This is one of my brain-splat efforts, so may not make any sense!
It started the day after Boxing Day when my Mum said she needed to discuss with me something about prayer. My kid sister said it wasn't about prayer at all, it was about Christology - she was right, but it didn't actually resolve the issue, which was about the current practice at the Sally Army citadel my mother attends (dead ecumenical, my family) of addressing prayers directly to Jesus. My mother said this was wrong, proscribed by Jesus himself, who was the son of God, not God. Plenty of scope for a PhD there, methinks, and certainly got us into a fascinating disucssion that led not very far. Whilst I have a deal of sympathy with my mum's objections to the prayers she experiences, my grounds for objection are miles from hers. I guess she is probably a sort of 'preconscious literalist' (was that Tillich? I cannot remember and am too lazy to go and look it up) and expects the Bible to act as rule book for public worship. The idea of timeless and timebound which we tried to explain (along with a bit of cultural conditioning) and how one ought to approach Biblical silences were not something she could grasp, although when I offered a set of views on the Trinity, she rapidly pounced on a hierarchical model as 'that's how it is.' I disagree, but hey ho.
My sister is loving the hermenuetics aspect of her MA, boldly declaring that it 'lets scripture be scripture unlike Biblical studies which is all the sitz im leben and such like rubbish.' I think that's unfair to both disciplines, not least cos my Biblical studies tutor remains firmly in my top 5 preachers, and it is clearly very much at odds with the forgoing discussion, but it did have a resonance with some of the stuff I have recently been thinking about in relation to theological reflection and my own spiritual life.
I vaguely remember something in a book I read donkeys' years ago which was trying to explain with a little story the dangers of analysing scripture. It took the extreme of imagining that some aliens took a Bible away and analysed it chemically, thereby missing the point. Similar stories speak of it being reduced to ink blobs on paper. Even allowing for preaching exageration, these stories are a bit daft - the Bible is read by people who know what the function of a 'book' is, where people differ is on how one should approach reading a book and making use of what it contains. For me, learning Biblical studies skills has enhanced rather than threatened my appreciation of scripture; as the old hymn of which I am rather fond says 'the Lord has yet more light and truth to break forth from his word.'
And yet, my sister's objections raise good questions in my mind: if there is a need to relate Biblical studies, hermeneutics and homiletics (which there is) how does this read across to other areas of theology? The three-Gortons-twenty-five-opinions discussions (remember we have Jewish and small-c congregationalist influences; these factors multiply!) got me thinking about the mismatch I observe when people undertake 'formal' theological reflection. All the methods I've seen at some point involve finding a Bible story that 'speaks to the situation' or 'illustrates the idea.' In my experience, without exception, what then occurs is that the story is taken at face value and a fairly simplistic 'reader response' (i.e. "this is what I think it means") is used to apply it. The insights from Bibilcal studies are discarded, at least at a conscious level.
This is not wrong, but it is limited. And I think it is relevant as I begin to use historical resources in my own research. From the very limited reading I have so far completed, historians are lagging behind Biblical scholars in their approach to texts, tending still to accept at face value what is written, rather than speculating (for that is all one can do) on the motivation of the writer, the purpose for which she/he was writing etc etc. Whilst history does include some facts - dates, places, names - a lot of it is actually a 'story.'
So one question that arises in my mind is something like, 'how can the critical skills of Biblical studies be employed in a healthy relationship with hermeneutics, homiletics and theological reflection, and how can these skills and insights be transferred to the use of Christian history ('tradition') within theological reflection?' Answers on a postcard...
Oh, and as a throw away, I recently bought a new edition of a standard English Baptist history. Flicking through it, I spotted the entry on a topic I had researched in some depth - it was presented as an issue for General Baptists only, when actually the people who wrote the books and had a big debate about it were Particular Baptists. All historians are biased, and without trying I found an example! I can guess at why the bais was as it is, but it is a bias nonetheless. maybe the next question is how nerdy one has to get in checking out everything one reads - especially if I write it!!!
PS Sean, when you read this at some point, I am hoping your Whitley lecture will offer me some helpful insights here.
PPS Can anyone tell me the correct name of the study of prayer? Prayeology?!
Comments
Hi Catriona
No pressure there then! The text is with the editor at the moment and so copies will be available in next few weeks - are you coming to one of the lectures (Assembly?) - otherwise I will send you a copy.
Really, really tempted to ask who the other 4 are,
Hi Sean - the other four, that would be telling! Actually it varies with time but John Stott (who I last heard about 20 years ago) and Brian Howden also manage to stay in the list at the moment. Btw, this is not the same as my top five sermons whose preachers don't necessarily feature in this list, and my all time most memorable sermon which was delivered by one of your erstwhile colleagues and means I now understand exactly how an evening and a thousand years are the same in the eyes of God.
Hope to get up to LKH for the lecture (excuse to have a day out!) failing that, Assembly unless there's a really good alternative.
Interesting point about historians. I was under the impression that historians by definition were interpreters of data - documents, artifacts, etc. - and conscious evaluators of their sources. Maybe they do it less self-consciously than the theologian or the biblical critic, or maybe they just don't show their workings if they're writing for the popular market.
Having said that, my old history teacher at O level marked our essays according to how many 'facts' we included. An early effort of mine once scored 12, so I was obviously a metaphysician even then!