Thursday, July 31, 2014

The house of cards of Biblical inerrancy

I run into people all the time within evangelicalism who basically subscribe to this belief about the Bible:

"God inspired humans to write down exactly what God wanted them to write.  Therefore everything in the Bible, from Genesis to the Revelation, is God-breathed.  Since God is perfect, what he does is perfect, so the Bible is without error in everything it speaks of."

Although not a technical definition, this is the basic idea that is meant by the term "Biblical inerrancy".  This foundational belief leads to the next one:

"Good Christians believe everything the Bible says and never doubt it, regardless of what modern scholarship and science discovers. If there is a discrepancy between something in modern scholarship or science and the words of the Bible, good Christians will always hold to the Bible teaching and reject or doubt the modern discoveries."

Good, faithful people are taught that there are no discrepancies or contradictions in the scripture.  Or, if there are things that seem like contradictions, there is a way to "harmonize" the divergent facts and still hold to the doctrine of inerrancy.

Although this seems like a very "high" view of scripture, and very worshipful and faithful, there is an underlying problem that such a view of scripture sets up.  With such a view of the Bible, IF an error is found, the entire Bible is cast under suspicion.  "If there is an error there...how can I be sure that there aren't errors in other places as well?  And if God didn't write the Bible perfectly, then how can I trust that I can follow it's teachings to find eternal life? How can I tell where it is true and where it is in error?"

Thus, under the idea of Biblical inerrancy, a single discrepancy or contradiction or error found in the Biblical texts can actual derail a person's entire faith in Jesus, and make their version of Christianity fall to pieces like a house of cards.

Likewise, people on the outside of Christianity looking in feel that they could NEVER become a Christian, because they would have to accept the Bible as inerrant, a position which is intellectually impossible for them to accept.

As a pastor, I want to help my people to a more secure foundation for their faith.  As a father, I want to lead my wife and children to a more secure foundation for their faith.  I do not want them to feel that they either have to believe in modern scholarship and science OR the Bible.  I want to help people develop ideas about the Bible that actually work in our modern age for people inside and outside the Christian faith.

But it is a risky thing to even speak of what the next posts will discuss - glaring problems with the doctrine of inerrancy, starting with the 2nd chapter of the Bible.

Why this blog?

Here's a newsflash.  My name is not Chris.  My last name is not Christianity.

I am an American Christian man.  I have worked as a pastor for over 20 years, picking up a bachelor degree at a Christian liberal arts university and a Master in Theology at a seminary along the way.

But I am not the person I was when I started down this path toward career Christian leadership.  Although once comfortable with the term "evangelical" to describe myself, I find myself aligning less and less with the beliefs and practices of evangelical Christianity.

I am a firm believer in Jesus Christ as the Messiah, the Son of God.  I affirm the Apostle's Creed. But I cannot accept much of what is required of "evangelical Christians" to believe and do.

My hope in writing this blog is to give me a place to safely and honestly share my theological wonderings and wanderings.  I hope it may become a place where others who are walking a similar spiritual path as myself may find encouragement and the courage to follow our convictions.

If you're reading this, welcome.  And may God's grace be with you.