1 / 72

How to Read the Bible? Catholic Approaches to Biblical Interpretation

How to Read the Bible? Catholic Approaches to Biblical Interpretation. Felix Just, S.J., Ph.D. Loyola Institute for Spirituality – Orange, CA http://catholic-resources.org. Should Catholics read the Bible?. Common Warning before Vatican II DON’T read the Bible! Why Not?

evita
Télécharger la présentation

How to Read the Bible? Catholic Approaches to Biblical Interpretation

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. How to Read the Bible?Catholic Approachesto Biblical Interpretation Felix Just, S.J., Ph.D. Loyola Institute for Spirituality – Orange, CA http://catholic-resources.org

  2. Should Catholics read the Bible? • Common Warning before Vatican II • DON’T read the Bible! • Why Not? • Too dangerous! Too easy to misunderstand! • Just listen to what Sister or Father tells you about it. • New Emphasis since just before Vatican II: • DO read the Bible, but humbly, carefully, prayerfully! • How? • In Liturgy & Sacraments, communally & individually

  3. A Key Question: • Should Catholics Read the Bible Literally? • Do we accept the Literal Interpretation of the Bible? • Answer: YES!(Are you surprised?) • Distinctions: • “Literal” but not “literalistic” (not naively; not as fundamentalists) • “Literal” means “according to the letter”  Bible is literature! • “Literally” AND “spiritually” (not either/or)

  4. What Is “Fundamentalism”? • Five “Fundamentals” of Christian Doctrine (1890’s, Prot.) • Literal Inerrancy of the Bible(interpreted 100% factually) • Virgin Birth & Deity of Jesus • Substitutionary Atonement (Jesus’ death) • Bodily Resurrection of Jesus • Imminent Return of Jesus • Popular Appeal of Fundamentalism: • simplistic answers to complex questions • meaning of texts is obvious? • people crave certainty (don’t want ambiguity or complexity)

  5. 5 Principles of Catholic Biblical Interp. • “Incarnational Theology” Core (God’s Self-Revelation!) vs. bibliolatry, over-emphasis on Bible as text • “Both / And” Approach to Christian Theology vs. one-sided over-emphasis or neglect • “Ecclesial Guidance” for Proper Understanding vs. individualistic mis-interpretations • “Literary Genres” are Diverse/Complex vs. modernist / historicist assumptions • “Historical-Critical” Exegesis is Essential vs. fundamentalist / literalist fallacies

  6. Principles of Catholic Interpretation (1) Incarnational Principle: God’s Self-Revelation • “Revelation” = God’s “self-communication” in/to world • In multiple stages: more and more explicit over time • “Tradition” = “passing on” God’s revelation to future • In multiple stages: gradually more explicit and established

  7. Principles of Catholic Interpretation (1) Incarnational Theology is the Core & Climax • “Word of God” is not just a book (Bible), but Jesus! • Jesus is the Pinnacle of God’s Self-Revelation to the World • “God sent his only-begotten Son…” (John 3:16) • Incarnation: “The Word became Flesh…” (John 1:14) • Jesus of Nazareth = both Son of God and Son of Mary • Word of God (God speaks, things happen; cf. Gen 1) • Word made Flesh (God speaks in human languages) • See New Testament Christology (FJ)

  8. Principles of Catholic Interpretation (2) The “BOTH / AND” Approach is Foundational: • Applies to Theology in general, Scripture in particular • Heads/Tails, Positive/Negative, North/South Examples from Theology: • God is both transcendentandimmanent • Jesus is both fully humanand fully divine • The Eucharist is both a mealand a sacrifice Problems/Errors with One-Sided Over-emphases: • Ex: Blind people touching different parts of an Elephant

  9. Principles of Catholic Interpretation (2) The “BOTH / AND” Approach is Foundational: • Bible is both the Word of God and authored by humans • Bible contains both Old Testament and New Testament • Bible is both studied academically and prayed liturgically • Bible is used both individually and communally • Bible has both literal and spiritual meanings (4-fold meaning) Caution: Read it literally (as literature of various types), but not literalistically (mere historical facts) • See “BOTH/AND: The Essential Key to Catholic Theology” (FJ)

  10. Principles of Catholic Interpretation (3) “Ecclesial” Guidance is Necessary • Jesus, Disciples, Holy Spirit, Church: • All came before the Bible was written and compiled! • The Church (guided by the Holy Spirit) created the Bible,not only vice-versa! • Church community helps us understand the texts: • Homilies, Books, Courses, Bible Study, Scripture Sharing Groups, etc. • Personal interpretation should not conflict with Church Tradition • Popes and Bishops are the guarantors of the Church’s Tradition (assisted by theologians & exegetes)

