proninja said:
Jayrok - today's my first day off in a bit, I'll have some time to respond in a bit more depth once I fix the fan on this has insert, but for a quick point of clarity, my position on inerrancy isn't what it once was. It's been something I've been wrestling with over the last couple of months.
I'd be interested to hear where you are now and how you got there. We could correspond via email if that might work better or be more convenient.
I got there by reading and listening to some smart friends. At some point in time a year or so ago I lost trust in the theology of the teaching pastor at my church, and I realized that he was by far the biggest influence on my own theology - frankly, more so than scripture itself. I'd heard his point of view and listened to his point of view orders of magnitude more than anybody else's, and what I realized was that if I didn't have confidence in his construct, I really had no idea what I actually believed, I was simply a parrot of what I had been spoon fed, and suddenly I didn't trust the person I had been parroting. That moment when you realize that you don't really have any idea exactly what you believe on the thing you claim to hold as the most important thing in your life is an interesting moment.
So, I started reading. I started with some classic reformed guys, like Calvin and Berkhof. I've moved to guys like Barth and Bonhoeffer these days - reading CD I.2 currently, and Bonhoeffer's Ethics is on deck. I have a friend just finishing up her M.Div, and another friend who lacks the degree, but he's the most well read guy I've met on this particular subject. He has been very generous with his time, just left the church I go to about 8 months ago, so he understands my issues with the church I go to well. He's a good friend, and most of what I've been reading has been at his recommendation. The good news is that through this my faith has actually gotten much stronger. I've learned a bit, but I have a long way to go.
Where I stand right now is that the bible is the inspired word of God written by human hands and heard by human ears. It is utterly reliable in its communication of the gospel, the translations we have are very good, and I don't need an absolutely utterly perfect bible to affirm that it is the reliable word of God.
Any communication has at least two parties. Scripture has four that I can think of. The holy spirit, the author, the translator, and the reader. Even if we presuppose that there are no errors in the autographs (which we don't have) and take any capacity for error away from God and the author, we are still left with a fallen translator and a fallen reader. There's a lot that can go wrong there.
There are many wrong ways to read the bible. For me to say that my particular interpretation of any verse is inerrant by necessity puts my authority on the same level as that of God (as well as that of the translator) and I am utterly unwilling to do that. Even if the bible were without any sort of human error in the autographs (which, by the way, I'm no longer willing to affirm), even if the translation were perfect, I still have to give myself the authority of God in order to claim that what I derive from the bible is the inerrant word of God, which is a pretty fundamentalist, put yourself in authority over revelation, big problem kind of thing to do. So I try not to do that. And it seems to me that if you want to claim inerrancy, you pretty much have to do that.
NT Wright talks about not only the difference between literal and metaphorical but also the difference between concrete and abstract. Here are some notes from an interview that he gave. The different parties to communication I lifted from Barth, but I frankly have trouble understanding him on this subject, so a lot of it is what I've been able to pull out of my backside too.
The word literal, like the word metaphorical is a word that refers to the way that words refer to things, he notes. But we often confuse the word literal with the terms concrete and abstract—that is, the first meaning something that is actual, physical and the latter, referring to something transient, like an idea. One can refer metaphorically to something concrete (e.g. “my car is an old tin can”), or one can refer literally to something abstract (e.g. Plato’s Theory of Forms).
You asked a while ago where I was willing to stop, and what hill I was willing to die on. The answer probably won't be very satisfying, but it'll be the truth - I'm not sure right now. I am in my infancy as a reader of theology, and I haven't given all of the different permutations of that question enough thought in order to give a decent answer, and I don't just want to parrot something I've heard that I don't fully understand. Besides, I don't trust people who give easy, simplistic answers to hard, complicated questions, so I don't want to be one of those guys.