Interpreting the Bible: “Elite” Scholars and “Non-elite” Communities
How elite are biblical scholars? As an Anabaptist and a biblical-scholar-in-training, I have long wondered what my role is in my own (local and larger) community of faith. For example, Stuart Murray devotes a chapter of his Biblical Interpretation in the Anabaptist Tradition to “congregational hermeneutics” (find a summary of the book here). The idea is that (according to 16th century Anabaptists) only a local community, attempting to be truly obedient, could understand the meaning of Scripture together as a community. If I am signing up for the scholarly path, what does that mean for my connection to Anabaptism? Is my training going against the grain of such “congregational hermeneutics”? Where is my place at the Anabaptist table of interpreters?
As I am reading through Philip Esler’s Galatians volume, I was pleasantly surprised to find a helpful insight on this topic from someone thoroughly rooted in a social historical analysis of the biblical text (as I try to be). He discusses the “base communities of Latin America and local groups elsewhere” which reveal “a different pattern” of biblical interpretation than is found in the North Atlantic:
. . . one in which the correlation between scriptural interpretation and the scrutiny of the contemporary situation are conducted by the communities themselves, with some help from theologians functioning as consultants rather than creators of the theology. In these contexts the value of non-elite readings of biblical text becomes apparent. For, in the end, although New Testament interpreters may provide exegetical results which can be appropriated by local communities seeking to undertake correlations of the type just mentioned, it is only those congregations who can make the earliest Christian story, critically understood, their story. . . . The only realistic prospects of developing an intercultural understanding of New Testament experience are located in Christian communities. [27, emphases mine]
Just prior to this statement, Esler effectively critiques those who attack historical methods of interpretation. I can resonate with Esler’s perspective here. As scholars of the biblical texts, our interpretation must be rooted in an attempt to understand the social historical environment from which they come. Postmodern criticism does remind us that we are fallible and does warn us against absolute confidence in our own assumed objectivity. But I like the idea that my purpose is to immerse myself in the historical stuff and serve as a “consultant” to the interpretation of my community. My community as a whole takes whatever attempt at objective interpretation I have made and applies it our own subjective situation collectively.
This is not all just an idealistic pipe dream. Just in the past few months, for example, as my congregation (a Mennonite church in southern California) went through a membership discernment process, I taught a Sunday school session on “Boundaries in the Bible: Inclusion and Exclusion among God’s People.” I brought to my fellow congregants what I had learned from an in-depth review of the topic and they got into groups discussing it. They came up with insights of how the historical analysis of the Bible would apply in our own world. The session was part of a much longer process in which we explored membership issues from a variety of angles.
In the end, the community as a whole came up with the wording of the policy and decided together whether the statements accurately reflected our sense of the issue as a community. With the exception of a few, we came to a vast majority approval of our new policy. I played only a small role, but it gives me hope and a vision for finding a place outside the ivory tower of academia. I’d also like to note that I think my social historical approach offered a more transferable and applicable reading of Scripture in the process than might some other methods.
Christians, Associations, and the State
I’m working on a paper on voluntary associations in the Roman world. The paper itself is not about Christ-confessing communities as associations, but is looking at the other evidence for collegia/thiasoi. Nevertheless, I was reading Stephen Wilson’s chapter to Voluntary Associations in the Graeco-Roman World and he had an interesting comment regarding Christian communities and their relationship to the state:
Two groups that did belong to more active networks, churches and synagogues, were concerned mostly to protect their privileges or to encourage circumstances that allowed them to run their internal affairs without interference. Their aim was not to overthrow the existing political system, but to find their niche within it — even if on their own terms. So while some aspects of early Christian communal life, for example, could be seen as politically or socially destabilizing, in fact most early Christian writers call on their members to support the state (Rom. 13; 1 Pet. 2). It is true that some Jews and Christians envisaged the overthrow of the state in the end times, and that the Judaean and North African Jews anticipated this outcome in a series of revolts against Rome in the first and second centuries CE. These uprisings were, however, driven more by a revolutionary than a reformist impulse, were limited geographically and temporally, and were atypical of the experience of the majority of Jews under Roman rule. (3)
This is not all that different than what many other scholars have said, but I like how it’s been phrased here. As an Anabaptist, I have been connected with a lot of Christians who would like to find a biblical basis for political reform. Texts like Romans 13:1-7 are, of course, the big challenge for them. I’m not sure Revelation 13 is much help because, as Wilson notes about Judean revolts, that apocalyptic critique of the state is “driven more by a revolutionary than a reformist impulse.” This revolution, however, is imagined as the act of God in the end of the age because any present revolutions are quite obviously fruitless (understatement!).
I think reformist Christians in the United States, such as the Mennonites in my own “voluntary association,” do better to recognize the historical circumstance of the early Christian movement. We can be honest that the early Christian movement was not trying to make political changes to the imperial government, but just because they were not reformist does not mean that Christians today cannot be. The same as the Anabaptists themselves could not be reformists in 16th century Europe but often are in the United States today. Christians should understand why the Jesus movement was not that way and then understand how the early values might apply in our very different social and political situation.
