The Contradictions of Scripture

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We can, however, only express the Truth if we foresee the extreme expression of all the contradictions inherent in it, from which it follows that Truth itself encompasses the ultimate projection of all its invalidations, is antonymic and cannot be otherwise.

-Pavel Florensky

I wrote in a previous article about the importance of contradictions in the knowledge of God. The Orthodox faith utterly delights in paradox and contradiction and liberally salts its language of worship with shockingly antonymic expressions. This is intentional and inherent to the nature of the kind of knowledge (koinonia) that alone is saving knowledge. Remembering this is important when we come to the study of the Scriptures. Doubtless, the most devastating practice with regard to the Scriptures is ridding them of contradiction. Today, this is done regularly, and from a number of directions. Apparently, human beings dislike contradiction and have a passion-driven instinct to minimize it. This diminution of reason goes by many names – some of them being so bold as to claim that this is reason itself. It is not. True reason is at home with contradiction.

The gospel proclamation of Christ is summarized by St. Paul in his First Letter to the Corinthians:

For I delivered [literally “traditioned” – it is a technical term in Greek] to you first of all that which I also received [“received” by “tradition”]:

that Christ died for our sins according to the Scriptures,
and that He was buried, and that He rose again the third day according to the Scriptures,
and that He was seen by Cephas, then by the twelve.
After that He was seen by over five hundred brethren at once, of whom the greater part remain to the present, but some have fallen asleep.

After that He was seen by James, then by all the apostles.
Then last of all He was seen by me also, as by one born out of due time. (1Co 15:3-8)

If the opening lines of this passage remind you of the Creed, it is because they most likely come from the most primitive Baptismal Creed, one version of which was later known as the Apostles’ Creed. This is not an off-hand narrative that St. Paul is making up as he writes. He is quoting, and specifically quoting a “tradition.”

At the heart of that tradition of the risen Christ is that He “died for our sins according to the Scriptures,” and that He “rose again the third day according to the Scriptures.” This does not mean “because the Scriptures said he did.” Rather it means, that His death for our sins and His resurrection on the third day are in accordance with the right reading of the Old Testament Scriptures. Indeed, we could say that the primitive Church proclaimed a message about the Old Testament itself that was as important (and new) as the news of Christ’s death and resurrection. Their radical proclamation was that all of the writings of the Old Testament were about the death and resurrection of Christ!

As I noted previously, this is simply not obvious on any reading of the Old Testament – unless you have been previously taught how to see it, look for it, and understand it, and have the ascetical discipline that allows the heart to “see.” This “according to the Scriptures” is itself part of that which is handed down. It is traditioned to us.

The treatment of the Scriptures, particularly since the Reformation, have ceased to acknowledge this dynamic, sometimes even being embarrassed by the unvarnished allegorical readings of the Fathers. The Reformation mantra that the Scriptures were the book for everyman, that each person, enlightened and guided by the Spirit, was capable of reading and understanding the Scriptures has consistently tended to privilege rationalistic schemes of interpretation. Alexander Campbell, one of the founders of the Protestant Restoration Movement, is said to have carried a Bible and the writings of John Locke. The “common sense” of Scottish rationalism has deeply affected the popular treatment of the Scriptures in the contemporary world.

There seems to be a general sense that the New Testament, however it arrived at its conclusions, is now the rational guide for reading the Old Testament. The Apostolic Church wrote by a miracle and we read with our reason. There is a rational paradigm that has risen in this context. It is rooted in the notion of the “authority” of Scripture (and its infallibility). How do I know that Christ is the truth? Because it’s in the Bible. How do I know that the Bible is true? Well, it says so in this verse here. That circular reasoning is actually as nonsensical as it sounds.

This also creates an anxiety of reliability. Every questioning of historical accuracy, every example of internal contradiction is met with rational explanations of how the Scriptures must be true. Extreme examples are those who insist on “Young Earth Creationism,” even suggesting that God created a universe that appeared old, but really isn’t. In Orthodox circles, this same approach is defended by citing any treatment within a Church Father that supports a literalist understanding. I have seen Fr. Thomas Hopko, of blessed memory, decried as a heretic because he suggested that Adam may not be a historical figure! There is some version of a “house of cards” in all of this. If this isn’t literally true, if this isn’t utterly reliable on a rational level, then that may not be true, nor this, nor…until faith itself collapses.

This is the tragic state of faith among many Christians, a foundation without merit, vulnerably standing on the playing field of modern rationalism. I personally believe it is the breeding ground of atheism…because it is a false position.

St. Luke has this:

Then He said to them, “These are the words which I spoke to you while I was still with you, that all things must be fulfilled which were written in the Law of Moses and the Prophets and the Psalms concerning Me.” And He opened their understanding, that they might comprehend the Scriptures. Then He said to them, “Thus it is written, and thus it was necessary for the Christ to suffer and to rise from the dead the third day, and that repentance and remission of sins should be preached in His name to all nations, beginning at Jerusalem.” (Luk 24:44-47)

This passage needs some care. In the Greek, it does not say “He opened their understanding.” Rather, it says, “He opened their nous.” The Scriptures are noetically understood. The nous and the heart are synonymous in many of the Fathers. It is by no means a synonym for discursive reason. Christ spiritually changed the disciples, such that they could see things that before had been hidden. And this change is directly associated with the encounter of the risen Lord. Christ nowhere opens the understanding of the disciples until after the resurrection. That noetic miracle is itself part of the resurrection. To be a witness of the resurrection includes the noetic understanding of the Scriptures.

