False. Hill’s work validates the early prominence and apostolic grounding of the four Gospels. Mirus commits a category error by treating historical evidence as though it were theological endorsement. Manuscript distribution, patristic citations, and early harmonizations cannot be used to prove the necessity of a later hierarchical authority structure. Hill’s argument is historical; the article’s conclusion is ecclesiological. The two should not be conflated.

Monday, April 6, 2026

Debunking Jeff Mirus On Church Authority And The Canon

  • Discussion:
          -Jeff Mirus wrote an article in which he attempts to argue that the Roman Catholic Church is immune to biblical critique. He appeals to Rome's authority and its alleged role in the compilation of the canonical writings to make his case. Excerpts from the author are cited in bold and followed by critical commentary of each claim:

          “The key question is… whether Scripture stands the test of Catholicism.”

         This inverts the natural direction of authority. A community cannot be the final judge of the text that originally shaped it. That would be like saying a constitution must “stand the test” of the government it authorizes. In any coherent system, the founding document is the standard by which the institution is measured. If Scripture must pass the test of the Roman Catholic Church, then it becomes accountable only to itself, which collapses authority into circular self‑validation. Sola Scriptura avoids this by grounding authority in something that precedes and transcends the community.

          “The Catholic Church gave rise to the Bible.”

         This confuses historical sequence with causal authority. A museum curator does not “give rise” to the artifacts that he catalogs. A scientific community does not “give rise” to the laws of physics it formalizes. The biblical writings existed and carried authority before they were ever evaluated. Sola Scriptura rests on the idea that the authority of the text is intrinsic, not conferred.

          “Revelation was not given to a book but to persons.”

         Revelation given to persons is inherently unstable. Human memory is fallible, oral transmission mutates, and institutional recollection is shaped by politics and power. Writing is the stabilizing technology that prevents drift. Every society that values the preservation of truth eventually commits its foundational revelations to writing. The written form is not a downgrade. It is the only medium capable of preserving revelation with fidelity across generations. Sola Scriptura recognizes that a written revelation is the only form capable of functioning as a stable, public, universally accessible authority.

          “Only the Church could identify which books were inspired… Scripture is the Church’s book.”

          Gatekeeping is not authorship. Communities often recognize truths that they did not create. Philosophers did not create logic; they discovered it. Linguists did not create grammar; they described it. The recognition of inspired writings is an act of discernment, not authorization. If the Bible were truly “the church’s book,” then the church could theoretically alter it, expand it, or redefine it. But the Roman Catholic Church itself denies having that power. Sola Scriptura treats the text as the formative authority, not the product of the community.

          “Protestants ask the question backwards… they insist Scripture is the source of Revelation.” 

          This misstates the Sola Scriptura position. Scripture is not the source of revelation, but the preserved form of revelation. The distinction matters. A photograph is not the source of the event it captures, but it is the most reliable record of it. Oral recollection is fragile; institutional memory is political; written testimony is stable. Sola Scriptura is not about privileging a book over a community. It is about privileging a stable medium over a mutable one. The author’s critique misunderstands the epistemological motivation behind the doctrine.

          “She [the Church] created the Bible by proclaiming which writers were inspired.”

          This is like saying that astronomers “created” the stars by cataloging them. The recognition of the canon is rooted in history, but the authority of the texts does not arise from that event. If the church’s declaration creates inspiration, then inspiration becomes a human act, which undermines the very idea of divine revelation. Sola Scriptura avoids this by grounding inspiration in the act of God, not in the later recognition of a human institution.

          “Only an idiot would submit the Church to the judgment of the text.” 

          This reverses how foundational texts function in every other domain. Constitutions judge governments. Scientific papers judge scientific institutions. Foundational charters judge organizations. The idea that a community should not be judged by its founding documents is foreign to every field of human knowledge. If the Catholic Church cannot be judged by Scripture, then the church becomes self‑authenticating, which is indistinguishable from authoritarianism.

          “The key question is whether Scripture is Catholic.” 

          This makes the Roman Catholic Church the interpretive center of reality. But no community can be the standard by which its own origins are judged. That is epistemically incoherent. It is like asking whether the U.S. Constitution is “American,” the Constitution defines America, not the other way around. Sola Scriptura insists that the text defines the community, not the community the text. Otherwise, the community becomes unfalsifiable, which is the hallmark of closed systems rather than truth‑seeking ones.

