This post is a review of Christian Smith’s recent provocative book, The Bible Made Impossible: Why Biblicism is not a Truly Evangelical Reading of Scripture. My thanks go out to Brazos Press for providing me a review copy of this text.
Christian Smith is a sociologist out of Notre Dame. Although I have dabbled just a little in sociology, Smith is seemingly one of the most prominent Christian sociologists alive. In this book, Smith approaches the topic of biblical inerrancy from the perspective of a sociologist. Throughout this book, he works in a very interdisciplinary way by weaving sociology, theology, and historical and literary epistemology. This book is broken into two major parts: “The Impossibility of Biblicism”, which will be defined below, and “Toward a Truly Evangelical Reading of Scripture.” The first part describes the problem; the second directs us in a constructive way forward.
Smith explains what exactly biblicism is and what he describes as the problem of pervasive interpretive pluralism. Before going further, it is critical to know what Smith means when he uses the word “biblicism.”
- Divine Writing: The Bible, down to the details of its words, consists of and is identical with God’s very own words written inerrantly in human language.
- Total Representation: The Bible represents the totality of God’s communication to and will for humanity, both in containing all that God has to say to humans and in being the exclusive mode of God’s true communication.
- Complete Coverage: The divine will about all of the issues relevant to Christian belief and life are contained in the Bible.
- Democratic Perspicuity: Any reasonably intelligent person can read the Bible in his or her own language and correctly understand the plain meaning of the text.
- Commonsense Hermeneutics: The best way to understand biblical texts is by reading them in their explicit, plain, most obvious, literal sense, as the author intended them at face value, which may or may not involve taking into account their literary, cultural, and historical contexts.
- Solo Scriptura: The significance of any given biblical text can be understood without reliance on creeds, confessions, historical church traditions, or other forms of larger theological hermeneutical frameworks, such that theological formulations can be built up directly out of the Bible from scratch.
- Internal Harmony: All related passages of the Bible on any given subject fit together almost like puzzle pieces into single, unified, internally consistent bodies of instruction about and wrong beliefs and behaviors.
- Universal Applicability: What the biblical authors taught God’s people at any point in history remains universally valid for all Christians at every other time, unless explicitly revoked by subsequent scriptural teaching.
- Inductive Method: All matters of Christian belief and practice can be learned by sitting down with the Bible and piecing together through careful study the clear “biblical” truths that it teaches.
The result of the above nine beliefs produce a tenth viewpoint:
10. Handbook Model: The Bible teaches doctrine and morals with every affirmation that it makes, so that together those affirmations comprise something like a handbook or textbook for Christian belief and living, a compendium of divine and therefore inerrant teachings on a full array of subjects—including science, economics, health, politics, and romance.
After defining what biblicism is, Smith introduces us to different institutions and denominations that affirm a biblicist view of Scripture in their statements of faith. As he later shows, one of the issues with biblicism is that it presupposes the Bible speaks to all issues that humans experience. Thus, there are books such as Bible Answers for Almost All Your Questions, Success in School: Building on Biblical Principles, and Gardening with Biblical Plants.
Smith introduces another important term that will be used throughout this book, “Pervasive Interpretive Pluralism.” Pervasive interpretive pluralism describes a true reality of the Church (proper): we cannot come to agreement on nearly anything. Smith poignantly notes that we might say “minor in the minors and major in the majors”, but in praxis, how often does this really happen? The Church is known much more its disagreements than its agreements. Smith proves that we agree on nearly nothing – and he shows this by listing many of the three, four, and five view books. We can’t even agree on important doctrine in Christian faith as the atonement, baptism, charismatic gifts, divorce and remarriage, and the Eucharist. Because we cannot agree on nearly anything, the pragmatic purpose in holding to inerrancy is seemingly devoid of actual reason.
Smith proposes that as Christians we need to embrace the multivocality, polysemy, and multivalency of the Christian Scriptures. Only a reading of Scripture that is formed out of the Princeton Fundamentalist/Modernist debate would assume such a wooden hermeneutic that rests, ironically, on the paradigm of modernity itself. Not only is this view philosophically dead, but by incessantly needing to base Scripture on modernity, it exalts modernity above Scripture itself. This leads to another point Smith makes: such a view of inspiration is entirely unwarranted. There have been many conclusions drawn from a few texts of Scripture that need to be rethought. It is our obsession with verification and knowing something as true through logic or science, that we have undermined the true authority of biblical Scripture, Jesus Christ.
