Dallas Willard on the Bible
The Divine Conspiracy (San Francisco: Harper Collins, 1998), p. xvi.
On the human side, I assume that [the Bible] was produced and preserved
by competent human beings who were at least as intelligent and devout
as we are today. I assume that they were quite capable of accurately
interpreting their own experience and of objectively presenting what
they heard and experienced in the language of their historical
community, which we today can understand with due diligence. ¶ On
the divine side, I assume that God has been willing and competent to
arrange for the Bible, including its record of Jesus, to emerge and be
preserved in ways that will secure his purposes for it among human
beings worldwide. Those who actually believe in God will be untroubled
by this. I assume that he did not and would not leave his message to
humankind in a form that can only be understood by a handful of
late-twentieth-century professional scholars, who cannot even agree
among themselves on the theories that they assume to determine what the
message is.
¶
The Bible is, after all, God's gift to the world through the Church,
not to the scholars. It comes through the life of his people and
nourishes that life. Its purpose is practical, not academic. An
intelligent, careful, intensive but straightforward reading — that
is, one not governed by obscure and faddish theories or by a mindless
orthodoxy — is what it requires to direct us into life in God's kingdom. any other approach is to the Bible, I believe, conflicts with the picture of the God that, all agree, emerges from Jesus and his tradition. To what extent this belief of mine is or is not harmfully circular, I leave the philosophically minded reader to ponder.
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