  11. Official Church Documents: • Pope Pius XII: Divino Afflante Spiritu(1943) • Second Vatican Council: Dei Verbum(1965) • Pontifical Biblical Commission: • “Historical Truth of the Gospels” (1964) • “The Interpretation of the Bible in the Church” (1993) • Catechism of Catholic Church (1994; 2nd ed. 1997) • In section on “The Profession of Faith” (par. 51-141) • [ Online versions of these and related documents - FJ]

  12. Principles of Catholic Interpretation (4) Awareness of Literary Genres is Crucial: • “GENRE”= category or type of literature (or art, music, etc.) • characterized by a particular form, style, or content. • Many publications contain multiple genres: • Ex: Newspapers have news articles, editorials, comics, obituaries, sports results, financial reports, classified ads, movie reviews, etc. • The Bible is not just one “book,” but a whole “library” • It contains many different literary genres, not just “history” • See “An Introduction to Literary Genres & Form Criticism” (FJ)

  13. Hebrew Bible Genres • Myths & Legends(Genesis, parts of Exodus, Numbers, Deuteronomy) • Legal Codes(Leviticus, parts of Exodus, Numbers, Deuteronomy) • Genealogies(parts of Genesis, much of Numbers) • Annals(Josh, Judges, 1 & 2 Samuel, 1 & 2 Kings, etc.) • Prophetic Books(Isaiah, Jeremiah, Ezekiel, etc.) • Psalms/Odes/Songs(Psalms) • Prayers/Laments(Lamentations) • Proverbs(Proverbs) • Wisdom Literature(Job, Wisdom, etc.) • Apocalypse(Daniel)

  14. New Testament Genres • Gospels(Mark, Matthew, Luke, John) • Acts(Acts of the Apostles) • Letters(esp. Paul's) • Church Orders(1 Timothy, Titus) • Testament(2 Timothy & 2 Peter) • Homily/Sermon(Hebrews) • Wisdom Collection(James) • Epistles/Encyclicals(1 & 2 Peter) • Apocalypse(Revelation to John) • Many more sub-genres, esp. within the Gospels

  15. What is “Truth”? • There are different KINDS of “Truth”: • Historical: Pearl Harbor was bombed on Dec. 7, 1941. • Conventional: My name is Felix. • Scientific: The earth revolves around the sun. • Mathematical: 2 + 3 = 5 • Theological: God is love. • All of these are “true” – but not all are “historical” • So, the whole Bible is true, but not all the Bible is historical!

  16. Literary Genres - Applications • Did God create the whole world in only six days? • What is the literary genre of Genesis 1? • Was Jonah really in the belly of a whale for 3 days? • What is the literary genre of the Book of Jonah? • Was Daniel really thrown into a Lion’s Den? • What is the literary genre of the Book of Daniel? • Is the “Parable of the Vineyard Workers” really fair? • What is the literary genre of Jesus’ parables?

  17. Principles of Catholic Interpretation (5) Historical-Critical Exegesis is Essential: • Ex-egesis = “leading out”(drawing the intended meaning out of the text) • Vs. eis-egesis(putting your own pre-formed opinions into the text) • “Critical” = asking analytical questions (not just “critiquing”) • Consider multiple levels of both Content and Context: • Historical / Literal Content & Spiritual / Theological Content • Historical Context (surrounding world) & Literary Context (surrounding text) • Openness to Development (historical, literary, theological): • Development from oral preaching/tradition to written texts/scriptures • Growth in our understanding and application of texts over time

  18. Principles of Catholic Interpretation (5) Results of Exegesis available to non-specialists: • Study Bibles: • Catholic Study Bible, New Jerusalem Bible, HarperCollins SB • Bible Dictionaries: • HarperCollins, Eerdmans, Anchor, Interpreter’s, etc. • Bible Commentaries: • One-Vol: New Jerome BC, HarperCollins, Collegeville, etc. • Multi-Vol: Sacra Pagina, Anchor BC, many others

  19. Principles of Catholic Interpretation (5) Biblical Exegesis shows Theological Developments,even within the Bible itself. For example: Polytheism (there are many gods, with different roles)  Henotheism (our God is better than all other gods)  Monotheism (there is one and only one true God)  Trinitarian Monotheism (one God is Father, Son, Spirit)

  20. Principles of Catholic Interpretation (5) Biblical Exegesis also shows Moral Developments: • Ancient Cultures:escalating retribution • Strike back hard! If you kill one of us, we’ll kill ten of you! • Hebrew Bible:limited retribution • “Eye for eye, tooth for tooth, life for life”? • Exod 21:23-24; Lev 24:19-20; Deut 19:21 • Literal meaning? Historical context? • New Testament: NO retribution! • Matt 5:38-48 – turn the other cheek, love your enemies… • Literal meaning? Modern application?

