As a Jewish convert to Christ via evangelical
Protestantism, I naturally wanted to know God better through
the reading of the Scriptures. In fact, it had been through
reading the Gospels in the "forbidden book" called the New
Testament, at age sixteen, that I had come to believe in
Jesus Christ as the Son of God and our promised Messiah. In
my early years as a Christian, much of my religious
education came from private Bible reading. By the time I
entered college, I had a pocket-sized version of the whole
Bible that was my constant companion. I would commit
favorite passages from the Scriptures to memory, and often
quote them to myself in times of temptation - or to others as
I sought to convince them of Christ. The Bible became for
me - as it is to this day - the most important book in print. I
can say from my heart with Saint Paul the Apostle, " All
Scripture is given by inspiration of God, and is profitable
for doctrine, for reproof, for correction, for instruction
in righteousness" (2 Timothy 3:16).
That’s the good news!
The bad news is that often I would decide for myself what
the Scriptures meant. For example, I became so enthusiastic
about knowing Jesus as my close and personal friend that I
thought my own awareness of Him was all I needed. So I would
mark verses about Jesus with my yellow highlighter, but pass
over passages concerning God the Father, or the Church, or
baptism. I saw the Bible as a heavenly instruction manual. I
didn’t think I needed the Church, except as a good place to
make friends or to leans more about the Bible so I could be
a better do-it-yourself Christian. I came to think that I
could build my life, and the Church, by the Book. I mean, I
took Sola Scriptura ("only the Bible") seriously! Salvation
history was clear to me: God sent His Son, together they
sent the Holy Spirit, then came the New Testament to explain
salvation, and finally the Church developed.
Close, maybe, but not close enough.
Let me hasten to say that the Bible is all God intends it to
be. No problem with the Bible. The problem lay in the way I
individualized it, subjecting it to my own personal
interpretations - some not so bad, others not so good.
A STRUGGLE FOR
UNDERSTANDING
It was not long after my conversion to
Christianity that I found myself getting swept up in the
tide of religious sectarianism, in which Christians would
part ways over one issue after another. It seemed, for
instance, that there were as many opinions on the Second
Coming as there were people in the discussion. So we’d all
appeal to the Scriptures. "I believe in the Bible. If it’s
not in the Bible I don’t believe it," became my war cry.
What I did not realize was that everyone else was saying the
same thing! It was not the Bible, but each one’s private
interpretation of it, that became our ultimate authority. In
an age which highly exalts independence of thought and
self-reliance, I was becoming my own pope! The guidelines I
used in interpreting Scripture seemed simple enough: When
the plain sense of Scripture makes common sense, seek no
other sense. I believed that those who were truly faithful
and honest in following this principle would achieve
Christian unity. To my surprise, this "common sense"
approach led not to increased Christian clarity and unity,
but rather to a spiritual free-for-all! Those who most
strongly adhered to believing "only the Bible" tended to
become the, most factious, divisive, and combative of
Christians - perhaps unintentionally. In fact, it seemed to me
that the more one held to the Bible as the only source of
spiritual authority, the more factious and sectarian one
became. We would even argue heatedly over verses on love!
Within my circle of Bible-believing friends, I witnessed a
mini-explosion of sects and schismatic movements, each
claiming to be "true to the Bible" and each in bitter
conflict with the others. Serious conflict arose over every
issue imaginable: charismatic gifts, interpretation of
prophecy, the proper way to worship, communion, Church
government, discipleship, discipline in the Church,
morality, accountability, evangelism, social action, the
relationship of faith and works, the role of women, and
ecumenism. The list is endless. In fact any issue at all
could-and often did-cause Christians to part ways. The fruit
of this sectarian spirit has been the creation of literally
thousands of independent churches and denominations. As I
myself became increasingly sectarian, my radicalism
intensified, and I came to believe that all churches were
unbiblical: to become a member of any church was to
compromise the Faith. For me, "church" meant "the Bible,
God, and me." This hostility towards the churches fit in
well with my Jewish background. I naturally distrusted all
churches because I felt they had betrayed the teachings of
Christ by having participated in or passively ignored the
persecution of the Jews throughout history. But the more
sectarian I became-to the point of being obnoxious and
antisocial-the more I began to realize that something was
seriously wrong with my approach to Christianity. My
spiritual life wasn’t working. Clearly, my privately held
beliefs in the Bible and what it taught were leading me away
from love and community with my fellow Christians, and
therefore away from Christ. As Saint John the Evangelist
wrote, "He who does not love his brother whom he has seen,
how can he love God whom he has not seen?" (1
John 4:20). This division and
hostility were not what had drawn me to Christ. And I knew
the answer was not to deny the Faith or reject the
Scriptures. Something had to change. Maybe it was me. I
turned to a study of the history of the Church and the New
Testament, hoping to shed some light on what my attitude
toward the Church and the Bible should be. The results were
not at all what I expected.
