The
Lutheran Confessions and the Bible
Scripture Is
Divinely Authoritative
The average Lutheran
layman today may not know any Latin, but he probably knows what
the phrase sola Scriptura (Scripture alone) means. It
means that we Lutherans base our theology solely on the Scriptures
of God and nothing else, not tradition, not human speculation,
not modern scholarship, not our experiences or feelings or anything
else. Sola Scriptura is a watchword, a guide for action, for
every true Lutheran, pastor or layman.
This was the position
and practice of Luther and our Lutheran Confessions. "The
Word of God is and should remain the sole rule and norm of all
doctrine" (FC SD, Rule and Norm, 9). "We pledge ourselves
to the prophetic and apostolic writings of the Old and New Testaments
as the pure and clear fountain of Israel, which is the only true
norm according to which all teachers and teachings are to be
judged" (FC SD, Rule and Norm, 3). This is the spirit in
which our great Lutheran Confessions speak. Everything we need
to believe and do as Christians is told us in the Scriptures.
Just as our Lord Jesus was a man of one Book and drew all His
teaching from that one divine source and submitted Himself to
it utterly in all He said and did, so we too who are His disciples
today place ourselves joyfully under that prophetic and apostolic
Word. And with our Lutheran Confessions we say: "No human
being's writings dare be put on a par with it, but ... everything
must be subjected to it" (FC SD, Rule and Norm, 9).
What persuades us
as Christians to render such an exalted place to the Scriptures
in our lives and teachings? It is the marvelous content of Scripture,
which is the Gospel-as Luther said, "Christ is involved
in Scripture through and through, like the body in its clothes"
(WA, 12, 418). And it is the Spirit of Christ who witnesses in
our hearts that as Scripture speaks judgment and grace it proclaims
God's judgment and grace to all men. We believe in the absolute
authority of Scripture because Christ accepted the absolute authority
of the prophetic Word of the Old Testament and because He guaranteed
the absolute authority of the apostolic Word of the New Testament
by His promise of the Holy Spirit to His apostles.
Why is Scripture
authoritative? Edmund Schlink of Heidelberg answers: "Because
God saves through the Word proclaimed by it." But this is
no answer to the question and confuses the issue. God saves also
through the Word proclaimed in hymns and sermons and Christian
literature. No, Scripture is authoritative because it is God's
Word. How often do our Confessions contrast God's Word in Scripture
to any human being's writings and insist that all our doctrine
be drawn "out of God's Word" (FC SD, Rule and Norm,
3,4,5,9, 10, 16; Ep, 1, 7, 8)! And Luther says: "The Word
of God shall establish articles of faith and no one else, not
even an angel" (SA, II, ii, 15). In contrast to all other
writings and human authorities, God's Word carries with it God's
authority.
And this authority
is absolute and final. What Scripture asserts God asserts, what
it commands He commands, what it promises God promises! Because
our Lutheran Confessions believe in such infallible authority,
they cite the Scriptures hundreds of times and regard Scripture's
answers to the great problems and issues of their day as God's
answers.
Today such a conviction
regarding Biblical authority is rejected by many theologians.
The Bible cannot carry divine authority with it, because it is
not the very Word of God, they say. Although it may somehow "convey"
or "contain" or "become" the Word of God,
it must be read like any other human book. This is exactly the
posture taken by many who use the "historical-critical method"
(also called "higher criticism"), employed within the
church by some scholars for about 200 years, since the time of
Rationalism and the Enlightenment in Europe.
It is quite clear
that such modern views-which were shared by unbelievers in the
early centuries of church history-are not compatible with the
position of Luther and our Confessions. The approach of higher
criticism is likely to result in questioning, again and again,
the evangelical doctrine which is drawn from the right reading
of the Sacred Scriptures. Today, after 400 years, we need have
no doubt concerning the divine authority of Scripture and therefore
of our Gospel message drawn from it. And today Scripture still
authenticates itself as the only source of our knowledge of God
and of His grace.
Threefold Tier
of Authority in the Church
Now that we have
talked about the authority of our Confessions and creeds as norms
for teaching in the church and also about the authority of Scripture,
the reader may be a bit confused. Are there, then, levels of
authority? Yes. Precisely. Specifically there is a threefold
tier of authority in the church, according to our Confessions.
1. "The prophetic
and apostolic writings of the Old and New Testaments" are
"the pure and clear fountain of Israel, which is the only
true norm according to which all teachers and teachings are to
be judged and evaluated" (FC SD, Rule and Norm, 3). That
statement means two things: (a) Scripture is the one divine source
from which, as from a spring or fountain, we draw all our theology;
and (b) Scripture is the only norm to judge teachers and teachings
in the church.
2. The Confessions,
on the other hand, are the "basis, rule, and norm, indicating
how all doctrines should be judged in conformity with the Word
of God" (ibid., Heading). This means, quite simply, that
the Confessions state what we Lutherans believe to be the teachings
of Scripture and what we therefore believe, teach, and publicly
confess.
3. Other good Christian
writings, that is, "good, useful, and pure books, such as
interpretations of the Holy Scriptures, refutations of errors,
and expositions of doctrinal articles" have their place
too. They are not to be rejected or spurned. "If they are
in accord with the aforementioned pattern of doctrine [namely,
the Confessions], they are to be accepted and used as helpful
expositions and explanations" (ibid., 10).
Scripture, the Confessions,
other good Christian literature! Scripture's authority is divine
and absolute. The Confessions' authority is derived from their
agreement with Scripture and is binding for everyone who professes
to be a Lutheran. Other Christian writings are authoritative
and useful too when they agree with Scripture and the Lutheran
Confessions.
The Confessions
and Scriptural Inerrancy
Do our Lutheran
Confessions teach that the Scriptures are inerrant? And do they
interpret the Scriptures in such a light? There has been much
debate on this issue, therefore we must give the question our
attention.
When we call Scripture
inerrant we are using a relatively modern word to express the
utter reliability and truthfulness of Scripture and of all its
assertions. The term we use may be somewhat modern, but the conviction
it expresses is as old as Scripture itself. The Scriptures teach
and assume everywhere their utter truthfulness, and so do our
Lutheran Confessions.
When our Confessions
take for granted the divine origin of Scripture, they likewise
take for granted its reliability and inerrancy. In our Confessions
the Bible is called "the Holy Scripture of God" (FC
SD, V, 3), "the clear Scripture of the Holy Spirit"
(Ap, Preface, 9). Again and again "God's Word" and
"Holy Scripture" are used interchangeably in our Confessions.
This assurance concerning the divine origin and nature of Scripture
is fundamental to a proper reading and approach to Scripture.
The Lutheran Confessions consistently read Scripture as God's
Word, carrying with it God's authority, God's power, God's truthfulness.
In other words,
the inerrancy, or truthfulness, of Scripture is a definite result
of its divine origin. And so our Lutheran Confessions speak of
Scripture as "the eternal truth" (FC SD, Rule and Norm,
13). They urge us to believe the Scriptures, for "they will
not lie to you" (LC, V, 76; cf. IV, 57) and cannot be "false
or deceitful" (FC SD, VII, 96). And why? Because God, who
is eternal Truth, cannot contradict Himself in Scripture (FC
SD, XI, 35). It is His "pure, infallible, and unalterable
Word" (Preface to the Book of Concord, p. 8).
This childlike trust
in the truthfulness of Scripture permeates our Confessions as
they confidently go about the business of citing and interpreting
and applying the Scripture to the great issues of their day.
The power of our Confessions rests in great measure on their
joyful and total submission to the divine Word.
From:
Getting
into The Theology of Concord
by Robert D. Preus
(St.
Louis: Concordia Publishing House, 1977), pgs.7-10.
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