In the second half of the book, Smith first proposes a theological/hermeneutical way forward and then an epistemic way forward. The first way forward is by adopting Barth’s Christocentric hermeneutic key. One of the most profound and freeing theological discoveries for me was the Christocentric hermeneutic key. As people who have the revelation of Jesus, Smith argues the need to interpret Scripture through the revelation that we have, not the revelation of the biblical writers. This is what Jesus did on the road to Emmaus. He diermeœneuoœ all the Scriptures concerning himself. For Barth, the Scriptures were not the central revelation of God. Rather, they were the witness to the logos. The logos was and is the true revelation of God and the Scriptures are the attestation to this revelation. Thus, when we view Scripture as attesting to the logos (in Old Testament and New Testament) we are released in assuming that Scripture speaks to all every-day issue that we experience. He contends that Scripture is not primarily there for that reason. Scripture is there to attest to what God has done and will do in Jesus Christ.
Smith argues that we need to learn to be fine with accepting the ambiguity of life and the ambiguity found within Scripture. The reason we’re not fine with this is because how heavily influenced we are by epistemic modernity. So what do we do about our obsession with a modernistic epistemology? We let go of it. The key thing matter of important is to swing to the other extreme. Smith says, “A more evangelical reading of scripture also requires Christians to break from modern epistemological foundationalism once and for all, but without sliding into a problematic postmodernism” (Smith, 149). Thus, he suggests we embrace a critical realistic epistemology (if you’re looking for a thorough treatment of critical realism, I highly recommend the first chapter of Tom Wright’s book The New Testament and the People of God).
In conclusion, I have found Christian Smith’s book to speak a lot of prophetic truth. Scripture does point to Jesus – this is the point that it’s there. Personally, as a Pentecostal, I think there needs to be a little bit more openness to Pneumatic interpretation. Reading Scripture Christocentrically and Pneumatically is not something I find to be in opposition to each other. A Christocentric hermeneutic paves way to a Pneumatic reading of the text that occurs within community and alone. Although I do not fully embrace every single thing said in Smith’s book, I do strongly recommend you pick it up, read it, wrestle with it, and apply it. This is no time for slacktivism – it’s time to do what Smith is prophetically saying to the church – to be unified despite differences.
November 10, 2012 at 4:31 pm
ouch on #9 Inductive method… lol, but I understand the overall point. seems like an important book and I agree about needing a PNeumatological emphasis too.
November 10, 2012 at 4:59 pm
I would disagree with his view that various views are evidence of a flawed hermeneutic while agreeing biblicism is flawed.
We can entirely agree on a sound hermeneutic and arrive at various conclusions.
“I will reveal my secrets to the humble”. Maybe I’m a little too big for my britches with a great hermeneutic and maybe you’re more humble and “get” the point of various passages better.
Another point is he as a Catholic has a church structure which defines various views for that denomination providing uniformity, some of which even he knows are flawed or he isn’t thinking. They may have uniformity, but, are they more accurate than say a Pentecostal church or a Methodist in accurate bible interpretation?
I doubt it and I do not mean anything disrespectful towards our brothers&sisters in Christ in that denomination. I would say the same about all denominations.
November 11, 2012 at 2:34 am
I’m interested to see how we are supposed to handle the ambiguities though because that is where unity with people you disagree with gets difficult to live out in a church community. How do we disagree but hold together without breaking off into splinter groups (otherwise known as denominations)? Some disagreements are easier to live with than others.
Thanks for this – I read a lot of book reviews but I may actually get this book!
November 11, 2012 at 7:16 pm
Ali,
I don’t mind disagreements myself. Let us all who believe Jesus is The resurrected Son of God rally around that fact.
I disagreed with my mother over some stuff, big deal. 1000 years from now, I bet her and I don’t care about that. We’ll be too busy loving each other, Christ and His Church to waste our time on it.
November 11, 2012 at 7:27 pm
@Ali Griffits: I’m not really sure how we naturally can do this. It is much easier to point out where we disagree with each other and have a relationship based on disagreements. It is much more difficult – and I would say only possible through the grace of God – to have a thriving relationship despite theological disagreements. It’s human to have schism – it’s divine to have one despite disagreements.
I think the necessary steps will be one’s that might not even “feel” comfortable. Things like taking communion; to those not comfortable with that, perhaps Scripture reading, praying the Lord’s prayer, and being involved in social action.
November 11, 2012 at 7:55 pm
Great review Daniel!
I think Smith’s criticism of modernistic epistemology is helpful. It seems to me that the overemphasis on individual readings and an agreeable plain reading (or even true authorial intent reading) hurts communal life more than disagreements. What I mean is, the ambiguities of scripture (and really understanding scripture itself) are better wrestled within community, and in my mind would strengthen the community, tradition, etc.
November 12, 2012 at 7:29 am
Thanks for the review, Daniel. I’ve read a large chunk of this book (haven’t finished it yet) and one of my hang-ups knowing he became a Roman Catholic is the “solution” to the problem that underlines the book would be to become part of a larger, authoritative tradition. It is tempting, but that’s not where I am at this point. Do you feel like Pentecostalism provides you with this structure of authoritative interpretation based on that particular traditions of Pentecostalism, or do you feel like many of us “E”vangelicals (i.e., evangelicals without a denominational home) that this book exposes a great weakness in how you interpret the Bible?