THE BIBLE OF THE APOSTLES
My initial attitude was that whatever was
good enough for the Apostles would be good enough for me.
This is where I got my first surprise. As I mentioned
previously, I knew that the Apostle Paul regarded Scripture
as being inspired by God (2
Timothy 3:16). But I had always
assumed that the "Scripture" spoken of in this passage was
the whole Bible-both the Old and New Testaments. In reality,
there was no "New Testament" when this statement was made.
Even the Old Testament was still in the process of
formulation, for the Jews did not decide upon a definitive
list or canon of Old Testament books until after the rise of
Christianity. As I studied further, I discovered that the
early Christians used a Greek translation of the Old
Testament called the Septuagint. This translation, which was
begun in Alexandria, Egypt, in the third century B.C.,
contained an expanded canon which included a number of the
so-called "deuterocanonical" (or "apocryphal") books.
Although there was some initial debate over these books,
they were eventually received by Christians into the Old
Testament canon. In reaction to the rise of Christianity,
the Jews narrowed their canons and eventually excluded the
deuterocanonical books-although they still regarded them as
sacred. The modern Jewish canon was not rigidly fixed until
the third century A.D. Interestingly, it is this later
version of the Jewish canon of the Old Testament, rather
than the canon of early Christianity, that is followed by
most modern Protestants today. When the Apostles lived and
wrote, there was no New Testament and no finalized Old
Testament. The concept of "Scripture" was much less
well-defined than I had envisioned.
EARLY CHRISTIAN WRITINGS
The second big surprise came when I realized
that the first complete listing of New Testament books as we
have them today did not appear until over 300 years after
the death and resurrection of Christ. (The first complete
listing was given by St. Athanasius in his Paschal Letter in
A.D. 367.) Imagine it! If the writing of the New Testament
had been begun at the same time as the U.S. Constitution, we
wouldn’t see a final product until the year 2076! The four
Gospels were written from thirty to sixty years after Jesus’
death and resurrection. In the interim, the Church relied on
oral tradition-the accounts of eyewitnesses-as well as
scattered pre-gospel documents (such as those quoted in 1
Timothy 3:16 and 2
Timothy 2:11-13) and written
tradition. Most churches only had parts of what was to
become the New Testament. As the eyewitnesses of Christ’s
life and teachings began to die, the Apostles wrote as they
were guided by the Holy Spirit, in order to preserve and
solidify the scattered written and oral tradition. Because
the Apostles expected Christ to return soon, it seems they
did not have in mind that these gospel accounts and
apostolic letters would in time be collected into a new
Bible. During the first four centuries A.D. there was
substantial disagreement over which books should be included
in the canon of Scripture. The first person on record who
tried to establish a New Testament canon was the
second-century heretic, Marcion. He wanted the Church to
reject its Jewish heritage, and therefore he dispensed with
the Old Testament entirely. Marcion’s canon included only
one gospel, which he himself edited, and ten of Paul’s
epistles. Sad but true, the first attempted New Testament
was heretical. Many scholars believe that it was partly in
reaction to this distorted canon of Marcion that the early
Church determined to create a clearly defined canon of its
own. The destruction of Jerusalem in A.D. 70, the breakup of
the Jewish-Christian community there, and the threatened
loss of continuity in the oral tradition probably also
contributed to the sense of the urgent need for the Church
to standardize the list of books Christians could rely on.
