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In the previous article, we have shown the difficulty of identifying "Word of God" and "Scriptures/Bible" for that would mean reducing the former to just one of its meanings. In fact, "Word of God" means first of all the person of Jesus Christ. He is the definitive Word uttered by God, the "Logos" that took on flesh and whose glory as Son was seen by the apostles. In the second place, "Word of God" is also the content of the preaching of the apostles, proclaimed, handed down from generation to generation, and recalled in the life of the community of faith -- in prayer, catechetics and worship. In the third place, "Word of God" is the memory that the apostles had of Christ in written form: the Scriptures. From this understanding of the "Word of God" one can draw three important ideas regarding the reading of Scriptures:
Let us take these ideas one by one. The reading of Scriptures must bring us to a personal contact with Jesus Christ. Christianity is not a religion of a book, but of persons. The whole economy of salvation is the story of God seeking human beings in a person-to-person encounter. The role of Scriptures within this economy (already spelled out by Augustine in the first book of the De Doctrina Christiana) is to create a "textual" occasion whereby human beings can -- paraphrasing Dei Verbum -- meet the Father who wishes to commune with his children. Or to put it another way: the Word by which God discloses his heart to humanity is echoed in the human words of Scriptures; therefore, through the words of Scriptures, one is not merely informed, but also invited and challenged to encounter the God who reveals Himself. Jesus Christ who is the definitive Word of Divine Revelation, therefore, is the object of the reading of Scriptures. A reading of the Scriptures which does not lead one to a personal encounter with Him frustrates the very nature of Scriptures itself. Scriptures and Tradition. Those who uphold the "sola Scriptura" principle misunderstand one basic truth about the person of Jesus Christ namely, that he can only be known through the proclamation of the apostles. The memory of the apostles which recall the words and gestures of the Lord are handed down through a living process, "tradition" (from the Latin "tradere"), which is sustained by an unbroken apostolic succession. Scriptures cannot be fully understood without this living tradition. Scriptures can be likened to a family album. When we open a family album, we look at snapshots of some special events in a family's life. But as often happens, there will be pictures that one won't be able to understand without the help of another who remembers the event behind the snapshot. Likewise, the Scriptures contain snapshots of the community of faith as it struggles with the great questions of its day. Without those who "remember" (those who carry the memory of the apostles), one can simply miss the point of the "snapshot". Go To Page: 1 2
The copyright of the article Scriptures as Word of God: Christ, Tradition and Church in Scriptural Studies is owned by . Permission to republish Scriptures as Word of God: Christ, Tradition and Church in print or online must be granted by the author in writing.
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