November 12, 2012 at 5:18 pm
Stellar review. Thanks for sharing. Social action as a means to have true unity? Calls for a whole blog in and of itself. Not so sure how I feel about the idea.
November 13, 2012 at 12:27 am
We’ve talked about this a bit in my theology class with Vanhoozer, who has a blurb on the back of the book. He mentioned that he doesn’t see why all his 8 points are necessary. He said, why can’t I be a 4 point biblicist. He just didn’t see the rigid pigeon hole he was trying to be put into. Further, if I were a sociologist, I would show the same way Scripture is shown to justify all sorts of weird things throughout history, so has tradition. I think it goes both ways. You could write a book, Tradition Made Impossible: Why Traditionalism isn’t a Truly catholic view of tradition…Maybe just a running thought.
November 13, 2012 at 7:09 am
Ben
I agree that tradition can be interpreted differently, but I think Roman Catholics may have one response in place: the papacy. Then again, I guess the next step would be to show where the papacy has been inconsistent and interpretive. Vicious cycle!
November 13, 2012 at 12:26 pm
@Brian: As of right now it’s quite the opposite for me. As a Pentecostal I embrace textual ambiguity. That the Bible is a multivalent, polysemic, and even multivocal story supports a Pneumatic hermeneutic. I don’t really hold to the typical authorial-intent-trumps-all hermeneutic. Although I do believe that what the author originally meant is extremely important to search for, I don’t think it’s the last word (no pun intended) on the matter. I think (although I can clearly be wrong) the Spirit works in communities and speaks through this witness to the Word in different ways than the author’s original meaning. James K.A. Smith does a wonderful job in his book, Thinking in Tongues, when discussing this.
November 13, 2012 at 1:34 pm
Daniel
I agree that “the Bible is a multivalent, polysemic, and even multivocal story”, and I can see how a “Pneumatic hermeneutic” is necessary for reading the text as an active location where God speaks to his people, but I wonder how this functions in the face of rogue individualism and heretical movements. For example, if the Spirit speaks to each person differently in drastically different ways how can we prepared for the individual who wants to move their own agenda (not led by the Spirit) upon the people? Also, technically, one could argue that there is no way to discredit the “Pneumatic hermeneutic” of Valentinian Gnosticism, Sabellianism, Arianism, or a number of other Christianities that have arisen over the years that the church has come to deny their orthodoxy. This is why I think tradition may have a greater role than we allow in “low-church” circles. Thoughts?
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November 13, 2012 at 2:08 pm
@Brian: You’re totally right. I recently wrote a critical review of a paper presented at the Society for Pentecostal Studies entitled, “Queer Tongues Confess, ‘I know that I know that I know’: a Queer Reading of James K.A. Smith’s Thinking in Tongues.” Jared took Smith’s hermeneutic and used it as a proposal for homosexual relations within the church as warranted. Now, I disagree with this because I care a lot about what the Bible says.
I don’t really have any completely thought-out constructive way forward at this point. Because of this, I automatically retort by leaning on the creeds. Nevertheless, I think there are a few ways forward:
1) We can have an orthodoxy that is much more generous. Such an orthodoxy would have to hold to certain dogma, such as the Lordship of Christ and the Triunity of God to even call itself Christian.
Or/And,
2) The Pneumatic hermeneutic is rooted in Jesus. The Logos is the Word to which the word (Scriptures) witnesses to. Thus, everything that is found in the Scripture, in one way or another, points to the revelation of God in, through, and as the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus.
In regards to the church, all public prophetic and Pneumatic readings of Scripture would probably need to be tested by the community. We can’t despise prophecy, but we have to test it. If somebody received a word for themselves from the text, then it’s for them to keep. If they receive a word for the church, I would assume it would need to be tested. But the key point to continuously maintaining Christian orthodoxy would be this: how does this interpretation aid our community and simultaneously point/rest to/in the Gospel (According to Matt, Mark, Luke, John, Paul, Peter, etc) revelation of Jesus.
I won’t try to put a front on and act like I have the holes figured out. I do realize they are there and are gaping. But at the same time, perhaps this is how the more grass-roots and organic early church was?
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January 22, 2013 at 12:52 pm
Hello, I stumbled upon your blog and this post today, and just wanted to let you know that I think that the hermeneutical method of Richard Bauckham in his “The Bible in Politics” is a great antidote not only to the negative consequences of “Biblicism” a la Christian Smith that I think most evangelicals would agree to, but also to what I think is an over-reaction by Smith who I think may tend toward “throwing out the baby with the bathwater.”
Thanks, Bryan