          “Only an affirmative answer makes the Bible worth reading at all.”

          This treats the Catholic Church as the source of the Bible’s value, which collapses divine revelation into institutional endorsement. A text is worth reading because of what it is, not because of who approves it. Shakespeare is valuable without a literary academy. Euclid is valuable without a mathematics council. Scripture’s worth is intrinsic to its content, not derivative of ecclesial approval. Sola Scriptura recognizes that divine revelation carries its own authority, independent of institutional validation.

Wednesday, March 25, 2026

Heavy Loads and Gatekeepers: How Matthew 23 Uproots Catholic Ecclesiology

          Matthew 23 presents one of Jesus’ most sweeping indictments of religious leadership, and its force extends far beyond the well‑known debate over titles. The chapter opens with Jesus acknowledging that the scribes and Pharisees “sit on Moses’ seat,” a phrase that recognizes a legitimate teaching office while simultaneously exposing the danger of its corruption. Archaeological finds of literal “Moses seats” in ancient synagogues illustrate that this was a recognized position of authority, which makes Jesus’ critique even more striking: the problem is not the office itself but the way it can be twisted when human traditions and spiritual pride overshadow God’s revelation. This tension becomes a significant point of pressure for Roman Catholic theology, which grounds its ecclesial structure in the idea of a divinely instituted magisterium. The Catholic claim that teaching authority is safeguarded from doctrinal error sits uneasily beside Jesus’ portrayal of leaders who possess real authority yet mislead the people through misplaced emphases and burdensome traditions.

          A central theme of Matthew 23 is Jesus’ condemnation of leaders who “tie up heavy burdens, hard to bear, and lay them on people’s shoulders.” In its original context, this refers to the Pharisaic tendency to multiply halakhic regulations, rules that went beyond the Torah and created an intricate system of obligations. Early Jewish writings show how detailed these rules could become, such as expanding Sabbath restrictions or adding layers of purity requirements. Jesus’ critique is not merely moral but theological: these added requirements obscured the weightier matters of the law, justice, mercy, and faithfulness. A similar dynamic emerges in the Roman Catholic Church’s sacramental system, penitential requirements, canon law, and doctrinal developments that extend far beyond the biblical witness. Mandatory fasting rules, the detailed conditions attached to indulgences, and the sacramental prerequisites for receiving grace all illustrate how a religious structure can accumulate obligations that burden consciences. These examples mirror the very pattern Jesus condemns, a system where human additions overshadow the simplicity and clarity of Scripture.

          Another major theme in Matthew 23 is Jesus’ denunciation of religious leaders who act as spiritual gatekeepers, obstructing access to God rather than facilitating it. Jesus accuses the Pharisees of shutting the kingdom of heaven in people’s faces, neither entering themselves nor allowing others to enter. In the first‑century setting, this included controlling who was considered ritually clean, who could participate in synagogue life, and who was deemed acceptable before God. This charge resonates with critiques of Roman Catholic ecclesiology, which locates the ordinary means of grace within the institutional church and its priesthood. The Catholic claim that salvation is ordinarily mediated through sacramental channels controlled by the clergy functions as a form of spiritual gatekeeping, especially when combined with doctrines that tie salvation to communion with Rome’s hierarchical structure. While Catholic theology insists that the church is a conduit of grace rather than an obstacle to it, the parallel with Jesus’ critique remains difficult to ignore, given the New Testament’s emphasis on direct access to God through Christ rather than through institutional mediation.

          Jesus also condemns the Pharisees for their obsession with minutiae, tithing mint, dill, and cumin while neglecting the heart of God’s Law. This critique highlights a theological principle: religious systems can become so absorbed in technicalities that they lose sight of the divine priorities of compassion, justice, and faithfulness. The Pharisees’ focus on tiny herbs, items of minimal value, illustrates how easily secondary matters can eclipse what truly matters to God. Catholic moral theology, with its long tradition of casuistry and fine‑grained distinctions, risks falling into this same pattern. The detailed regulations surrounding sacramental validity, the conditions distinguishing mortal from venial sin, and the precise requirements for indulgences can appear to replicate the Pharisaic tendency to elevate secondary matters to primary importance. Jesus’ warning about straining out a gnat while swallowing a camel becomes a lens through which to question whether Catholicism’s doctrinal and disciplinary complexity obscures the simplicity of the gospel.

