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mackbrislawn
Guest
Our claim is that the substance of verbal tradition is no different than what is contained in the Scriptures.
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I personally agree–the substance of verbal tradition is no different than what is contained in the Scriptures.
The problem arises, however, in determining what it is that is contained in the Scriptures! In that question, there is considerable debate. Many interpet the Scriptures in a way that does not agree with verbal tradition.
This relates back to the question posed earlier by the Jehovah’s Witnesses–suppose a bible dropped down from the sky in a desert and someone picked it up and read it, would that person come to believe in the Trinity? Well, we would have to admit to the JW, that no, he would probably not come to think of God as Trinity the way we do. Of course, we could also turn that question around on the JW and ask, would that same person in the desert come to believe that the Watchtower was God’s organization on earth? Certainly not. Would they come to believe that Jesus returned invisibly in 1914? Doubtful.
The fact of the matter is, there is really no way to predict what that person would come to believe upon reading Scripture. Because we have no way of knowing what prior ideas that person has in his skull. Does he believe in God at all? Does he believe in mulitiple gods? What attitude does he have toward his reading? Is it literal? Symbolic? Allegorical? If he believed in many gods, he might very well take Jesus to be one of them. Would he even connect the God of Jesus with the God of Abraham? Possibly not. The gnostics didn’t.
So, one’s prior assumptions will determine what you take out of the bible. The JW’s ask their question about the bible falling into the desert as a way of illustrating someone unfamiliar with the bible who discovers it for the first time. A real example of today would be for a non-Chrisitan, untaught in Christian teachings, who picks up a Gideon bible in his motel room and reads it for the first time. Would he understand it properly? Again, it is doubtful.
Peter states this himself in 2Peter 3:15-16, “…just as also our beloved brother Paul, according to the wisdom given him, wrote to you, as in all his letters, speaking in them of these things, in which are some things hard to understand, which the untaught and unstable distort, as they do also the rest of the Scriptures, to their own destruction.”
Peter applies this to the rest of the Scriptures as well as to the specific writings of Paul. Hence, scripture itself asserts that an untaught person will likely distort Scripture. Untaught in what? Untaught in the kerygma, the verbal tradition.
That is why knowledge of the prior kerygma is so important. For understanding the Trinity in Scripture, and for many other scriptural teachings which the verbal tradition clarifies.