And it is at this point that I direct us to the inherent contradictions within the text. I say “contradictions,” but I include within that the very “hiddenness” of the meaning. That meaning, if you will, is a “contradiction” of the letter. If the letter says, “Ark of the Covenant,” but we understand that it refers to the Theotokos (to use but one common example), then, there is a seeming contradiction between the letter and the meaning. If the text says, “lamb,” be we read “Christ,” there is an apparent contradiction between the letter and the meaning.

But the Fathers (including the Apostles) were not daunted by these seeming contradictions. There is a seeming contradiction in Christ Himself. He is a man, and appears as a man in every outward manner. But we confess Him as God, despite His death on the Cross. How can God die? His mother is a virgin, and yet she gave birth.

When we no longer see the contradiction in these things, the nous is darkened, and we begin to make of these great mysteries mere intellectual ciphers, rational objects to be manipulated in arguments, systematized and refined. True noetic perception involves great ascetic effort, in which we fast, pray and repent for the hardness of our hearts and our constant efforts to substitute an understanding that does not at every moment depend upon God.

There is a sense in which I revel in the contradictions (at least the ones I see). They are gateways into the Kingdom of God. I frequently encounter, however, an “easy” Orthodoxy, or “easy” Protestantism, etc., in which paradox and contradiction are deeply muted, explained, or simply avoided.

At every Divine Liturgy, I stand at the altar, and speak the contradiction, “And make this bread to be the precious Body of our Lord and God and Savior Jesus Christ…” Its opacity is a measure of my own heart. On those occasions in which things seem less than opaque, I do not know how to explain what I see. These are the moments of faith, a “participatory adherence to the Presence” in the words of Vladimir Lossky. And though I can proclaim, “Behold the Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world,” I cannot demonstrate it as an object. I can love it and eat it and become one with it.

The reading of Scripture should resemble this far more than we realize. For Christ is there, within every word, every space between the words, and even in the silence that frames them.

“Didn’t our hearts burn within us!”

 

 

 

About Fr. Stephen Freeman

Fr. Stephen is a retired Archpriest of the Orthodox Church in America. He is also author of Everywhere Present: Christianity in a One-Storey Universe, and Face to Face: Knowing God Beyond Our Shame, as well as the Glory to God podcast series on Ancient Faith Radio.



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105 responses to “The Contradictions of Scripture”

  1. Mark Basil Avatar
    Mark Basil


    Hello Father;

    I have only read “resident aliens” by H. and a small few articles. I appreciate your interpretation of him vis. idolatry as a better category. I really think this captures something essential, but wouldn’t you say that it captures something essential *about violence*?
    It is the taking up of the sword to exert our will that prevents us from the humble faithfulness and weakness that perfects us. Choosing violence, we do not allow ourselves to become truly human as St Ignatius so powerfully illustrated through his own non-resistance.
    And again with St Stephen the protomartyr- we see his non-resistance. And isn’t it very telling that the disciples did not respond to his death by mobilizing a sort of self-protecting militia? Yet since Orthodoxy’s cooperation with empire we no longer see this social dimension- beating swords into ploughshares and no longer making war- being taught and practiced. I would hope to see the distinction between God’s use of the sword wielded *by the state* in contrast to Christian commitment to the Kingdom of God (not organizing to defend ourselves with the sword but witnessing to Christ’s passion) more clearly reflected on and drawn out again, as it was practiced at the time of St Stephen’s martyrdom.

    I do think nonviolence is an important category for us Orthodox, though I agree it has historically not been so. But this lack of reflection in our Orthodox history I see as circumstantial, and part of the ongoing revelation of the Holy Spirit in our Church: we could not see violence for what it was because of our experiments with ‘Christian empire’.
    Here we are today, on the other side of broken empires and I think we can see that there are antiquated errors mixed into our historical relationship with state-sanctioned violence. It will take time to disentangle that which is truly blessed by God in these relationships and that which is perhaps erroneous and needs to be called such (I have suggested we have an example in understanding the Cross. Our profound theological reflection on Christ’s willing Passion is at odds with Constantine’s usage of this symbol as talisman and subsequent notions that the Cross is a power able to beat our carnal enemies… “O Lord save thy people and bless thine inheritance”- yes, but this is not a political entity. I believe we need to humble ourselves as a Church and re-interpret even these words through the lens of Christ, as we might re-interpret language of violence in the psalms).

    “Slavery” is not a category that the Tradition dealt with head-on either, for similar reasons: the whole economic system was utterly entangled with it. There is that one rare prophetic sermon against slavery by St Gregory of Nyssa, but largely slavery was not something directly addressed as an evil.
    Yet it is a social evil.
    Racism likewise was not really addressed directly and with the nuance that we might have today as Orthodox. Neither was ecological care, or questions about Food Industry, etc. Several other ethical categories are fine tuned through the ages, no? Isn’t our Bridegroom still actively *leading* us into all truth, *removing* all spot and blemish from his Bride?