          Finally, Matthew 23 exposes the danger of religious traditions that claim continuity with Scripture while in practice undermining its message. Jesus accuses the Pharisees of building tombs for the prophets while embodying the very spirit that opposed them. This critique is not merely historical but theological: it warns that religious institutions can honor the form of revelation while contradicting its substance. Applied to Roman Catholicism, the argument is that the church’s appeal to apostolic tradition masks developments that lack clear biblical grounding. Doctrines such as purgatory, Marian dogmas, and papal infallibility are often cited as examples of teachings that present themselves as faithful to the apostolic deposit while representing significant departures from the biblical text. From this perspective, Matthew 23 becomes a cautionary text about the capacity of religious authority to elevate human tradition to the level of divine revelation, precisely the dynamic Jesus confronts.

          Taken together, the themes of Matthew 23, burdensome tradition, spiritual gatekeeping, misplaced priorities, and the danger of institutional self‑deception, form a coherent and substantial critique of Roman Catholic theology. The chapter does not reject religious authority, but it issues a sobering warning about how authority can drift from its divine purpose. For those who question the Catholic model of doctrinal development and ecclesial power, Matthew 23 provides a rich exegetical foundation for arguing that the gospel calls for a simpler, more direct, and more Christ‑centered approach to faith and practice.

Sunday, March 22, 2026

Why Psalm 115 Leaves No Room For Dulia Or Hyperdulia

          Psalm 115 presents one of the most uncompromising declarations of exclusive devotion to God in the entire biblical canon. Its opening line, “Not to us, O LORD, not to us, but to Your name give glory," establishes a theological posture in which all religious honor, trust, and exaltation are directed solely toward God. The psalm does not merely reject pagan idols; it articulates a worldview in which any religiously charged attention toward a created being is inappropriate. This creates a significant tension with the Catholic distinction between latria (worship), dulia (veneration of saints), and hyperdulia (special veneration of Mary), distinctions that were formally articulated centuries after the psalm was written. The Psalm’s holistic understanding of worship does not appear to recognize the nuanced categories that Catholic theology later developed.

          The heart of the issue lies in the Psalm’s treatment of glory and trust as exclusive divine prerogatives. Catholic devotional practice includes a wide range of actions directed toward Mary and the saints, processions, hymns, coronations, and titles such as “Queen of Heaven” or “Our life, our sweetness, and our hope.” Catholic theologians insist that these acts fall under dulia or hyperdulia, not latria, and therefore do not constitute worship. Yet Psalm 115 does not differentiate between degrees of religious honor. Instead, it presents glory, exaltation, and trust as a single category of devotion that belongs to God alone. The psalmist’s worldview is relational rather than philosophical: glory is not something that can be subdivided into types or degrees. It is simply the proper response to the living God.

          Psalm 115 also collapses the Roman Catholic distinction between trust and intercessory trust. Catholic prayers often speak of Mary as a refuge, protector, or even a source of salvation, phrases that Catholic theology interprets as shorthand for her intercessory role. Yet Psalm 115 repeatedly contrasts trusting in God with trusting in anything else. In the biblical imagination, trust is not a neutral or subdivided category. It is an act of worship. To place religious trust in a creature, even in a mediated or derivative sense, is to misdirect devotion. The Psalm’s critique of idols reinforces this point, since it is not limited to physical statues but extends to anything that receives religious attention that belongs to God. The issue is fundamentally about misplaced reliance rather than the material form of the object.

          Another tension arises in the area of religious address. Catholic theology distinguishes between praying to God and asking saints to pray for believers. However, Catholic devotional practice frequently uses direct address to saints: “St. Anthony, help me,” “Holy Mary, save us,” and similar expressions. Psalm 115’s logic does not allow for such distinctions. The Psalm contrasts the living God, who hears and acts, with all other beings, who cannot. The issue is not whether a being is represented by an idol, but whether it is treated as a recipient of religious invocation. In the biblical worldview, to address a heavenly being for help is to treat it as a god. Early Jewish monotheism developed precisely through the rejection of intermediary heavenly beings as objects of religious attention.

