Hi all.
I wanted to bring up something that i was challenged about a while back and hopefully i could get some help with, or maybe just fuel some discussion. This is the idea of progressive revelation.
These are not my thoughts, nor a result of my study, but i am merely reitterating parts of a paper i was given written by a former moore college lecturer a while back. I am saying this so that you won’t confuse me with a person of great intellect and original thought.
As you read the bible it becomes clear that some of the beliefs held by the writers of early Old Testament Scripture have been abandoned or replaced as the scriptures unfold. 1 example is the view of life after death. For most of the period of when the Old Testament was being written, people held view that there was no life after death. to die was to become almost non existent. The place of death was a cold place for the semi concious or the uncocious. See Psalm 6 and Ecclesiastes 9:5-10.
The idea of life after death, let alone a full bodied after life, was only emerging at the end of the OT period and the intertestamal period.
so the scriptures seem to be a dynamic and evloving body of literature.
He writes:
The books of the Bible appear to have gone through a process of editing and re-editing as Jewish and then Christian communities of faith have appropriated and re-appropriated earlier expressions of faith and life. New situations, such as the exile into Babylon, occasioned new readings of the past, new understandings. Even within the New Testament there is development as the implications of Christ’s life, death and resurrection are worked out, for example, with respect to law keeping or the place of Gentiles in the new communities of faith. Arguably, this process of working through implications continues beyond the Scriptures. The fulfilment that happens in Christ does not resolve every question. Nor does it obliterate the on-going impact of culturally conditioned ideas and beliefs.
He then argues that a principled openness to well-founded contemporary knowledge is important to an understanding and appropriation of Scripture, and says
If it is the case that God accommodated himself to the time and culture bound understandings of Biblical writers, and that there is development of thought and theology within Scripture, then there are likely to be instances where new discoveries, new knowledge will impact upon our reading and appropriation of the Biblical material. To not be open to well-founded contemporary knowledge is to run the risk of defending the indefensible and of unreasonable and unsustainable resistance to advances in understanding.
Later he says In a simple way therefore we cannot say “Because the Bible Says X, God Says X, and so X is true”. the bible says things which are not true.
Basically (so this thread isn’t an essay) some further conclusions are that our contemporary knowledge has to regulate the way we read scriptures, and what God’s word for us is a little more complicated to try and work out.
One example being women. He args that the role and rights of women progressed from the old testament through to Jesus and further regulated by Paul, but now with the contemporary knowledge we have of women and their abilities we can take it even further and abolish all forms of patriarchy.
What do people think of progressive theology?
What do you see as its flaws? It’s dangers?
sorry this was long. If you would like to read the whole paper send me an email and i’ll give it to you.
Blessings
Geoff




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