  21. Applications to “Difficult Texts” • The Bible says, “There is no God!” • At least three times! Ps 10:4; 14:1; 53:1 • Literary context? • Literal meaning?

  22. Applications to “Difficult Texts” • Does the Bible contradict itself? • “They shall beat their swords into plowshares, and their spears into pruning hooks…” (Isaiah 2:4; Micah 4:3) • “Beat your plowshares into swords, and your pruning hooks into spears…” (Joel 3:10)

  23. Applications to “Difficult Texts” • Did Jesus have “Brothers & Sisters”? (Mark 6:3) • Literal meaning? • Historical context?

  24. Applications to “Difficult Texts” • “Pluck out your eyes, cut off your hands/feet?”(Matt 5:29-30 & 18:8-9) • Literary genre / form / type? • Literal meaning? • Historical context?

  25. Applications to “Difficult Texts” • “Don’t call anyone on earth ‘father’ ”? (Matt 23:8) • Literary genre / form / type? • Literal meaning? • Literary and Historical context?

  26. Applications to “Difficult Texts” • Should women wear veils in church?(1 Cor 11:4-10) • Literal meaning? • Historical context?

  27. Applications to “Difficult Texts” • Your Examples? • Literal/original meaning? • Spiritual/theological meaning? • Literary genre/type? • Historical context? • Literary context? • Canonical context?

  28. Summary / Review • “Incarnational Theology” Core (God’s Self-Revelation!) vs. bibliolatry, over-emphasis on Bible as text • “Both / And” Approach to Christian Theology vs. one-sided over-emphasis or neglect • “Ecclesial Guidance” for Proper Understanding vs. individualistic mis-interpretations • “Literary Genres” are Diverse/Complex vs. modernist / historicist assumptions • “Historical-Critical” Exegesis is Essential vs. fundamentalist / literalist fallacies

  29. Catholic Teachingson Biblical Interpretation:Vatican II: Dei Verbum Fr. Felix Just, S.J., Ph.D. Loyola Institute for Spirituality, Orange, CAhttp://catholic-resources.org

  30. Dei Verbum(Vatican II)“Preface” • The WORD of GOD! • Hearing it with Reverence; Proclaiming it with Faith • Quotation of 1 John 1:2-3 • In the footsteps of Trent and Vatican I • Authentic doctrine on divine revelation“and how it is handed on” (Lat. transmissione) • Hearing  Believe  Hope  Love

  31. Ecumenical Councils & The Bible: • Council of Trent (1545-63) – Session IV (4/8/46) • Q: Biblical Canon & Authorized Translations? • vs. Protestants who omitted books & made vernacular transl. • First Vatican Council (1869-70) – Dei Filius • Q: Relationship between Scripture & REASON? • vs. both Fideists(faith alone) & Rationalists (reason alone) • Second Vatican Council (1962-65) – Dei Verbum • Q: Relationship between Scripture & TRADITION?

  32. Official Catholic Documents: • Pope Pius XII: DivinoAfflanteSpiritu(1943) • Vatican II: Dei Verbum(1965) • Pontifical Biblical Commission: • “Historical Truth of the Gospels” (1964) • “The Interpretation of the Bible in the Church” (1993) • Catechism of the Catholic Church(1994; 2nd ed. 1997) • In section on “The Profession of Faith” (par. 51-141) • Synod of Bishops: “Word of God in Life/Mission of Church (2008) • Benedict XVI, Post-Synodal Exhortation: Verbum Domini (2010) • Online versions of these and related documents - FJ

  33. Council of Trent: Session IV (1546) • First Conciliar List of the Canon of the Bible: • 46 OT books (incl. 7+ “Deutero-canonicals”) • 27 NT books (luckily, same as Protestants!) • Official: Latin Vulgate! • Norms for Translations: • Done by Catholic scholars • Approved by Bishop(s) • Esp. Douay-Rheims

  34. Vatican I (1869-70) – Dei Filius • SCRIPTURE & REASON are COMPATIBLE: • Vs. Rationalists (reason alone) • Vs. Fideists(faith alone) • BOTH/AND Approach! • Heads & Tails • Science & Religion • Creation & Evolution • Etc.