          Historical context further sharpens the contrast. The distinctions between latria, dulia, and hyperdulia were formally codified in the late first millennium, primarily in response to debates over images and devotional practices. These categories were not part of the biblical or early Jewish worldview. They emerged as theological solutions to later developments in Christian devotion. The psalmists, writing in a context of constant pressure from surrounding polytheistic cultures, did not parse religious acts into philosophical categories. For them, any religious honor, trust, or invocation directed toward a being other than God was a threat to Israel’s covenant identity.

          In this light, Psalm 115 poses a serious challenge to the Roman Catholic devotional system. The Psalm’s categories are holistic and exclusive, leaving no conceptual space for religious veneration of heavenly figures, however carefully distinguished from worship. While Catholic doctrine does not intend idolatry, the biblical categories simply do not support the nuanced distinctions that Catholic theology later developed. Psalm 115 calls for a form of devotion in which all glory, all trust, and all religious address belong to God alone. Any attempt to distribute these acts among other heavenly beings, whether angels, saints, or Mary, runs counter to the psalmist’s uncompromising monotheism.

Wednesday, March 11, 2026

Paul's Use Of Psalm 32 In Romans 4

           The Epistle to the Romans is Paul's literary masterpiece on the doctrine of salvation. It is the most elegant of his extant writings. The apostle begins his treatise by presenting the issue of man's depravity, the righteousness of God, and his resultant condemnation. Paul shows that both Jew and Gentile have violated God's righteous commandments, making them wholly worthy of divine condemnation. He strips away every layer of man's hubris. Everyone stands guilty before Him, without any ability to challenge that divine verdict, but with the positive side being that God has presented a means of reconciliation for us through the atoning work of Jesus Christ.

          Paul makes an argument by example when he mentions Abraham, who lived prior to the Law being given to the people of God. He does this with the intent of showing that his teaching is compatible with the Old Testament. A system of works righteousness would result in boasting, which God takes offense at. Further, Romans 4:4 says that if someone earns wages, then it is not a gift. But justification is precisely that, so any claim to self-merit must be left out of that equation. Romans 4:5 says that God declares righteous the ungodly and counts them as such on the basis of faith. Thus, the one and only thing a man can do in this scenario is set aside any dependence upon himself. 

          The Law required that two or three witnesses be present to establish the validity of a charge (Deuteronomy 19:15; Numbers 35:30). We see the Apostle Paul adhering to this custom in arguing for justification before God by faith as opposed to meritorious works. He brings up Abraham and King David as examples of men who were justified without consideration of good works. The latter person is of special interest as we consider how Paul ties in Psalm 32 with his argument. The Psalm in question is one of a penitential nature. What is especially striking is that the Law did not have any provision of atonement for the man who committed murder. Yet, God forgave David anyway. This divine act helps to lay the foundation for Paul's declaration of God declaring righteous the ungodly and retaining His status as righteous in so doing.

          The Psalm used by the Apostle Paul concerns the blessedness of being freed from the guilt of sin that comes about as a result of God forgiving it. The misdeeds King David had repented of were sending Uriah the Hittite into battle to be killed with the intent of covering up his affair with Bathsheba. One scandalous act led him to committing another, but his scheming failed utterly in the end. Further, David uses three words to describe his conduct, showcasing the richness of Hebrew vocabulary, which are guilt, wrongdoing, and sin. His act was a distortion of decency. It was crooked, not upright. It was a violation of the Law. Three words are used in Psalm 32 to describe three different aspects of breaching the divine moral standard.

          Contrariwise, David used three terms to describe God's mercy: forgiven, covered, and not being taken into account. To be "forgiven" of our sins means that God has taken them away from us. To have our sins "covered" means that their penalty has been met. That leads up to the forgiveness of our sins by God. In fact, Romans 4:7 is the only instance in which this word occurs in the New Testament. When sin is not taken into account, that means we do not merit for ourselves God's eschatological wrath. He does not treat us with the eternal fate that we deserve, just as David himself was spared physical death for his actions. Forgiveness is entirely a matter of grace, not an obligation owed to us. We are actually the ones indebted to God, and could never even begin to repay Him for our sin.