During this period of the canon’s evolution, as previously
noted, most churches had only a few, if any, of the
apostolic writings available to them. The books of the Bible
had to be painstakingly copied by hand, at great expense of
time and effort. Also, because most people were illiterate,
they could only be read by a privileged few. The exposure of
most Christians to the Scriptures was confined to what they
heard in the churches-the Law and Prophets, the Psalms, and
some of the Apostles’ memoirs. The persecution of Christians
by the Roman Empire and the existence of many documents of
non-apostolic origin further complicated the matter. This
was my third surprise. Somehow I had naively envisioned
every home and parish having a complete Old and New
Testament from the very inception of the Church! It was
difficult for me to imagine a church surviving and
prospering without a complete New Testament. Yet
unquestionably they did. This may have been my first clue
that there was more to the total life of the Church than
just the written Word.
THE GOSPEL ACCORDING TO
WHOM?
Next, I was surprised to discover that many
"gospels" besides those of the New Testament canon were
circulating in the first and second centuries. These
included the Gospel according to the Hebrews, the Gospel
according to the Egyptians, and the Gospel according to
Peter, to name just a few. The New Testament itself speaks
of the existence of such accounts. Saint Luke’s Gospel
begins by saying, "Inasmuch as many [italics added] have
taken in hand to set in order a narrative of those things
which have been fulfilled among us … it seemed good to me
also … to write to you an orderly account" (Luke
1:1, 3).
At the time Luke wrote, Matthew and Mark were the only two
canonical Gospels that had been written. In time, all but
four Gospels were excluded from the New Testament canon. Yet
in the early years of Christianity there was even a
controversy over which of these four Gospels to use. Most of
the Christians of Asia Minor used the Gospel of John rather
than the Gospels of Matthew, Mark, and Luke. Based upon the
Passion account contained in John, most Christians in Asia
Minor celebrated Easter on a different day from those in
Rome. Roman Christians resisted the Gospel of John and
instead used the other Gospels. The Western Church for a
time hesitated to use the Gospel of John because the Gnostic
heretics made use of it along with their own "secret
gospels." Another debate arose over the issue of whether
there should be separate gospels or one single composite
gospel account. In the second century, Tatian, who was
Justin Martyr’s student, published a single composite
"harmonized" gospel called the Diatessaron. The Syrian
Church used this composite gospel in the second, third, and
fourth centuries; they did not accept all four Gospels until
the fifth century. They also ignored for a time the Epistles
of John, 2 Peter, and the Book of Revelation. To further
complicate matters, the Church of Egypt, as reflected in the
second-century New Testament canon of Clement of Alexandria,
included the "gospels" of the Hebrews, the Egyptians, and
Mattathias. In addition they held to be of apostolic origin
the First Epistle of Clement (Bishop of Rome), the Epistle
of Barnabas, the Preaching of Peter, the Revelation of
Peter, the Didache, the Protevangelium of James, the Acts of
John, the Acts of Paul, and The Shepherd of Hermas (which
they held to be especially inspired). Irenaeus (second
century), martyred Bishop of Lyons in Gaul, included the
Revelation of Peter in his canon.
OTHER CONTROVERSIAL BOOKS
My favorite New Testament book, the Epistle to the Hebrews,
was clearly excluded in the Western Church in a number of
listings from the second, third, and fourth centuries.
Primarily due to the influence of Augustine upon certain
North African councils, the Epistle to the Hebrews was
finally accepted in the West by the end of the fourth
century. On the other hand, the Book of Revelation, also
known as the Apocalypse, written by the Apostle John, was
not accepted in the Eastern Church for several centuries.
Among Eastern authorities who rejected this book were
Dionysius of Alexandria (third century), Eusebius (third
century), Cyril of Jerusalem (fourth century), the Council
of Laodicea (fourth century), John Chrysostom (fourth
century), Theodore of Mopsuesta (fourth century), and
Theodoret (fifth century). In addition, the original Syriac
and Armenian versions of the New Testament omitted this
book. Many Greek New Testament manuscripts written before
the ninth century do not contain the Apocalypse, and it is
not used liturgically in the Eastern Church to this day.
Athanasius supported the inclusion of the Apocalypse, and it
is due primarily to his influence that it was eventually
received into the New Testament canon in the East. The early
Church actually seems to have made an internal compromise on
the Apocalypse and Hebrews. The East would have excluded the
Apocalypse from the canon, while the West would have done
without Hebrews. Simply put, each side agreed to accept the
disputed book of the other. Interestingly, the
sixteenth-century father of the Protestant Reformation,
Martin Luther, held that the New Testament books should be
"graded" and that some were more inspired than others (that
there is a canon within the canon). Luther gave secondary
rank to Hebrews, James, Jude, and Revelation, placing them
at the end of his translation of the New Testament.
Imagine-the man who gave us sola scriptura assumed the
authority to edit the written Word of God!
THE NEW TESTAMENT MATURES
I was particularly interested in finding the
oldest legitimate list of New Testament books. Some believe
that the Muratorian Canon is the oldest, dating from the
late second century. This canon excludes Hebrews, James, and
the two Epistles of Peter, but includes the Apocalypse of
Peter and the Wisdom of Solomon. It is not until A.D.
200-about 170 years after the death and resurrection of
Christ-that we first see the term "New Testament" used, by
Tertullian. Origen, who lived in the third century, is often
considered to be the first systematic theologian (though he
was often systematically wrong). He questioned the
authenticity of 2 Peter and 2 John. He also tells us, based
on his extensive travels, that there were churches which
refused to use 2 Timothy because the epistle speaks of a
"secret" writing-the Book of Jannes and Jambres, derived
from Jewish oral tradition (see 2
Timothy 3:8). The Book of Jude was
also considered suspect by some because it includes a
quotation from the apocryphal book, The Assumption of Moses,
also derived from Jewish oral tradition (see Jude
9). Moving into the fourth
century, I discovered that Eusebius, Bishop of Caesarea and
the "Father of Church History," lists as disputed books
James, Jude, 2 Peter, and 2 and 3 John. The Revelation of
John he totally rejects. Codex Sinaiticus, the oldest
complete New Testament manuscript we have today, was
discovered in the Orthodox Christian monastery of Saint
Catherine on Mount Sinai. It is dated as being from the
fourth century and it contains all of the books we have in
the modern New Testament, but also includes Barnabas and The
Shepherd of Hermas. During the fourth century, Emperor
Constantine was frustrated by the controversy between
Christians and Arians concerning the divinity of Christ.
Because the New Testament had not yet been clearly defined,
he pressed for a clearer defining and closing of the New
Testament canon, in order to help resolve the conflict and
bring religious unity to his divided Empire. However, as
late as the fifth century the Codex Alexandrinus included 1
and 2 Clement, indicating that the disputes over the canon
were still not everywhere firmly resolved.
WHO DECIDED?
With the passage of time the Church discerned which writings
were truly apostolic and which were not. It was a prolonged
struggle, taking place over several centuries. As part of
the process of discernment, the Church met together several
times in council. These various Church councils confronted a
variety of issues, among which was the canon of Scripture.
It is important to note that the purpose of these councils
was to discern and confirm what was already generally
accepted within the Church at large. The councils did not
legislate the canon so much as set forth what had become
self-evident truth and practice within the churches of God.
The councils sought to proclaim the common mind of the
Church and to reflect the unanimity of faith, practice, and
tradition as it already existed in the local churches
represented. The councils provide us with specific records
in which the Church spoke clearly and in unison as to what
constitutes Scripture. Among the many councils that met
during the first four centuries, two are particularly
important in this context:(1) The Council of Laodicea met in
Asia Minor about A.D. 363. This is the first council which
clearly listed the canonical books of the present Old and
New Testaments, with the exception of the Apocalypse of
Saint John. The Laodicean council stated that only the
canonical books it listed should be read in church. Its
decisions were widely accepted in the Eastern Church.(2) The
third Council of Carthage met in North Africa about A.D.
397. This council, attended by Augustine, provided a full
list of the canonical books of both the Old and New
Testaments. The twenty-seven books of the present-day New
Testament were accepted as canonical. The council also held
that these books should be read in the church as Divine
Scripture to the exclusion of all others. This Council was
widely accepted as authoritative in the West.
THE BUBBLE BURSTS
As I delved deeper into my study of the history of the New
Testament, I saw my previous misconceptions being demolished
one by one. I understood now what should have been obvious
all along: that the New Testament consisted of twenty-seven
separate documents which, while certainly inspired by God
nothing could shake me in that conviction-had been written
and compiled by human beings. It was also clear that this
work had not been accomplished by individuals working in
isolation, but by the collective effort of all Christians
everywhere-the Body of Christ, the Church. This realization
forced me to deal with two more issues that my earlier
prejudices had led me to avoid: (1) the propriety and
necessity of human involvement in the writing of Scripture;
and (2) the authority of the Church.
HUMAN AND DIVINE
Deeply committed, like many evangelicals, to belief in the
inspiration of Scripture, I had understood the New Testament
to be God’s Word only, and not man’s. I supposed the
Apostles were told by God exactly what to write, much as a
secretary takes down what is being dictated, without
providing any personal contribution. Ultimately, my
understanding of the inspiration of Scripture was clarified
by the teaching of the Church regarding the Person of
Christ. The Incarnate Word of God, our Lord Jesus Christ, is
not only God but also man. Christ is a single Person with
two natures-divine and human. To de-emphasize Christ’s
humanity leads to heresy. The ancient Church taught that the
Incarnate Word was fully human-in fact, as human as it is
possible to be-and yet without sin. In His humanity, the
Incarnate Word was born, grew, and matured into manhood. I
came to realize that this view of the Incarnate Word of God,
the Logos, Jesus Christ, paralleled the early Christian view
of the written Word of God, the Bible. The written Word of
God reflects not only the divine thought, but a human
contribution as well. The Word of God conveys truth to us as
written by men, conveying the thoughts, personalities, and
even limitations and weaknesses of the writers-inspired by
God, to be sure. This means that the human element in the
Bible is not overwhelmed so as to be lost in the ocean of
the divine. It became clearer to me that as Christ Himself
was born, grew, and matured, so also did the written Word of
God, the Bible. It did not come down whole-plop-from heaven,
but was of human origin as well as divine. The Apostles did
not merely inscribe the Scriptures as would a robot or a
zombie, but freely cooperated with the will of God through
the inspiration of the Holy Spirit.
A QUESTION OF AUTHORITY
The second issue I had to grapple with was even more
difficult for me-the issue of Church authority. It was clear
from my study that the Church had, in fact, determined which
books composed the Scriptures; but still I wrestled mightily
with the thought that the Church had been given this
authority. Ultimately, it came down to a single issue. I
already believed with all my heart that God spoke
authoritatively through His written Word. The written Word
of God is concrete and tangible. I can touch the Bible and
read it. But for some strange reason, I was reluctant to
believe the same things about the Body of Christ, the
Church-that she was visible and tangible, located physically
on earth in history. The Church to me was essentially
"mystical" and intangible, not identifiable with any
specific earthly assembly. This view permitted me to see
each Christian as being a church unto himself. How
convenient this is, especially when doctrinal or personal
problems arise! Yet this view did not agree with the reality
of what the Church was understood to be in the apostolic
era. The New Testament is about real churches, not ethereal
ones. Could I now accept the fact that God spoke
authoritatively, not only through the Bible, but through His
Church as well-the very Church which had produced,
protected, and actively preserved the Scriptures I held so
dear?
THE CHURCH OF THE NEW
TESTAMENT
In the view of the earliest Christians, God
spoke His Word not only to but through His Body, the Church.
It was within His Body, the Church, that the Word was
confirmed and established. Without question, the Scriptures
were looked upon by early Christians as God’s active
revelation of Himself to the world. At the same time, the
Church was understood as the household of God, "having been
built on the foundation of the apostles and prophets, Jesus
Christ Himself being the chief cornerstone, in whom the
whole building, being fitted together, grows into a holy
temple in the Lord" (Ephesians
2:20, 21).
God has His Word, but He also has His Body. The New
Testament says: (1) "Now you are the body of Christ, and
members individually" (1
Corinthians 12:27; compare Romans
12:5). (2) "He [Christ] is the
head of the body, the church" (Colossians
1:18). (3) "And He [the Father]
put all things under His [the Son's] feet, and gave Him to
be head overall things to the church, which is His body, the
fullness of Him who fills all in all" (Ephesians
1:22, 23).
In early times there was no organic separation between Bible
and Church, as we so often find today. The Body without the
Word is without message, but the Word without the Body is
without foundation. As Paul writes, the Body is "the church
of the living God, the pillar and ground of the truth" (1
Timothy 3:15). The Church is the
Living Body of the Incarnate Lord. The Apostle does not say
that the New Testament is the pillar and ground of the
truth. The Church is the pillar and foundation of the truth
because the New Testament was built upon her life in God. In
short, she wrote it! She is an integral part of the gospel
message, and it is within the Church that the New Testament
was written and preserved.
THE WORD OF GOD IN ORAL
TRADITION
The Apostle Paul exhorts us, "Therefore,
brethren, stand fast and hold the traditions which you were
taught, whether by word or our epistle" (2
Thessalonians 2:15). This verse
was one that I had not highlighted because it used two
phrases I didn’t like: "hold the traditions" and "by word
[of mouth]." These two phrases conflicted with my
understanding of biblical authority. But then I began to
understand: the same God who speaks to us through His
written Word, the Bible, spoke also through the Apostles of
Christ as they taught and preached in person. The Scriptures
themselves teach in this passage (and others) that this oral
tradition is what we are to keep! Written and oral tradition
are not in conflict, but are parts of one whole. This
explains why the Fathers teach that he who does not have the
Church as his Mother does not have God as his Father. In
coming to this realization, I concluded that I had grossly
overreacted in rejecting oral Holy Tradition. In my
hostility toward Jewish oral tradition, which rejected
Christ, I had rejected Christian oral Holy Tradition, which
expresses the life of the Holy Spirit in the Church. And I
had rejected the idea that this Tradition enables us
properly and fully to understand the Bible. Let me
illustrate this point with an experience I had recently. I
decided to build a shed behind my house. In preparation, I
studied a book on carpentry that has "everything" in it.
It’s full of pictures and diagrams, enough so that "even a
kid could follow its instructions." It explains itself, I
was told. But, simple as it claimed to be, the more I read
it, the more questions I had and the more confused I became.
Disgusted at not being able to understand something that
seemed so simple, I came to the conclusion that the book
needed interpretation. Without help, I just couldn’t put it
into practice. What I needed was someone with expertise who
could explain the manual to me. Fortunately, I had a friend
who was able to show me how the project should be completed.
He knows because of oral tradition. An experienced carpenter
taught him, and he in turn taught me. Written and oral
tradition together got the job done.
WHICH CAME FIRST?
What confronted me at this point was the
bottom line question: Which came first, the Church or the
New Testament? I knew that the Incarnate Word of God, Jesus
Christ, had called the Apostles, who in turn formed the
nucleus of the Christian Church. I knew that the Eternal
Word of God therefore preceded the Church and gave birth to
the Church. When the Church heard the Incarnate Word of God
and committed His Word to writing, she thereby participated
with God in giving birth to the written Word, the New
Testament. Thus it was the Church which gave birth to and
preceded the New Testament. To the question, "Which came
first, the Church or the New Testament?" the answer, both
biblically and historically, is crystal clear. Someone might
protest, "Does it really make any difference which came
first? After all, the Bible contains everything that we need
for salvation." The Bible is adequate for salvation in the
sense that it contains the foundational material needed to
establish us on the correct path. On the other hand, it is
wrong to consider the Bible as being self-sufficient and
self-interpreting. The Bible is meant to be read and
understood by the illumination of God’s Holy Spirit within
the life of the Church. Did not the Lord Himself tell His
disciples, just prior to His crucifixion, "When He, the
Spirit of truth, has come, He will guide you into all truth;
for He will not speak on His own authority, but whatever He
hears He will speak; and He will tell you things to come" (John
16:13)? He also said, "I will
build My church, and the gates of Hades shall not prevail
against it" (Matthew
16:18). Our Lord did not leave us
with only a book to guide us. He left us with His Church.
The Holy Spirit within the Church teaches us, and His
teaching complements Scripture. How foolish to believe that
God’s full illumination ceased after the New Testament books
were written and did not resume until the Protestant
Reformation in the sixteenth century, or-to take this
argument to its logical conclusion-until the very moment
when 1, myself, started reading the Bible. Either the Holy
Spirit was in the Church throughout the centuries following
the New Testament period, leading, teaching, and
illuminating her in her understanding of the gospel message,
or the Church has been left a spiritual orphan, with
individual Christians independently interpreting-and often
"authoritatively" teaching the same Scripture in radically
different ways. Such chaos cannot be the will of God, "for
God is not the author of confusion but of peace" (1
Corinthians 14:33).
A TIME TO DECIDE
At this point in my studies, I felt I had to make a
decision. If the Church was not just a tangent or a
sidelight to the Scripture, but rather an active participant
in its development and preservation, then it was time to
reconcile my differences with her and abandon my prejudices.
Rather than trying to judge the Church according to my
modern preconceptions about what the Bible was saying, I
needed to humble myself and come into union with the Church
that produced the New Testament, and let her guide me into a
proper understanding of Holy Scripture. After carefully
exploring various church bodies, I finally realized that,
contrary to the beliefs of many modern Christians, the
Church which produced the Bible is not dead. The Orthodox
Church today has direct and clear historical continuity with
the Church of the Apostles, and it preserves intact both the
Scriptures and the Holy Tradition which enables us to
interpret them properly. Once I understood this, I converted
to Orthodoxy and began to experience the fullness of
Christianity in a way I never had before. Though he may have
coined the slogan, the fact is that Luther himself did not
practice Sola Scriptura. If he had, he’d have tossed out the
Creeds and spent less time writing commentaries. The phrase
came about as a result of the reformers’ struggles against
the added human traditions of Romanism. Understandably, they
wanted to be sure their faith was accurate according to New
Testament standards. But to isolate the Scriptures from the
Church, to deny 1500 years of history, is something the
slogan Sola Scriptura and the Protestant Reformers-Luther,
Calvin, and later Wesley-never intended to do. To those who
try to stand dogmatically on Sola
Scriptura, in the process
rejecting the Church which not only produced the New
Testament, but also, through the guidance of the Holy
Spirit, identified those books which compose the New
Testament, I would say this: Study the history of the early
Church and the development of the New Testament canon. Use
source documents where possible. (It is amazing how some of
the most "conservative" Bible scholars of the evangelical
community turn into cynical and rationalistic liberals when
discussing early Church history!) Examine for yourself what
happened to God’s people after the twenty-eighth chapter of
the Book of Acts. You will find a list of helpful sources at
the end of this booklet. If you examine the data and look
with objectivity at what occurred in those early days, I
think you will discover what I discovered. The life and work
of God’s Church did not grind to a halt after the first
century and start up again in the sixteenth. If it had, we
would not possess the New Testament books which are so dear
to every Christian believer. The separation of Church and
Bible which is so prevalent in much of today’s Christian
world is a modern phenomenon. Early Christians made no such
artificial distinctions. Once you have examined the data, I
would encourage you to find out more about the historic
Church which produced the New Testament, preserved it, and
selected those books which would be part of its canon. Every
Christian owes it to himself or herself to discover the
Orthodox Christian Church and to understand its vital role
in proclaiming God’s Word to our own generation.
SUGGESTED READING
Bruce, F.F., The Canon
of Scripture, Downers Grove, Illinois: InterVarsity
Press, 1988.
Eusebius,
Ecclesiastical History, Grand Rapids, Michigan: Baker
Book House, 1990.
Farmer, William R. &
Farkasfalvy, Denis, The Formation of the New Testament
Canon: An Ecumenical Approach, New York: Paulist Press,
1983.
Gamble, Harry Y., The
New Testament Canon: Its Making and Meaning,
Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1985.
Kesich, Veselin, The
Gospel Image of Christ, Crestwood, New York: St.
Vladimir’s Seminary Press, 1992.
Metzger, Bruce Manning,
The Canon of the New Testament: Its Origin, Development,
and Significance, New York: Oxford University Press,
1987.
Meyendorff, John,
Living Tradition, Crestwood, New York: St. Vladimir’s
Seminary Press, 1978. Histories of Christianity
generally give some information on the formation of the
Canon, although they are not likely to discuss its
relevance to the authority and interpretation of
Scripture.
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