  35. Vatican II (1962-65) • Four Main “Constitutions” • SacrosanctumConcilium:Const. on the Sacred Liturgy • Lumen Gentium:Dogmatic Const. on the Church • Dei Verbum:Dogmatic Constitution on Divine Revelation • Gaudium et Spes:Pastoral Const. on the Church in the Modern World

  36. Vat II: Dei Verbum – very short! GS: Church in Mod. World (24,076) LG: Dogm. Church (17,489+912) AG: Mission Activity (9961) SC: Sacred Liturgy (8,066+182) PO: Ministry & Life of Priests (8112) AA: Apostolate of the Laity (7254) CD: Past. Office of Bishops (6216) UR: Ecumenism (4932+897) DV: Dogm. Divine Revelation (3,420) PC: Religious Life (3406) DH: Religious Freedom (3307) OT: Priestly Training (3118) OE: East. Rite Churches (1911+912) GE: Christian Education (2735) IM: Social Communications (2312) NA: Non-Christian Religions (1217)

  37. Dei Verbum= “Word of God”(Vatican II, 1965) Preface (§1) 1) Revelation Itself (§§2-6) 2) Transmission of Divine Revelation (§§7-10) 3) Sacred Scripture, Its Divine Inspiration and Interpretation (§§11-13) 4) The Old Testament (§§14-16) 5) The New Testament (§§17-20) 6) Sacred Scripture in the Life of the Church (§§21-26)

  38. Dei Verbum(Vatican II) – Chap. 1, Par. 2-6“Revelation Itself” • God reveals HIMSELF to us, in deeds & words • Four Main Stages of GOD’s SELF-Revelation: • God’s Revelation through all of Creation • God’s Revelation to / through the Human Race • God’s Revelation to / through the Chosen People • God’s Revelation in / through Jesus of Nazareth • Obedience of Faith  Understand Truth  Salvation

  39. Dei Verbum(Vatican II) – Chap. 2, Par. 7-10 “Transmission of Divine Revelation” • Stages in the TRANSMISSION of God’s Self-Revelation: • Historical Events (Jesus’ words & deeds) • Oral Traditions (apostles preach, hand on; Lat. traditio) • Written Accounts (scriptures composed; Lat. scriptus) • Biblical Collections gradually canonized, interpreted, translated, taught, preached, applied… • Unity of Tradition & Scripture & Magisterium

  40. Dei Verbum(Vatican II) – Chap. 3 “Sacred Scripture…” • Sacred = holy, dedicated, “set apart” • “Inspired” by God; religious purpose: goal of salvation • Scripture = “writings” (esp. religious) • Broader term than “Bible” (for Jews & Christians) • Other religions have other “scriptures” • Sacred Scripture = foundational religious documents • Hebrew Bible = Tanak, Old Testament • Christian Bible = OT + NT

  41. Scripture < Tradition < Revelation • Not separate or opposed to each other Revelation  Tradition  Scripture • Bible contains Rev., but not all Rev. is in the Bible ! • Bible is “core” revelation; so no conflicts with other revs. • We don’t need more “public” revs. (but “private” revs. OK) • What is the “Word of God” ? • Not just the Bible, but primarily Jesus himself ! • Community (Church) preceded Scriptures (Bible)

  42. ScriptureAlone?

  43. Scripture and Tradition?

  44. Tradition and Scripture

  45. Scripture vs. Tradition? • Not really separate or next to each other: • Scripture on one side? • Tradition on the other? • Rather, Scripture is a part of Tradition: • “Tradition” existed before the Bible was written • “Tradition” continued after the Bible was written • The Bible is an important “Core” of Tradition • Scripture & Tradition interact with each other

  46. Dei Verbum(Vatican II) – Chap. 3, Par. 11-13 Biblical “Inspiration” • Application of “BOTH / AND” Approach: • Bible is both“Word of God” and written in human language • God is the author and human writers were “true authors” • Implications of “Human” Language: • Limitations of all language; difficulties of translations • Note literary forms; characteristic modes of expression • “Inspired by the Holy Spirit” (not mere dictation) • Purpose: Truth for the sake of our salvation • Inspiration at multiple historical stages

  47. Dei Verbum(Vatican II) – Chap. 4, Par. 14-16 “The Old Testament” • 14: For Salvation of ALL, God chose a special people • Covenant with Abraham • Covenant, thru Moses, with people of Israel • God speaks thru Prophets • OT remains permanently valuable • 15: Purpose of OT: to prepare for the coming of Christ • OT books “contain some things which are incomplete and temporary” • Divine Pedagogy: sense of God, teachings, wisdom, prayers, mystery • 16: God is inspirer and author of BOTH Testaments • NT is hidden in the OT; OT is made manifest in the NT

  48. Dei Verbum(Vatican II) – Chap. 5, Par. 17-20 “The New Testament” • 17: Word of God = Word made Flesh • Jesus’ words and deeds; death, resurrection, ascension, Holy Spirit • 18: Within Bible, the Gospels have a special preeminence • Four Gospels are of “apostolic origin” • Four-fold Gospel (sg.!), according to Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John • 19: Historical Character of the Gospels • Gospels “faithfully hand on what Jesus Christ… really did and taught” • After Ascension, Apostles gain “clearer understanding” • Evangelist’s Role: select, reduce, explain, preserve • 20: NT Canon: Epistles of Paul & other Apostolic Writings • Christ’s teachings are confirmed, more fully stated, preached, etc.

More Related