          It is worth noting that King David did not mention any good deeds done to earn God's favor. In fact, he only brought up his sin, with its gravity being enormous. He came to God with nothing, but was still forgiven for what he had done. God is said to give a righteous status to men who are ungodly, since David was very much deserving of judgment and had not one thing to offer in his defense. The non-imputation of sin to a believer's account necessarily implies an upright standing before Him. Hence, David was regarded as righteous in God's sight. Walter Roehrs, in the the Concordia Self-Study Commentary, Old Testament, p. 355, writes:

          "And indeed David claims no merit or worthiness, entitling him to absolution; even his penitential tears and abject remorse do not produce anything deserving consideration. Giving all glory to God, he revels in sharing the happiness which is bestowed out of pure grace on the man to whom the Lord imputes no iniquity (1-2)."

          The Apostle Paul uses King David as an example of a man being declared righteous in spite of his sins against God. Both he and Abraham can speak to the reality of justification apart from works. Their experiences are spoken of as equivalent to each other. Romans 4:7 and Romans 4:8 emphasize our pardon from sin. The point being made in these parallel stanzas is that we are not justified by good works. David speaks of the "blessed man" who receives full pardon from sin, which implies that he believed others could experience the same. Paul here recontextualized the meaning of forgiveness as deliverance from earthly death to being set free from its punishment in the life to come. This excerpt from the Commentary on the New Testament Use of the Old Testament, edited by G. K. Beale and D. A. Carson, p. 624, is relevant here:

          "...In contrast with many of the rabbinic references to Ps. 32, Paul makes no mention of the confession of sins, which is a central theme of the psalms (cf. Ps. 32:5; see Str-B 3:202-3). Confession is implicitly taken up in faith for Paul, in which sin that has overpowered our person is overcome: in faith "we give glory to God" (4:20; cf. 1:23; 3:26). As was the case with the story of Abraham, the broader context of the psalm makes clear that the "reckoning of righteousness" is no mere declaration, but rather an effective word."

          Confession is faith in Jesus Christ expressed. Repentance is the recognition of the need of redemption from sin and its penalty, involving a change of mind and heart. These things are closely associated with salvation and cannot be separated from it. The New Testament never takes into consideration the idea of a Christian either failing to do one or both. Confession and repentance are assumed of believers without exception. They are lived expressions of faith that acknowledge the gravity of sin and entrust themselves completely to the grace of God.

Monday, March 9, 2026

The Power Of Divine Grace

"It is because the Word of the Lord comes from God to man as a pure gift and as creative grace that it lives and grows from man to man. On the night in which He was betrayed Jesus foretold the failure of His disciples. Satan, He said, would sift them like wheat in the hope and to the intent that they might prove chaff to be burned in the unquenchable fire. On that occasion Jesus gave Peter, who was to fail most signally, a special proof of His love: “Simon, Simon,” He said, ‘I have prayed for you that your faith may not fail” (Lk 22:31-32). That forgiving love of Jesus laid the divine claim of grace on Peter even then, on the principle that he who is forgiven much shall love much (Lk 7:47). Jesus went on to say, “And when you have turned again, strengthen your brethren” (Lk 22:32). Because he had failed and had been forgiven, because he knew both the fragility of man’s resolves and the strength of divine grace, Peter was fitted for the task of strengthening his brethren. We find him doing this in his letters as the strengthener of persecuted brethren (1 Ptr) and as the strengthener and warner of brethren whose hold on the Christian hope is growing weak."

Martin Franzmann, Concordia Self-Study Commentary, New Testament, p. 258

The Power Of The God-Breathed Word

“As such they are profitable, useful, performing a function. Being the work of the Spirit, whose creative possibilities begin where man’s possibilities end, they can give man what man cannot give himself: teaching, knowledge of the will and ways of the God of illimitable power, wisdom, and goodness; reproof, the exposure and conviction of sin which make a man cry out, ‘Woe is me! For I am lost,’ in the presence of his holy God (Is 6:5); correction, the raising up of man to life and ministry where man has failed and totally collapsed (Is 6:6–8); training in righteousness—the inspired Word takes man in hand, lays the gentle yoke of his Savior God upon him, puts his reckless life in order, and makes of him a man of God … complete, equipped for every good work.”

