As Paul reminded Timothy, "All Scripture is inspired by God and is
[therefore] useful for teaching, reproof, correction, and instruction in
righteousness" (2 Tim. 3:16)--all Scripture, not just our "life verses."
At the same time, the Westminster Confession properly reminds us that
not everything in Scripture is equally plain or equally important. We
have to interpret the more difficult passages in the light of clearer
ones. Scripture interprets Scripture, and we learn the whole meaning of
Scripture by studying its parts and its parts by learning the whole. You
need the box-top and the puzzle-pieces.
Of course, there is
disagreement about which verses are "difficult" and which are "clear,"
as well as which are more important. I think we'd all agree that the
meaning of Christ's descent into hell is less clear and less important
than his incarnation, active and passive obedience, resurrection,
ascension, and return. Nevertheless, on a host of other points the roads
diverge. Most evangelicals would place church government in the "Who
Cares?" category. Far from being at the core of the faith, such a view
was at least important enough to divide the Reformed tradition over
Episcopal, Presbyterian, and Congregational polities. For Eastern
Orthodoxy, episcopacy is essential to the very existence of the church,
and Rome takes it one step further, insisting on the primacy of the
bishop of Rome.
Even when it comes to the gospel, there are
quite different assumptions at play. Eastern Orthodox churches think
that the clear and important passages emphasize theosis--a
process of being conformed to Christ-likeness that leads to final
salvation through a combination of grace and free will. Roman Catholics
have traditionally maintained that the clear and important passages
teach the reconciliation of humanity in the church through its
management of the treasury of merit.
Arminians think that the
clear and important passages teach the primacy of God's love (over other
attributes), the universality of grace, and the libertarian free will
of human beings. While Reformed theology never teaches God's sovereignty
(predestination) as a central dogma from which every other doctrine is
deduced, the love of God and a libertarian view of free will do function
that way in standard Arminian systems. Arminians often acknowledge a
stand-off: Calvinists enshrine God's sovereignty and predestination,
while they make God's universal love and human freedom normative. "You
have your verses and we have ours," is the oft-heard shrug that can only
weaken the believer's confidence in the unity, consistency, and
reliability of Scripture. Continue at Michael Horton
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