Sunday, October 8, 2017

Now, How Am I To Interpret That

Returning to Quiet Rest a couple of weeks ago from Fort Myers, I've been thinking how differently I interpret the two cultures of which I live. Also, the issue of communicating my interpretation effectively to friends, acquaintances, and sometimes family? Kind of like one of those fantastic illusionist on America's Got Talent or the Carbonaro Effect.  We will watch, look at each other and ask rhetorically: "How did he do that or how can a nine year have a voice, like that?" Sometimes I even note a hit of interpretation snags between Bets and myself.  Both of us, will often interrupt one another by adding: " I didn't understand it to be that way," or maybe, "there's more to the story than what he's saying or how she's acting."  But then again, I think; is this not part of the postmodern milieu of which I am part of?  Questions of interpretation—whose interpretation, which interpretation, what interpretation—has been at the forefront of discussions as far back as President Clinton's: "depending on what the meaning of "is" is. In today's political ambient, my sense is that the modern assumptions of objective and definitive truths are mostly false. I'm left with suspicion as to whether or not I can honestly believe anything any particular politician says is the truth.  Early in my life, Dad told me many times, "believe nothing you hear and only half of what you see."

I realize that issues of interpretation, of course, are not simply matters of intellectual speculation. I remember there have been many times I have been personally involved in discussions about the interpretation of reality. What political party accurately assesses national realities? Which media outlet presents the news fairly and without bias? Which cultural icons and artists illuminate the human condition in all of its complexity?

And of course I believe people of all faiths wrestle with questions of interpretation, as well. What does this passage mean? What are its implications? How does it make sense in the world today? And how can there be so many different interpretations for the same passage?

Questions of interpretation notwithstanding, my Christian faith claims to know and to represent the truth. For example I claim that the truth is contained in Scripture. But I am less clear in the murky world of interpretation about how that truth is to be presented and how it is able to transcend culture and language. St. Augustine, writing in the fourth century, asked similar questions about the opening words of Genesis: Does it mean in the beginning of time, because it was the first of all things, or in the beginning, which is the Word of God, the only begotten Son? And how could it be shown that God produced changeable and time-bound works without any change in Himself? And what may be meant by the name heaven and earth? Was it the total spiritual and bodily creation that was termed heaven and earth, or only the bodily sort? And in what way did God say let light be made? Was it in time or in the eternity of the Word? And what is this light that was made? Something spiritual or something bodily?

Augustine's
questions concerning the first chapter of Genesis has given me just a glimpse into some of the complexities of interpreting the text of Scripture. Yet, it seems to me that even with all his questions, Augustine understood that as one inhabited the world of the Scriptures, God was being revealed through a living story. The story of Israel and the person of Jesus portray a God who redeems. I was taught early on and believe, the writers of the Old and New Testaments were inspired to write down their time-honored oral traditions in order to make them 'alive' for future generations, and to give testimony of God's redemption for future generations. In this way, God saw fit to "enflesh" not only the essence of the spoken and written words that had come before, but also something of the very nature and truth of reality.

I testify to the fact that Jesus is God's ultimate act of speech. He is the living bible, and the One who interprets the very nature and truth of God. The writer of the letter to the Hebrews 1 tells that "in the former days, the days of old, God spoke through the prophets; but in these last days, God has spoken to us by a Son". And in the Gospel of John, chapter 1 I see we are told that God's ultimate word, God's ultimate form of speech is the inscription of the person of Jesus: "In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God...and the Word became flesh and dwelt among us, full of grace and truth; and we have beheld his glory, glory as of the only begotten from God." I think these writers of the written word inform that the ultimate, final, definitive word of God is the Word made flesh, Jesus Christ. Jesus is the living bible and His life communicates the truth of God to me and every other person on earth.

Therefore, the truth is more than facts and information to acquire, the truth is a Person. Reading the writer of the letter to the Hebrews, I understand he  makes this very point. There is a distinction between what had been inscribed (the law and the teachings of the prophets) and the Living Word, Jesus Christ, Who was sent by the Father. Of course, the advent of Jesus as the Living Word does not nullify or invalidate the written word. The two have something of a complementary  relationship. All of written scripture points to the Living Word, Jesus, and to the saving activity of God. Jesus fulfills the written word, and all of the written word finds its meaning and its completion in the life and teachings of Jesus. Indeed, Jesus is the living embodiment of Israel's law and prophets! Jesus is saying this about Himself in the Sermon on the Mount: "Do not think that I came to abolish the law or the prophets; I did not come to abolish but to fulfill." In His life, Jesus embodies God's kingdom and the Word made flesh interprets for me what it looks like to live in God's kingdom-order.
British New Testament scholar N.T. Wright, in his writing of The Last Word says: "The authority of scripture is most truly put into operation as the church goes to work in the world on behalf of the gospel, the good news that in Jesus Christ the kingdom of God has come and the living God has defeated the powers of evil and begun the work of new creation in this world."

Father, God, thank You for giving me the grace of living a redemptive story. Even though I know that issues of interpretation will continue to press me as I seek to faithfully communicate and make sense of reality, provide me the added grace to be a living bible as I retell Your story and claim to be a follower of Your Son, Jesus. I proclaim You the God who saved me and is saving still—my life in making plain the interpretation.  Amen

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