Bad News for Mennonites
I just received this email from the Coordinator of the Anabaptist-Mennonite Scholars Network:
Please note that there will be no Mennonite Scholars and Friends Forum or Reception at this year’s AAR and SBL meetings, because we were unable to make the necessary arrangements for hosting and sponsorship. The intent is to resume annual meetings in 2010.
The Mennonite Scholars and Friends Forum and Reception are often the highlight of the conference for me, or at least in the top five highlights. I’m bummed to get this news, but I will look forward to next year!
Update: We got a correction that the reception will go on! Good, I look forward to some Menno-schmoozing.
The Mennonite Scholars and Friends Reception will occur at SBL in New Orleans, hosted by Associated Mennonite Biblical Seminary / Institute of Mennonite Studies:Friday, November 20, 7:00-8:30 pmGallier A, Sheraton New Orleans
9/11, Kingship in Ancient Israel, and Anabaptism
Like others, I still remember where I was when I heard what happened eight years ago–at the beginning of my senior year at Messiah College. It was a Tuesday morning and Tuesday mornings were our time for all-inclusive chapels (several chapel options were available on Thursdays). I think my roommate had been watching something about it on the news, but I hadn’t paid too much attention and didn’t realize what had happened. Then they made the announcement in chapel. Then my classes were canceled that day. In one of the lecture halls, the professor put down the video screen and had CNN playing. “You can stay if you want,” he told us, “but you don’t have to.”
I had been “on a break” with the girl I had dated prior to meeting my wife. After the events of 9/11 [in addition to the other crashes, the crash in Somerset County, Pa. was significant for our Pennsylvania school], this girl and I “took a break from the break” and spent more time together for comfort. It finally “officially” ended within a month, but we just needed each other’s support for a little while to get through the emotional impact of that day.
Perhaps the most influential result of 9/11 for me was the time that we spent reflecting upon it in a course I took on kingship in ancient Israel with Gordon Brubacher. We spent a ton of time discussing the issues of kingship, more so than the specifics of particular kings. We talked about how the people demanded a king when God told them they didn’t need one. We reflected upon the desire for and corruption of power, the neglect of social justice, the alignment with unsavory characters, the use of violence, the powerful forgetting that God is the true king.
All the while, our unabashed social activist professor had us considering many of the underlying global issues related to the events of 9/11. Do they really “hate our freedom”? Is war the appropriate response? When it seemed the entire country gave their unwavering support to President Bush and his rhetoric of sanctified violence, I became a member of what seemed to be (at that time) a tiny minority who questioned our country’s knee jerk reaction to the 9/11 attacks.
The events of 9/11 served as a catalyst for so many to begin to follow the news and become informed. I was one of those people. But not only that. The combination of such information with the deep reflections on Israelite kingship had a transformative effect upon a social awareness in my own faith.
I believe those things are what firmed up my commitment to Anabaptism.
Preaching, Research, and Breast Milk
Yesterday, I had the honor of preaching at my own church. I felt a little extra pressure knowing that I see these people quite often and I don’t want to walk around knowing everybody thinks I preached a terrible sermon. Overall, the sermon seemed to go well–aside from the California heat of the sanctuary and a busy service. Though, I did totally botch up the benediction. What I appreciated about the sermon, though, was not merely its apparent “successful” delivery, but the opportunity to make some complicated stuff more accessible.
Somehow, I was assigned a passage that relates directly to themes I am currently addressing in my research. The text was Acts 2:37-47. The first part is the response of the Jerusalem crowds to Peter’s sermon and the second part is one of the famous descriptions of the early community life: sharing of goods, fellowship, etc. In my research, I am looking into sectarian impulses and mission impulses. In this passage, we have mission and we also have a strong internal community (I hesitate to use “sectarian”). Somehow there is a dialectic between the two. I find the combination intriguing. It’s not simply a “city on a hill” community–”Hey, look at how great we are! Wanna join up?” But there is an active, uh, “recruitment” initiative. It’s like a Billy Graham Crusade meets Menno Simons.
Mennonites tend to do better with the community part of this passage than the mission part, so I focused on the “mission” part as a challenge. The process of preparing the sermon, though, helped ground me a little bit. I think it has affected my perspective on my overall research, but I haven’t quite figured that out yet.
What an interesting journey this is–my career as a scholar of my own sacred texts. Last night, as I was in bed flipping through my Bible and considering the sermon and my research, I turned to my wife and said, “I love the Bible.” She handed me a bottle of pumped breast milk and asked me to go put it in the fridge. Life goes on. . .
Near Perfect Agreement: Tom Yoder Neufeld
Nick asked an interesting question on his blog, a question that I often consider. Is there any person (“scholar, theologian, pastor, or just regular person in your life”) with whom you agree almost all the time? How about the reverse? A while back, I was answering one of my father-in-law’s theological or biblical questions. We were talking about some author and I said, “I don’t agree with him on everything, but I think he’s got a lot of good ideas.” My father-in-law asked me if there was any one author with whom I agree all the time. I couldn’t think of anyone, but the question stuck with me.