Martin Franzmann, Concordia Self-Study Commentary, New Testament, p. 226

Monday, March 2, 2026

Studying The Biblical Text As Literature

          Studying the Bible as literature means treating it as a crafted body of writing whose meaning emerges through narrative design, poetic technique, and cultural context rather than through theological interpretation alone. This approach places the Bible alongside other major literary classics, such as Homer, Virgil, Sophocles, and Shakespeare, and examines how its authors use language, structure, and storytelling to explore human experience. When read this way, the Bible becomes a rich literary archive that reveals the artistic choices of ancient writers and the imaginative worlds they inhabited.

          The literary study of biblical narrative begins with its distinctive storytelling style. Biblical authors often rely on extreme narrative compression, presenting events with minimal description and leaving interpretive gaps that readers must fill. Characters are rarely described physically or psychologically. Instead, their identities emerge through dialogue, action, and the consequences of their choices. This technique creates a narrative subtlety comparable to classical epics, where meaning is embedded in gesture, repetition, and symbolic setting. Stories such as the binding of Isaac, the rivalry of Jacob and Esau, or the rise and fall of King David gain their power from this understated yet highly intentional narrative craft.

         The Bible’s poetry displays an equally sophisticated literary artistry. Hebrew poets use parallelism as their primary structural device, creating lines that echo, intensify, or contrast with one another. This technique shapes the emotional and rhetorical force of the Psalms, the prophetic books, and the Song of Songs. Imagery drawn from shepherding, agriculture, storms, and the natural world becomes a symbolic vocabulary through which poets express grief, longing, praise, and hope. The result is a poetic tradition that stands alongside the lyric poetry of the ancient Mediterranean in its depth of feeling and precision of language.

          Wisdom literature introduces a philosophical dimension that aligns the Bible with other ancient intellectual traditions. Books such as Job, Proverbs, and Ecclesiastes explore the nature of justice, the limits of human knowledge, and the search for meaning in a world marked by uncertainty. Their literary forms, dialogue, proverb, lament, shape how these questions unfold. Job in particular uses dramatic speeches and poetic disputation to probe the problem of suffering, creating a work that resonates with the tragic sensibilities of Greek drama while remaining distinct in its theological and literary vision.

          The prophetic and apocalyptic writings demonstrate the Bible’s capacity for imaginative innovation. Prophets employ symbolic actions, vivid metaphors, and rhetorical intensity to critique social injustice and envision a transformed future. Apocalyptic texts such as Daniel and Revelation expand this imaginative world through visions of cosmic conflict, heavenly intervention, and symbolic beasts. These works use a dramatic, visionary mode of storytelling that has influenced later literature, from medieval allegory to modern fantasy and dystopian fiction.

          Studying the Bible as literature also requires attention to its historical layering. Because the Bible was composed over many centuries by multiple authors and editors, its literary forms reflect evolving cultural contexts and interpretive traditions. Later texts often reinterpret earlier ones, creating a network of intertextual relationships that enrich the literary experience. This layered composition resembles the development of other classical traditions, where stories are retold, reshaped, and reimagined across generations.

          Finally, the Bible’s literary influence is unparalleled. Its stories, images, and themes have shaped the works of Dante, Milton, Shakespeare, Melville, and countless others. Understanding the Bible’s literary qualities deepens our understanding of these later works, revealing how writers draw on biblical motifs to explore new artistic and cultural questions. The Bible’s impact extends beyond literature into visual art, music, political rhetoric, and everyday language, making literary study essential for understanding its role in shaping cultural history.

          A literary approach does not replace theological or historical study. It complements them by illuminating the Bible’s artistry and complexity. It invites readers to appreciate the text as a product of human creativity, crafted, layered, and rich with meaning. This perspective reveals why the Bible endures not only as a sacred text, but also as one of the central masterpieces of world literature.

Saturday, February 7, 2026

Five English Bible Translations Of Distinctive Scholarly Value: An Analytical Overview

Introduction:

The history of English Bible translation is a story of shifting scholarly priorities, evolving linguistic ideals, and the ongoing effort to render ancient texts with clarity and integrity. Among the many translations produced in the modern era, five stand out not merely for their circulation but for the distinct intellectual traditions they embody: the New American Standard Bible (NASB), the New English Translation (NET), the Revised Standard Version (RSV), the New King James Version (NKJV), and the New English Bible (NEB). Each represents a particular vision of what a Bible translation should be, offering readers a different window into the biblical world.

