In three
previous posts, I’ve worked specifically through different areas of Dr Michael
Kruger’s Canon
Revisited, (Michael J. Kruger, “Canon Revisited: Establishing the Origins
and Authority of the New Testament Books”, Wheaton, IL: Crossway Books © 2012):
There are a number of other blog
posts here at Triablogue focusing on many different aspects of his work, as
well as on his blog series, “Misconceptions about the Canon”.
But over the
next week or so, I specifically want to work through the details of Dr Kruger’s
argument, because there are historical and exegetical details that, because of
his status as a New Testament scholar, readers will not necessarily be familiar
with. We may have touched on some elements in the past, but they’re assembled
here as part of a cogent argument that critics will need to address before they
simply say “nuh uh!” and hang up.
As is the
case with any good scholar, Michael Kruger is not squeamish about dealing with
challenges to his work. The vast majority of this book (following after the
chapters in which he (a) reviews the various theories of the New Testament
canon, and (b) outlines his own thoughts regarding the “New
Testament Canon as Self Attesting”) involves “Exploring and Defending” this
“Canonical Model”.
Here again
are his “criteria for canonicity”, reasons why the New Testament books are
included in the canon, reasons why the early church included these 27 works,
and only these 27 works in the New Testament canon:
(1) They have “divine qualities”
(canonical books bear the “marks” of divinity),
(2) Corporate reception (canonical
books are recognized by the church as a whole),
(3) Apostolic origins (canonical books
are the result of the redemptive-historical activity of the apostles).
In the rest
of the book, Dr Kruger goes into more detail about what is meant by these
qualities, and what kinds of challenges these “criteria” do face in the real
world of New Testament scholarship. In a brief section at the end of chapter
three (pg 121), he notes:
The essence of the self-authenticating
model is that Christians have a rational basis (or warrant) for affirming the
twenty-seven books of the New Testament canon because God has created the proper
epistemic environment wherein belief in the canon can be reliably formed.
However, that is not all that needs to be said. Even if one has a rational
basis for holding to a belief, that belief still faces the possibility of
epistemic defeat by other beliefs that one might come to hold. Such “defeaters
are the kind of beliefs that would challenge or undercut a prior belief, giving
one reason to think that the prior belief is false.
While he
notes, “in a volume this size it is not possible to mention all potential
canonical defeaters, so we will focus on the primary ones”. Here are some of
the primary challenges he sees and addresses:
The
challenge to divine qualities: apparent disagreements and/or contradictions
within the New Testament books: Argues against the existence of divine
qualities in these books. If New Testament books are inconsistent with one
another – as many scholars have claimed – then how could they really be from
God?
The
challenge to Apostolic Origins: a number of New Testament books were not
written by the Apostles: Much of modern scholarship argues that a number of
New Testament books are pseudonymous forgeries. For instance, only seven of Paul’s
epistles are widely regarded as authentic. How, then, can we claim that all canonical
books are apostolic?
The
challenge to corporate reception: there was widespread disagreement in the
early church that lasted well into the fourth century: Is it still possible
to say that there was significant consensus of the early church, or was this “consensus”
called into question “when we recognize the widespread disagreement and
confusion that existed in early Christianity about the extent of the canon? If
the church experienced disarray over canonical books from the very start,
should this not raise doubts about whether the Spirit was really at work?
He admits that
not all of the question can be addressed adequately in a single volume, “we
will attempt to provide at least a preliminary response” to each of these
objection in the rest of the volume.
And in the
process, he gives a broadly Reformed and Evangelical understanding of what the
early church was, what it was like, and how it operated, especially with regard
to its posture vis-à-vis the Scriptures.
There is
rock-solid information here about the early church that you won’t want to be
without.
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