I think I have an answer. I put it in a comment on Nick’s blog, but I’d like to share it here as well: Thomas Yoder Neufeld. Tom is the son-in-law of the late (and legendary) John Howard Yoder. But for my proverbial money, Tom is the better scholar when it comes to the biblical text (not really fair, as JHY was not primarily a biblical scholar). At least, he’s the one I agree with more.
Tom is a Harvard-trained, Mennonite New Testament scholar, teaching up at the University of Waterloo. He has three books out, that I know of, showcasing his scholarly prowess: ‘Put on the Armour of God!’ The Divine Warrior from Isaiah to Ephesians, an Ephesians commentary in the Believers’ Church Bible Commentary Series (check out his treatment of the household code!), and most recently, Recovering Jesus: The Witness of the New Testament. He is currently working on a book addressing violence in the New Testament, which he predicts will be published in 2010 by Westminster/John Knox and SPCK.
Though I had known of his work, I had not yet read it until I saw him present in the Mennonite Scholars and Friends group at the 2007 San Diego SBL/AAR meeting (see my play-by-play of the session). That session may be the single most engaging session I have attended while at SBL (though, I have only been two years thus far). In that session, Tom seemed to be the greatest voice of reason on the topic of the Atonement. He showed himself to be deeply committed to Mennonite theology, but also capable of keeping a nuanced perspective of biblical theology in tension with his personal views. That is the mark of intellectual integrity, as far as I am concerned.
That session spurred me on to read Tom’s works. And I had the opportunity to get to know Tom a bit more during his sabbatical at Fuller Seminary, when he attended my church for several months. As a committed Anabaptist, with a nuanced and complex understanding of biblical scholarship, Tom is the model for the type of biblical scholar I aspire to be.
Obama Going to Messiah College
This is just an update that Obama accepted the invitation to the Compassion Forum that will be held at Messiah College on April 13th. See my earlier post about Clinton’s announcement to attend.
Mennonite Rap
This is just for fun. Here are some Hesston students putting in their own lyrics to a popular song:
[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dqbS25paRPM]
First rap song I’ve ever heard to use the term heilsgeschichte!
Clinton confirms she's going to Messiah College
I mentioned the Compassion Forum the other day, when we knew the invitations were being considered, but Hillary Clinton has made it explicit: she’s going to participate in the forum at my alma mater (HT: Beliefnet [the article is kind of a watered down version of the press release]). I don’t think this will be proving which candidate is “Christian enough” as one commenter at Beliefnet suggests, since the Forum will be focused on issues of broader concern (e.g., domestic and international poverty, global AIDS, climate change, abortion, genocide in Darfur, and human rights and torture). Note that the board includes folks like Jim Wallis, Gary Haugen, Richard Cizik, and David Beckmann.
The spin is that these questions are being asked from a faith perspective. I think it does more for challenging people of faith to think about important social issues than it ranks the candidates on their “Christianness.” What Jim Wallis says is that politicians are “wind chasers.” They stick their finger up in the air and see which way the wind is blowing. Wallis says that Christians (and I think all concerned citizens, no matter religion) need to change the direction of the wind–like MLK, Jr. I hope that this Forum is one more step to raise public awareness that the faith-based voters are not only looking for the best Christian (although some unfortunately are) but they are more interested in making real change with difficult social concerns.
I’m envious of the students on campus right now because of the amazing learning opportunity this provides them.
For the record, I’m still a little dumbfounded that presidential candidates are going to an Anabaptist school!
My Anabaptist Alma Mater To Host Presidential Candidates
This is something else. Messiah College, my undergraduate alma mater located near Harrisburg, Pa., is going to be hosting the “Compassion Forum” in the evening of April 13th (nine days before the Pennsylvania primary). Invited are Obama, Clinton, and McCain for a conversation on important moral issues that bridge the partisan divide. Check out this bit from the announcement on Messiah’s news blog:
The Compassion Forum will be a unique event—not another traditional debate. Each candidate will participate in a separate substantive conversation. The Forum will be moderated by Jon Meacham, editor of “Newsweek,” author of “American Gospel,” and a respected scholar on faith and American politics. Conversation topics will focus on compassion and social justice issues such as U.S. and global poverty; AIDS; climate change; Darfur; and human rights.
The compassion, reconciliation, and social justice issues to be discussed at this forum are relevant to the mission and values of Messiah College. As host organization, Messiah will be able to create important educational opportunities for our students related to this event.
It is sponsored, in part, by Council of Christian Colleges and Universities, the ONE Campaign, and Oxfam America.To my knowledge, the campaigns haven’t officially accepted the invitation yet, but it sounds like it’s assumed they will. I hope they do. It is pretty darn interesting. Presidential candidates come to an Anabaptist school to talk about how issues important to people of faith. Anabaptists have come a long way in their interaction with society and politics. Of course, most of the students at the school are not actually Anabaptist and many probably don’t know much about Anabaptism, but the school is intentional about its Anabaptist values (even if its not as explicit about them as, say, Goshen). I wonder what the campaigns will do when they learn that Messiah doesn’t have a flag pole on campus (oh, heresies of heresies).
What I’m not looking forward to are more jokes about the name of the school or references to the whole Monica Goodling fiasco.
I was first tipped off by these two stories (and my alumni email update).




