The Protestant understanding of the Canon of the New Testament
must address critics on two sides: the Roman Catholics who say “you can’t have
your canon without the authority of the Roman Catholic Church”, and on the
liberal side, who say, “the idea of a NT canon was an afterthought”. Dr Kruger addresses this notion in his
most recent blog post:
[I]n recent years, a new challenge
has begun to take center stage (though it is really not new at all). … The
question now is “Why is there a New Testament at all?” The answer, according to critics of the
canon, is not to be found in the first-century—there was nothing about earliest
Christianity (or the books themselves) that would naturally lead to the
development of a canon. Instead, we are told, the answer is to be found in the
later Christian church. The canon was an
ecclesiastical product that was designed to meet ecclesiastical needs. Thus,
the New Testament canon was not a natural development within early Christianity,
but a later, artificial development that is out of sync with Christianity’s
original purpose—it was something imposed upon the Christian faith. … I will
argue here that the earliest Christians held a number of beliefs that,
especially when taken in tandem, would have naturally led to the development of
a new collection of sacred books—what we could call a “canon.” In other words, the theological matrix of
first-century Christianity created a favorable environment for the growth of a
new written revelational deposit. Let us consider what three of these
theological beliefs might have been.
1. The earliest Christians believed that Jesus of Nazareth was the
eschatological fulfillment of foundational Old Testament promises about God’s
redemption of his people. It is
important to remember the Jews of the first century period were in a state of anticipation—waiting
and longing for God’s redemptive deliverance of Israel. In other words, Jews of this period viewed
the story of the Old Testament books as incomplete. When the Old Testament story of Israel was
viewed as a whole, it was not viewed as something that was finished but as
something that was waiting to be finished. N.T. Wright observes, “The great
story of the Hebrew scriptures was therefore inevitably read in the
second-temple period as a story in search of a conclusion.” What made the earliest Christians unique is
that they believed that the story of the Old Testament had been completed. It was finished and fulfilled in the coming
of Jesus of Nazareth. The long-awaited
redemption of God had arrived.
If so, it is not difficult to see
how this belief might impact the production of new scriptural books. If
Christians believed the OT story had now been completed, then it reasonable to
think that the proper conclusion to the Old Testament might then be written. Otherwise the OT Scriptures would be a play
without a final act. This possibility finds confirmation in the fact that some
of the New Testament writings seem to be intentionally completing the Old
Testament story. It is noteworthy that
the first book of the New Testament begins with a genealogy with a strong
Davidic theme (Matt 1:1), and the (likely) last book of the Hebrew canon begins
with a genealogy that has a strong Davidic theme (1 Chronicles 1-2). This
structural feature led D. Moody Smith to declare, “In doing so, Matthew makes
clear that Jesus represents the restoration of that dynasty and therefore the
history of Israel and the history of salvation. Thus, Jesus continues the
biblical narrative.” Davies and Allison
agree that Matthew “thought of his gospel as a continuation of the biblical
history.”
2. The earliest Christians believed that Jesus inaugurated a new covenant. We must remember that the Jews of the first
century were covenantally oriented. N.T. Wright has observed that “Covenant
theology was the air breathed by the Judaism of this period.”[5] And it is clear that the earliest Christians
were also covenantally oriented, as they saw Jesus as ushering in a new
covenant (Luke 22:20; cf. Matt 26:28; Mark 14:24; 2 Cor 3:6; Heb 7:22,
8:8). What implications does this belief
have on canon? The answer lies in the
very close connection between covenants and written texts. It is well-established by now that the very
concept of ‘covenant’ (or treaty) was drawn from the ancient near eastern world
where a suzerain king would often make a treaty-covenant with his vassal king.
And here is the key: when such covenants were made, they were accompanied by
written documentation of that covenant.
It is not surprising then that when God made a treaty-covenant with
Israel on Sinai, he gave them written documentation of the terms of that
covenant. Indeed, so close was the
connection between the covenant and written texts, that Old Testament language
would often equate the two—the written
text was the covenant!
If this is the background of early
Christian understanding of covenants, then the implications are easy to see.
