| Orthodox Outlet for Dogmatic Enquiries | Essays on Orthodoxy |
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by Fr. Stephen Freeman

Source:
https://glory2godforallthings.com/2026/04/07/the-church-and-the-scriptures/
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The notion of the “Scriptures” has undergone radical changes
across the centuries. Today, we picture them as a single book,
the Bible. Indeed, we picture that book as private property,
perhaps a personal guide for all things spiritual. Even when we
hear its words being quoted in public or in Church gatherings,
we imagine the readings as something bound-up in this private
mode. More than that, the text of the Scriptures is frequently
reduced to ideas, as propositions to be weighed and considered.
All of this is largely foreign to the Scriptures in their
original form.
The Scriptures are “Scripture,” inasmuch as
the Church deems them to be so. Outside of the Church, the word
itself has no meaning. The word means, “the Writings,”
specifically, the “writings” which the Church reads as the word
of God, as authoritative, as revealing Christ to the Church in
the Church.
In their original form, the Scriptures were
exceedingly expensive. The best vellum copies of the gospels
(made from calf skin) required the hides of some 100 calves. An
entire set of the Scriptures would require five times that many.
The most common form of the Scriptures are what today are called
“lectionaries,” that is, the selections from the Scriptures that
are prescribed for reading in the services of the Church.
Early copies of the Scriptures had no
markings for verses or chapters, nor even spaces between words
(it was a sort of economy when the vellum on which it was
written was so expensive). The Scriptures were public documents,
copied and preserved by the Church for the Church. When St.
Paul, for example, quotes from the Scriptures, he is not doing
so with a handy Bible by his side to consult. He quotes from
memory.
It was once a common practice that
monastics learned the whole of the Psalter by memory, while the
same was expected of Bishops. Today, such feats of memory seem
outlandish, but they are not as far beyond reach as we imagine.
There is a greater act of memory that takes
place in the life of the Church that continues into our present
time. It is found in the Liturgy as it is celebrated in the
midst of the congregation. It is, in fact, the most natural
place for the Scriptures: it is where they belong. It is the
true place where the Scriptures are remembered.
For example, each year in the period known
as “Holy Week” (from Lazarus Saturday and Palm Sunday through
Pascha) the Orthodox Church takes a deep dive into the narrative
drama of the last days of Christ’s ministry: His betrayal,
arrest, trial, scourging, crucifixion and burial through to the
accounts of His resurrection. The narratives of Christ’s passion
are rehearsed both in the actions of the services as well as in
the context of hymnography that meditates on the meaning and
purpose of what is taking place. Many of the services in the
early part of the week are largely composed of sung text, poetic
expositions on the Scriptures for that day. The services known
as the “Bridegroom Matins” (named for their poetic meditation on
Christ as the Bridegroom) begin on the evening of Palm Sunday
and last through Holy Wednesday. The typicon (the service
directions) call for the reading of the entirety of
all four gospels over the course of the first three days of Holy
Week. On Holy Friday, after the icon of Christ’s burial shroud
is placed in the tomb, the Psalter begins to be read from
beginning to end, in a continual repetition until Saturday
evening, when the reading of the Acts of the Apostles replaces
it. The services tend to have liturgical actions, with varying
levels of congregational participation, that take Biblical text
and poetic discourse and combine them with actions in which the
gospel story of Christ’s passion is liturgically dramatized in
the parish setting. In something of a tour
de force, the Vesperal Liturgy of Holy Saturday has
15 readings from the Old Testament, demonstrating and rehearsing
the Paschal pattern that permeates the whole of Scripture.
What I want to stress is that all of these
actions are a “reading” of Scripture. In particular, they are a
reading that points out that the “pattern” in the whole of
Scripture is revealed in the primary pattern
of Christ’s Pascha (death and resurrection). His Pascha reveals
not just God’s purpose, but our purpose,
and the purpose of all
things. This is, perhaps, an interesting way to
“read” the Scriptures. We are a deeply text-based society
(whether the text is in a book or on screen). We tend to
overlook (or ignore) the fact that Christ never wrote a book or
a letter. He gave us something else.
Three of the gospels, as well as St. Paul,
relate this story of the Last Supper.
For I received from the Lord what I also delivered to you, that
the Lord Jesus on the night when he was betrayed took bread, and
when he had given thanks, he broke it, and said, “This is my
body, which is for you. Do this in remembrance of me.” In the
same way also he took the cup, after supper, saying, “This cup
is the new covenant in my blood. Do this, as often as you drink
it, in remembrance of me.” (1 Corinthians 11:23–25)
These are Christ’s words that we have
received, but the Church’s memory of
those words, even before they were written down, were embodied
in the actions of
the Divine Liturgy, even in its most primitive form. It is a
portion of “Holy Week” that is enacted at every celebration of
the Liturgy to this day.
The truth is that the Scriptures are not
“read” unless and until they are enacted. Christ says this about
His own words:
“He who has My commandments and keeps them,
it is he who loves Me. And he who loves Me will be loved by My
Father, and I will love him and manifest Myself to him.” (Jn
14:21)
And this:
Then Jesus said to those Jews who believed Him, “If you abide in
My word, you are My disciples indeed. And you shall know the
truth, and the truth shall make you free.” (Jn 8:31–32)
We should note that in this second saying,
“knowing the
truth” comes after “abiding
in My word.”
St. Paul has a different way of saying
this:
"You are our epistle written in our hearts, known and read by all
men; clearly you are an epistle of Christ, ministered by us,
written not with ink but by the Spirit of the living God, not on
tablets of stone but on tablets of flesh, that is, of the heart."
(2Cor. 3:2-3)
Perhaps the greatest betrayals of Scripture
have been the many movements that have reduced it to a text. It
is not that the Scriptures cannot be studied, but that the true
study of Scripture is not found in the acquisition of
information. Rather, its true study is that which results in a
life transformed into the image of Christ.
The Liturgies of the Church embody this
instinct. There, the Scriptures are not just read aloud, but
read liturgically,
with actions, candles, incense, processions, and response. The
hymns that accompany its reading serve an interpretive role as
well. In the Divine Liturgy, the Scriptures always lead to the
climax of the Eucharist in which everything is gathered into the
Lord’s Pascha: “showing forth His death ’til He comes.” (1Cor.
11:26) “Unless you eat the flesh of the Son of Man and drink His
blood, you have no life in you.”
(Jn. 6:53)
The saints whose lives are commemorated in
the liturgy also serve an interpretive role. They are lives that
reveal themselves as conformed to the image of Christ. They are
what the Scriptures look like in human form, the death and
resurrection of Christ repeated and glorified.
St. Paul expresses this in intensely
personal terms:
“I have been crucified with Christ; it is no longer I who live,
but Christ lives in me; and the life which I now live in the
flesh I live by faith in the Son of God, who loved me and gave
Himself for me.”(Gal 2:20)
In one of the most extreme examples of
performative interpretation, we have a small story from the
Desert Fathers:
One of the monks, called Serapion, sold his book of the Gospels
and gave the money to those who were hungry, saying: “I have
sold the book which told me to sell all that I had and give to
the poor.”
And this is Christ’s Pascha.
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Article created : 07-04-2026.
Last update : 07-04-2026