Wednesday, January 31, 2024
"Graph"ted into Christ
Saturday, January 13, 2024
Self-Attestation vs. Self-Authenticity
As I read more and more examples in which I find a conflation between epistemology and apologetics (link, link, link, link), I am reminded of Anthony Bryson's thoughtful chapter in Calvinism and the Problem of Evil called, Calvinism, Self-Attestation, and Apathy toward Arguments From Evil. Unlike many authors, Bryson is aware of the distinction between the two:
...my aim is not to look at what role self-attestation should play in apologetics. I'm interested in how the Christian can know that the Bible is the word of God. In the SA literature, these sometimes get confused.
In his chapter, Bryson detects apathy from presuppositionalists towards the problem of evil and thinks such is due to their reliance on the principle of "self-attestation." He writes that some presuppositionalists think as follows:
We clearly know that God exists because of what the Bible says. Since God is its author, it is infallible. And we know its author is God because of its own self-testimony. In short, the Bible is self-attesting...
...how can we know that the Bible is inspired? The most common answer from self-attestation theorists is that Jesus and the rest of the Scriptures teach that it is… we know that it was written by God because God, in the Bible, has written that it was written by him. (pgs. 275, 280-281)
Here's another problem with "apathetic" presuppositionalists Bryson mentions: does every proposition the Bible communicates begin with a self-attestation (e.g. "I am the Lord...")? Obviously not. How, then, are we able to know those propositions? Not by an appeal to self-attestation! There must be some other way in which we know each biblical proposition, in which case Bryson has a point that the motivation for a lazy self-attestation epistemology is undercut.
SA arguments fence off inerrancy claims so that we cannot possibly acquire good reasons for thinking that the Bible, or just a part, is uninspired. God's self-authentication is the most fundamental and important piece of evidence for the inspiration/inerrancy of Scripture. All other evidence depends on it and must be interpreted in light of this epistemic base. The self-attestation of Scripture is not one piece of evidence among others that happens to weigh more. It determines what else can count as evidence, including how or whether we even ought to search for evidence. Put another way, for the SA theorist belief in biblical inerrancy resembles the sort of belief lodged in the middle of a Quinean doxastic web. The belief will (and ought to) be held, come what may.
Christian theologians—especially in the Reformed world—have long argued that there is a more foundational way we can know books are from God: the internal qualities of the books themselves.
Kruger believes that SA sanctions the use of other kinds of evidence, like the internal virtues of a book, to pick out the divinely inspired books. Yet, despite this broadening of potential evidence, his view collapses into the strict self-attestation view. He requires that we beg the question and assume which books belong in the cannon [sic] to figure out which books should be included in the canon. Unless God, via some other form of communication, enlightens us as to the list of canon making attributes, we must rely on God's word. Consequently, we must have already isolated the right books so that we can extract from them the criteria for canon inclusion.
For instance, Kruger believes that the beauty of the Bible, along with its efficacy and harmony, is evidence of inspiration. But how does he know to search for these attributes? Primarily because of what he knows about God and his character. And he acquired this knowledge, I believe he would say, from Scripture.
At this point, we've hit upon the second horn of our dilemma: We must already know some of the books that belong in the New Testament canon apart from this method. For if we know that book X belongs in the canon and then learn that according to that book, properties a, b, and c are indicative of divine inspiration, those properties must not initially explain how we first learned that book X is inspired. (pg. 293)
When a mom calls a child to dinner, she doesn’t need to identify who she is for the child to "know" who is calling. If she did identify herself, such self-attestation ("Ryan Hedrich, your mom is calling you!") wouldn’t be "needed"... but it also wouldn’t be unreasonable. Self-attestation might serve as a reminder to the child to take her words seriously. Aside from questions of knowledge, such reminders might have a psychological or pragmatic purpose (e.g. behavior reinforcement, mindfulness). (link)
A fortiori, as sinners, we are playing outside of the safety and nourishment of God's house. When He calls his children home by His word - Scripture; the Bible - the recipients of His effectual call may - with full assurance - know, hear, follow His voice. They will do this even if the word they hear does not contain a reference to self-attestation ("Thus saith the Lord")! That being said, our God is gracious, and if we listen long enough, we find that He does give us behavior reinforcement and so forth by self-attesting as to the fact that it is He who is calling.
Thursday, January 11, 2024
We Have History
- Articles from the early days of The Presbyterian Guardian
- Articles from the current denominational magazines New Horizons and Ordained Servant
- Pressing Toward the Mark (Compilation of Essays by OPC churchmen, 50th denominational anniversary)
- Confident of Better Things (Compilation of Essays by OPC churchmen,75th denominational anniversary)
- Gary North's Crossed Fingers
- John Muether and Darryl Hart's Fighting the Good Fight
- John Muether and Darryl Hart's Seeking a Better Country
- Darryl Hart's Between the Times