    I would say with state-sanctioned violence there is a need for new language and categories. As with changing science, so changing economics, politics, cultures, technologies, etc. require thinking differently and in different terms than the Fathers employed in their time and context.
    One value to speaking of nonviolence directly, is that today warfare conducted by modern nation-states is vastly different from that engaged in by the Byzantine Empire. I believe today it is very difficult for a devout Christian to cooperate with the military in anything like the manner he may have done in the Byzantine Empire. Warfare in the modern world is almost purely demonic in my estimation, with our capacity to wreak so vast a destruction on so indiscriminate a target-range, from a dehumanizing distance. Increasingly this is done in subterfuge as well, so that the average citizen does not really know the extent of what is happening and cannot morally object. Motivations are equally corrupt; The U.S. has been in almost perpetual war for decades- and these are not defensive wars but instead ensure continued wealth and a consumptive lifestyle. Such profound destruction is spread in modern warfare waged by essentially secular powers, yet we are still falling back on the language of a different era to justify this (protection of the innocent; duty to one’s country; heroic sacrifice; etc.).
    Think of the full impact of Monsanto’s “agent orange” in Vietnam, with millions of subsequent birth defects and environmental carnage felt to this day; or tens of millions of US bombs dropped in Laos that to this day are killing and maiming children; or the atomic bombs dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki (and I have heard Orthodox clearly justifying these acts of violence as “necessary” to prevent something worse, etc.). The latter were even blessed by Catholic chaplain George Zabelka who later came to see nonviolence as an essential category of the Gospel– a category and language that without which, left him blind to the blessing of mass slaughter (see it in his own words here ).

    Like Catholic chaplain George Zabelka, I think we Orthodox today suffer from our lack of using the language and categories of nonviolence. We are unable to think in terms that would open our eyes not only to brokenness in our own Church history and errors that persist from it, but more importantly to current evils perpetrated by powerful nation-states (yet hidden from direct view; one has to really research what the military is doing to begin to grasp the scope of the problem). I think it prevents us from asking the sorts of questions we *should* be asking of our modern Nation-States, and keeps us complicit in warfare that is profoundly unChristian (if not directly participating, then economically and politically supporting).

    An example of how nonviolence can practically operate even in the most challenging of situations can be found in the peace work of Palestinian Melkite bishop Elias Chacour. In his amazing story, told in the book Blood Brothers, Elias recounts first-hand experience of his Palestinian Christian town being invaded by Zionists. When they come, his brother wants to get a gun “just in case” they need it for self-defense. But Elias’s father simply says that they have put their trust in Jesus and will not kill. The whole subsequent story is remarkable, and the hand of God is so amazingly at work in now-archbishop Elias’s long legacy of peacemaking. Yet none of it would have been possible without a simple Palestinian farmer’s intuition that keeping a gun for self-defense is incompatible with his trust in Jesus.
    This sort of nonviolent intuition found in a simple Palestinian Christian is what I believe we Orthodox need to recover.

    Let us continue to pray and receive what the Lord gives us. I know I have lots to learn.
    Peace;
    -Mark Basil

  2. Diana Welsch Avatar
    Diana Welsch

    It is, essentially, turning my heart towards God and actually looking for Him. When we don’t do that, we’re mostly just playing games with our own thoughts, and are separated from everything around us, with our own thoughts being our primary contact with the world. It will create loneliness and depression.

    That is a lot to chew on. Very good!!

  3. Brandon Avatar
    Brandon

    Father – do you remember what “very good book on Artificial Intelligence that shows how misguided our thinking is about the brain and human intelligence” is?

    Thank you!

  4. Dee of St Hermans Avatar
    Dee of St Hermans

    Brandon,
    I was intrigued by your question. Here is an article:
    https://aeon.co/essays/your-brain-does-not-process-information-and-it-is-not-a-computer

    And a couple of authors who have written critiques on the subject: Miquel Nicolelis, Hubert Dreyfus

    I’m not sure whether Father Stephen has a recommendation. But if he does, I would be curious and trust and endorse his recommendation.

    Frequently these critiques do not espouse an Orthodox view of the mind (and/or brain), but they might not conflict with the Orthodox view. Nicolelis however, is antagonistic to the idea of “Intelligent Design” I think, which emphasizes evolutionary pressures without a relationship to God (this info I gathered from a brief review). But his critique of AI research ‘goals’ might be useful despite this particular aspect of his perspective. –I haven’t read these books and neither am I that knowledgeable of computer science/AI stuff.

  5. Brandon Avatar
    Brandon

    Dee,

    Thank you very much! That article is super helpful in the research/thinking that I’ve been doing. I’ll look into your other recommendations as well. I think all of our bad metaphors about AI and simply the desire to achieve “God-like AI that will amplify human cognitive abilities to solve all the problems in the world” stem from an improper understanding of mystery – which this blog has been more cogent about than anything I’ve read or heard.

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