The New American Standard Bible (NASB): Formal Equivalence at Its Purest:

The NASB is often regarded as the high-water mark of formal equivalence in English Bible translation. Rooted in the American Standard Version of 1901, it inherits that tradition’s commitment to rendering the Hebrew and Greek texts with maximal transparency. The Lockman Foundation sought to preserve the ASV’s scholarly precision while presenting the text in contemporary English.

The NASB’s defining characteristic is its willingness to follow the structure and idioms of the original languages even when doing so produces a somewhat stiff English style. This deliberate literalism allows readers to sense the contours of the underlying text—its repetitions, its abruptness, its grammatical patterns. For those engaged in close study, exegesis, or word-level analysis, the NASB remains a trusted tool precisely because it resists interpretive smoothing and leaves the interpretive work to the reader.

The New English Translation (NET): Transparency as a Scholarly Ideal:

The NET approaches translation from a different angle. Its most distinctive feature is not the English text itself but the extensive translators’ notes that accompany it. These notes—numbering in the tens of thousands—explain textual variants, lexical decisions, syntactical challenges, and alternative renderings.

Developed by scholars associated with Dallas Theological Seminary, the NET was conceived as a digital-first project, designed to make both the translation and the reasoning behind it freely accessible. The translation philosophy blends formal and functional equivalence, but the notes reveal the translators’ debates, uncertainties, and methodological choices. In this way, the NET serves not only as a Bible translation but also as a compact introduction to textual criticism and the art of translation.

The Revised Standard Version (RSV): Tradition and Scholarship in Mid‑Century Harmony:

The RSV occupies a pivotal place in the history of English Bible translation. Published in 1952, it sought to preserve the literary dignity of the King James tradition while incorporating the best manuscript evidence and linguistic scholarship available at the time. It was the first major ecumenical translation since the seventeenth century, produced by a broad committee of scholars committed to both accuracy and readability.

The RSV’s achievement lies in its balance. It retains the cadence and solemnity of traditional English Bible style while eliminating archaic forms and correcting readings based on earlier and more reliable manuscripts. It reflects the mid‑twentieth‑century scholarly consensus with clarity and restraint. The RSV is one of the most beautiful translations ever produced in English, combining elegance with a disciplined fidelity to the text.

Its influence has been immense, serving as the foundation for several later translations and shaping the expectations of generations of readers.

The New King James Version (NKJV): Preserving the King James Tradition with Modern Clarity:

The NKJV, published in 1982, represents a deliberate effort to preserve the literary heritage of the King James Version while making its language accessible to contemporary readers. Rather than revising the RSV tradition or adopting a new textual base, the NKJV maintains continuity with the KJV’s underlying manuscripts, including the Textus Receptus for the New Testament and the traditional Hebrew Masoretic Text for the Old Testament.

Its translators sought to retain the familiar rhythms, cadences, and dignified tone of the KJV while removing archaic vocabulary and grammatical forms that had become barriers to comprehension. The result is a translation that feels recognizably “King James” in style yet is readable without specialized knowledge of Early Modern English.

The NKJV’s value lies in its commitment to continuity. It offers readers a bridge between the literary grandeur of the KJV and the clarity expected in modern English, making it especially appealing to those who appreciate the traditional English Bible style but desire a text that is accessible for study, teaching, and public reading.

The New English Bible (NEB): A Bold Literary Reimagining:

The NEB stands apart from the other translations discussed here because it is not a revision of the King James tradition but a fresh translation from the original languages. Commissioned by major British churches and published in 1970, it reflects mid‑twentieth‑century literary sensibilities and a commitment to dynamic equivalence.

The NEB’s translators sought to render the meaning of the text in natural, idiomatic English, even when that required departing from traditional phrasing. The result is a translation that is vivid, imaginative, and often strikingly modern. Its literary boldness invites readers to hear familiar passages with fresh ears, highlighting narrative flow and poetic nuance.

The NEB remains a distinctive achievement, a translation that prioritizes literary artistry and contemporary expression, offering a creative counterpoint to more literal approaches.