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Suppose, for example, that it could be proved that the Fourth Gospel was
not actually written by Saint John the beloved disciple of Christ—in
my view, there are in fact strong reasons for continuing to accept
John's authorship—yet, even so, this would not alter the fact that we
regard the Fourth Gospel as Scripture. Why? