THE ORTHODOX APPROACH TO TRUTH
When, by God's mercy, I found the Orthodox Faith, I had no desire to
give Protestantism and its "methods" of Bible study a second look.
Unfortunately, I have found that Protestant methods and assumptions
have managed to infect even some circles within the Orthodox Church.
The reason for this is, as stated above, that the Protestant approach
to Scripture has been portrayed as "science." Some in the Orthodox
Church feel they do the Church a great favor by introducing this error
into our seminaries and parishes. But this is nothing new; this is how
heresy has always sought to deceive the faithful. As Saint Irenaeus
said, as he began his attack on the heresies current in his day:
By means of specious and plausible words, they cunningly allure the
simple-minded to inquire into their system; but they nevertheless
clumsily destroy them, while they initiate them into their blasphemous
opinions....
Error, indeed, is never set forth in its naked deformity, lest, being
thus exposed, it should at once be detected. But it is craftily decked
out in an attractive dress, so as, by its outward form, to make it
appear to the inexperienced (ridiculous as the expression may seem)
more true than truth itself.18
Lest any be mistaken or confused, let me be clear: the Orthodox
approach to the Scriptures is not based upon "scientific" research
into the Holy Scriptures. Its claim to understand the Scriptures does
not reside in its claiming superior archaeological data, but rather in
its unique relationship with the Author of the Scriptures. The
Orthodox Church is the body of Christ, the pillar and ground of the
Truth, and it is both the means by which God wrote the Scriptures
(through its members) and the means by which God has preserved the
Scriptures. The Orthodox Church understands the Bible because it is
the inheritor of one living tradition that begins with Adam and
stretches through time to all its members today. That this is true
cannot be "proven" in a lab. One must be convinced by the Holy Spirit
and experience the life of God in the Church.
The question Protestants will ask at this point is who is to say that
the Orthodox Tradition is the correct tradition, or that there even is
a correct tradition? First, Protestants need to study the history of
the Church. They will find that there is only one Church. This has
always been the faith of the Church from its beginning. The Nicene
Creed makes this point clearly, "I believe in... one Holy, Catholic
and Apostolic Church." This statement, which almost every Protestant
denomination still claims to accept as true, was never interpreted to
refer to some fuzzy, pluralistic invisible "church" that cannot agree
on anything doctrinally. The councils that canonized the Creed (as
well as the Scriptures) also anathematized those who were outside the
Church, whether they were heretics, such as the Montanists, or
schismatics like the Donatists. They did not say, "well we can't agree
with the Montanists doctrinally but they are just as much a part of
the Church as we are." Rather they were excluded from the communion of
the Church until they returned to the Church and were received into
the Church through Holy Baptism and Chrismation (in the case of
heretics) or simply Chrismation (in the case of schismatics) [Second
Ecumenical Council, Canon VII]. To even join in prayer with those
outside the Church was, and still is, forbidden [Canons of the Holy
Apostles, canons XLV, XLVI]. Unlike Protestants, who make heros of
those who break away from another group and start their own, in the
early Church this was considered among the most damnable sins. As St.
Ignatius of Antioch [a disciple of the Apostle John] warned, "Make no
mistake brethren, no one who follows another into a schism will
inherit the Kingdom of God, no one who follows heretical doctrines is
on the side of the passion" [to the Philadelphians 5:3].
The very reason there arose a Protestant movement was that they were
protesting Papal abuses, but prior to the Roman West breaking away
from the Orthodox East these abuses did not exist. Many modern
Protestant theologians have recently begun to take a second look at
this first millennium of undivided Christendom, and are beginning to
discover the great treasure that the West has lost (and not a few are
becoming Orthodox as a result).19
Obviously, one of three statements is true: either (1) there is no
correct Tradition and the gates of hell did prevail against the
Church, and thus both the Gospels and the Nicene Creed are in error;
or (2) the true Faith is to be found in Papism, with its ever-growing
and changing dogmas defined by the infallible "vicar of Christ;" or
(3) the Orthodox Church is the one Church founded by Christ and has
faithfully preserved the Apostolic Tradition. So the choice for
Protestants is clear: relativism, Romanism, or Orthodoxy.
Most Protestants, because their theological basis of Sola Scriptura
could only yield disunity and argument, have long ago given up on the
idea of true Christian unity and considered it a ridiculous hypothesis
that there might be only one Faith. When faced with such strong
affirmations concerning Church unity as those cited above, they often
react in horror, charging that such attitudes are contrary to
Christian love. Finding themselves without true unity they have
striven to create a false unity, by developing the relativistic
philosophy of ecumenism, in which the only belief to be condemned is
any belief that makes exclusive claims about the Truth. However, this
is not the love of the historical Church, but humanistic
sentimentality. Love is the essence of the Church. Christ did not come
to establish a new school of thought, but rather, He, Himself said
that He came to build His Church, against which the gates of hell
would not prevail (Matthew 16:17). This new community of the Church
created "an organic unity rather than a mechanical unification of
internally divided persons."20 This unity is only possible through the
new life brought by the Holy Spirit, and mystically experienced in the
life of the Church.
Christian faith joins the faithful with Christ and thus it composes
one harmonious body from separate individuals. Christ fashions this
body by communicating Himself to each member and by supplying to them
the Spirit of Grace in an effectual, tangible manner.... If the bond
with the body of the Church becomes severed then the personality which
is thereby isolated and enclosed in its own egoism will be deprived of
the beneficial and abundant influence of the Holy Spirit which dwells
within the Church. 21
The Church is one because it is the body of Christ, and it is an
ontological impossibility that it could be divided. The Church is one,
even as Christ and the Father are one. Though this concept of unity
may seem incredible, it does not seems so to those who have gone
beyond the concept and entered into its reality. Though this may be
one of those "hard sayings" that many cannot accept, it is a reality
in the Orthodox Church, though it demands from everyone much
self-denial, humility and love.22
Our faith in the unity of the Church has two aspects, it is both an
historic and present unity. That is to say that when the Apostles, for
example, departed this life they did not depart from the unity of the
Church. They are as much a part of the Church now as when they were
present in the flesh. When we celebrate the Eucharist in any local
Church, we do not celebrate it alone, but with the entire Church, both
on earth and in heaven. The Saints in heaven are even closer to us
than those we can see or touch. Thus, in the Orthodox Church we are
not only taught by those people in the flesh whom God has appointed to
teach us, but by all those teachers of the Church in heaven and on
earth. We are just as much under the teaching today of Saint John
Chrysostom as we are of our own Bishop. The way this impacts our
approach to Scripture is that we do not interpret it privately (II
Peter 1:20), but as a Church. This approach to Scripture was given its
classic definition by St. Vincent of Lerins:
Here, perhaps, someone may ask: Since the canon of the Scripture is
complete and more than sufficient in itself, why is it necessary to
add to it the authority of ecclesiastical interpretation? As a matter
of fact, [we must answer,] Holy Scripture, because of its depth, is
not universally accepted in one and the same sense. The same text is
interpreted differently by different people, so that one may almost
gain the impression that it can yield as many different meanings as
there are men.... Thus it is because of the great many distortions
caused by various errors, that it is, indeed, necessary that the trend
of the interpretation of the prophetic and apostolic writings be
directed in accordance with the rule of the ecclesiastical and
Catholic meaning.
In the Catholic Church itself, every care should be taken to hold fast
to what has been believed everywhere, always, and by all. This is
truly and properly ėCatholic,' as indicated by the force and etymology
of the name itself, which comprises everything truly universal. This
general rule will be truly applied if we follow the principles of
universality, antiquity, and consent. We do so in regard to
universality if we confess that faith alone to be true which the
entire Church confesses all over the world. [We do so] in regard to
antiquity if we in no way deviate from those interpretations which our
ancestors and fathers have manifestly proclaimed as inviolable. [We do
so] in regard to consent if, in this very antiquity, we adopt the
definitions and propositions of all, or almost all, of the Bishops.23
In this approach to Scriptures, it is not the job of the individual to
strive for originality, but rather to understand what is already
present in the traditions of the Church. We are obliged not to go
beyond the boundary set by the Fathers of the Church, but to
faithfully pass on the tradition we received. To do this requires a
great deal of study and thought, but even more, if we are to truly
understand the Scriptures, we must enter deeply into the mystical life
of the Church. This is why when St. Augustine expounds on how one
should interpret the Scriptures [On Christian Doctrine, Books i-iv],
he spends much more time talking about the kind of person the study of
the Scripture requires than about the intellectual knowledge he should
possess:24
1. One who loves God with his whole heart, and is empty of pride,
2. Is motivated to seek the Knowledge of God's will by faith and
reverence, rather than pride or greed,
3. Has a heart subdued by piety, a purified mind, dead to the world;
and who neither fears, nor seeks to please men,
4. Who seeks nothing but knowledge of and union with Christ,
5. Who hungers and thirsts after righteousness,
6. And is diligently engaged in works of mercy and love.
With such a high standard as this, we should even more humbly lean
upon the guidance of holy Fathers who have evidenced these virtues,
and not delude ourselves by thinking that we are more capable or
clever interpreters of God's Holy Word than they.
But what of the work that has been done by Protestant Biblical
scholars? To the degree that it helps us understand the history behind
and meaning of obscurities, to this degree it is in line with the Holy
Tradition and can be used.
As Saint Gregory Nazianzen put it when speaking of pagan literature:
"As we have compounded healthful drugs from certain of the reptiles,
so from secular literature we have received principles of enquiry and
speculation, while we have rejected their idolatry..."25 Thus as long
as we refrain from worshiping the false gods of Individualism,
Modernity, and Academic Vainglory, and as long as we recognize the
assumptions at work and use those things that truly shed historical or
linguistic light upon the Scriptures, then we will understand the
Tradition more perfectly. But to the degree that Protestant
scholarship speculates beyond the canonical texts, and projects
foreign ideas upon the Scriptures - to the degree that they disagree
with the Holy Tradition, the "always and everywhere" faith of the
Church, they are wrong.
If Protestants should think this arrogant or naive, let them first
consider the arrogance and naivete of those scholars who think that
they are qualified to override (and more usually, totally ignore) two
thousand years of Christian teaching. Does the acquisition of a Ph.D.
give one greater insight into the mysteries of God than the total
wisdom of millions upon millions of faithful believers and the Fathers
and Mothers of the Church who faithfully served God, who endured
horrible tortures and martyrdom, mockings, and imprisonments, for the
faith? Is Christianity learned in the comfort of one's study, or as
one carries his cross to be killed on it? The arrogance lies in those
who, without even taking the time to learn what the Holy Tradition
really is, decide that they know better, that only now has someone
come along who has rightly understood what the Scriptures really mean.
CONCLUSION
The Holy Scriptures are perhaps the summit of the Holy Tradition of
the Church, but the greatness of the heights to which the Scriptures
ascend is due to the great mountain upon which it rests. Taken from
its context, within the Holy Tradition, the solid rock of Scripture
becomes a mere ball of clay, to be molded into whatever shape its
handlers wish to mold it. It is no honor to the Scriptures to misuse
and twist them, even if this is done in the name of exalting their
authority. We must read the Bible; it is God's Holy Word. But to
understand its message let us humbly sit at the feet of the saints who
have shown themselves "doers of the Word and not hearers only" (James
1:22), and have been proven by their lives worthy interpreters of the
Scriptures. Let us go to those who knew the Apostles, such as Saints
Ignatius of Antioch and Polycarp, if we have a question about the
writings of the Apostles. Let us inquire of the Church, and not fall
into self-deluded arrogance.
FOOTNOTES
1. George Mastrantonis, trans., Augsburg and Constantinople: the
Correspondence between the Tubingen Theologians and Patriarch Jeremiah
II of Constantinople on the Augsburg Confession (Brookline, Mass.:
Holy Cross Orthodox Press, 1982), 114.
2. The Illustrated Bible Dictionary, vol. 2 (Wheaton: Tyndale House
Publishers, 1980), "Jannes and Jambres," by A. F. Walls, 733 -734.
3. Indeed this list did not even intend to comprise all the books
which the Church has preserved from antiquity and considers part of
the larger Tradition. For example, the book of Enoch, though quoted in
the canonical books, was not itself included in the canon. I will not
pretend to know why this is so, but for whatever reasons the Church
has chosen to preserve this book, and yet has not appointed it to be
read in Church or to be set along side the canonical books.
4. For example, there is no place where the question of the inerrancy
of the Scriptures is dealt with in detail, precisely because this was
not an issue of dispute. In our present day, with the rise of
religious skepticism, this is very much an issue, and if the epistles
were being written today, this would certainly be dealt with at some
point. It would thus be foolish to conclude that since this issue is
not dealt with specifically, that the early Christians did not think
it was important or did not believe in it.
5. Alexander Schmemann, Introduction to Liturgical Theology (Crestwood
NY: St Vladimir's Seminary Press, 1986), 51 ff.
6. And in fact, this is what Protestant scholarship has done. Though
Protestantism was founded on its claim of believing the Bible to be
the only authority for faith and practice, modern Protestant
scholarship is now dominated by modernists who no longer believe in
the inspiration or inerrancy of the Scriptures. They now stand above
the Bible and only choose to use those parts that suit them and
discard the rest as "primitive mythology and legend." The only
authority left for such as these is themselves.
7. The Waldensians were a sect that was founded in the 12th century
founded by Peter Waldo which in some ways anticipated the Protestant
Reformation. Due to persecution by the Roman Catholic Church this sect
survived primarily in the mountainous regions of northwestern Italy.
With the advent of the Protestant Reformation, the Waldensians came
under the influence of the Reformed movement and essentially joined
forces with it. Many early Protestant historians claimed that the
Waldensians represented a remnant of "true" Christians that had
existed prior to Constantine. Though today no credible historian would
make such an unsubstantiated claim, many fundamentalists and cults
like the Jehovah's Witnesses continue to claim descent from the early
church through the Waldensians - despite the fact that the Waldensians
still exist to this day, and they certainly do not claim the Jehovah's
Witnesses.
8. Mastrantonis, 115.
9. Ibid., 198.
10. Ibid., 115.
11. The term ėpositivism' comes from the French word positif, which
means ėsure,' or ėcertain.' This term was first used by Auguste Comte.
Positivistic systems are built upon the assumption that some fact or
institution is the ultimate basis of knowledge - in Comte's
philosophy, experience or sense-perception constituted that basis and
thus he was the forerunner of modern Empiricism [See Encyclopaedia of
Religion and Ethics, 1914 ed., s.v. "Positivism," by S.H. Swinny; and
Wolfhart Pannenburg, Theology and Philosophy of Science, trans.
Francis McDonagh (Philadelphia: Westminster Press, 1976), p. 29].
12. For example, one method for determining the reality of past
events, among empirically minded scholars, is the principle of
analogy. Since knowledge is based on experience, then the way one
understands what is unfamiliar is by relating it to something that is
familiar. Under the guise of historical analysis they judge the
probability of a supposed past event (e.g. the resurrection of Jesus)
based upon what we know to take place in our experience. And since
these historians have never observed anything which they would
consider supernatural they determine that when the Bible speaks of a
miraculous event in history that it merely is recounting a myth or a
legend. But since to the Empiricist, a ėmiracle' entails a violation
of a natural law, then there can be no miracles (by definition)
because natural laws are determined by our observation of what we
experience, so were such an Empiricist to be confronted with a modern
analogy of a miracle it would no longer be considered a miracle
because it would no longer constitute a violation of natural law. Thus
empiricists do not produce results that falsify transcendent reality,
or miracles; rather their presuppositions, from the very outset, deny
the possibility of such things. [see G. E. Michalson, Jr., "Pannenburg
on the Resurrection and Historical Method," Scottish Journal of
Theology 33 (April 1980): 345-359.]
13. Rev. Robert T. Osborn, "Faith as Personal Knowledge," Scottish
Journal of Theology 28 (February 1975): 101-126.
14. Gerhard Hasel, Old Testament Theology: Basic Issues in the Current
Debate (Grand Rapids: Eerdman's Publishing Company, 1982), p. 9.
15. Ibid., p. 7.
16. I have discussed Liberal Protestantism only to demonstrate the
fallacies of "Historical" exegesis.
An Orthodox Christian is much more likely to be confronted by a
conservative Fundamentalist or a Charismatic, simply because they take
their faith seriously enough to seek to convert others to it. Liberal
Protestant denominations have their hands full trying to keep their
own parishioners, and are not noted for their evangelistic zeal.
17. For a more in-depth critique of the excesses of the
Historical-Critical Method, see Thomas Oden, Agenda for Theology:
After Modernity What? (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1990) pp 103-147.
18. A Cleveland Coxe, trans., Ante-Nicene Fathers, vol. i, The
Apostolic Fathers with Justin Martyr and Irenaeus (Grand Rapids:
Eerdmans Publishing Company, 1989), p 315.
19. In fact a recent three volume systematic theology, by Thomas Oden,
is based on the premise that the "ecumenical consensus" of the first
millennium should be normative for theology [see, The Living God:
Systematic Theology Volume One, (New York: Harper & Row, 1987), pp ix
- xiv.]. If only Oden takes his own methodology all the way, he too
will become Orthodox.
20. The Holy New Martyr Archbishop Ilarion (Troitsky), Christianity or
the Church?, (Jordanville: Holy Trinity Monastery, 1985), p. 11.
21. Ibid., p. 16.
22. Ibid., p. 40.
23. St. Vincent of Lerins, trans. Rudolph Morris, The Fathers of the
Church vol.7, (Washington D.C.: Catholic University of America Press,
1949), pp. 269-271.
24. St. Augustine, "On Christian Doctrine," A Selected Library of the
Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers. series 1, vol. ii, eds. Henry Wace and
Philip Schaff, (New York: Christian, 1887-1900), pp. 534-537.
25. St. Gregory Nazianzen, "Oration 43, Panegyric on Saint Basil," A
Selected Library of the Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers of the
Christian Church, series 2, vol. vii, eds. Henry Wace and Philip
Schaff (New York: Christian, 18871900), p. 398f.
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