The earliest Christians were themselves immersed in the covenantal structure of
the Old Testament and thus would have understood this critical connection between
covenants and written texts. Thus, if
they believed that through Jesus Christ a new covenant had been inaugurated
with Israel (Jer 31:31), it would have been entirely natural for them to expect
new written documents to testify to the terms of that covenant. In
other words, this Old Testament covenantal background provides strong
historical reason for thinking that early Christians would have had a
predisposition towards written canonical documents and that such documents
might have arisen naturally from the early Christian movement. At a minimum, the covenantal context of early
Christianity suggests that the emergence of a new corpus of scriptural books,
after the announcement of a new covenant, could not be regarded as entirely
unexpected.
This appears to find confirmation
in 2 Cor 3:6 when Paul refers to himself and the other apostles as “ministers
of the new covenant”—and Paul makes this declaration in a written text that
bears his authority as a minister of the new covenant. Thus, one could hardly fault the Corinthians
if they understood Paul’s letter as, in some sense, a covenant document.
3. The earliest Christians believed in the authority of the apostles to
speak for Christ. Jesus had commissioned his apostles “so that they might
be with him and he might send them out to preach and have authority” (Mark
3:14–15). When Jesus sent out the twelve, he reminds them that “For it is not you
who speak, but the Spirit of your Father speaking through you” (Matt
10:20). Thus, he is able to give a warning
to those who reject the apostles’ authority: “If anyone will not receive you or
listen to your words…it will be more bearable on the day of judgment for the
land of Sodom and Gomorrah than for that town” (Matt 10:14). Given this background, we come to the key
question: what would happen if the apostles put their authoritative message in
written form? How would such documents
be viewed? Initially, of course, the
apostles delivered their message orally through teaching and preaching. But, it
was not long before they began to write their message down. And when they did
so, they also told Christians “Stand firm and hold to the traditions you were
taught by us, either by our spoken word or by our letter” (2 Thess 2:15). And
again, “If anyone does not obey what we say in this letter, take note of that
person and have nothing to do with him” (2 Thess 3:14). It is here that we see the obvious connection
between the role of the apostles and the beginnings of the canon. If apostles were viewed as the mouthpiece of
Christ, and they wrote down that apostolic message in books, then those books
would be received as the very words of Christ himself. Such
writings would not have to wait until second, third, or fourth-century
ecclesiastical decisions to become authoritative—instead they would be viewed
as authoritative from almost the very start. For this reason, a written New
Testament was not something the church formally “decided” to have at some later
date, but was instead the natural outworking of the redemptive-historical
function of the apostles.
In sum, these three theological
beliefs of the earliest Christians should, at a bare minimum, make us hesitant
about confident proclamations from modern scholars that early Christians had no
inclinations toward a canon. On the
contrary, these beliefs suggest that the development of a new corpus of
scriptural books would have been a natural, and to some extent even inevitable,
part of early Christianity.
Previous entries:
the Canon issue must be addressed From another side also -
ReplyDelete- from Muslims who say, "Who wrote the books and who decided to put them together, and how long after Jesus were they put together again?
They generally think it was Constantine.
And a fourth -
from your 22 year old son who gets exposes to college professors attacks on Christianity -
"who decided to put these books together and what is the oldest Bible we have in history?"
Hey Ken -- I think that there is a lot of work addressing the "Constantine" issue along with the Da Vinci Code responses.
ReplyDeleteWhat Kruger seems to be doing is building a positive case for how the canon came together -- while addressing some misconceptions as he goes.
Admittedly, this is long overdue, but once Kruger's book comes out (and I think I saw a note on his website to the effect that the Kindle version was available now), then there will be summaries and even "sound bites" available with which we can respond to some of the critics.
Yes, the Da Vinci Code and Constantine narrative has been answered many times, but the mis-conceptions are still there, promoted by internet and liberal media and Muslims, and skeptics, etc.
ReplyDeleteThis is a great series, and your articles along with Jason Engwer's on these issues are like a library that we can all use to constantly go back to; like a handbook.
I wish it was all in a book.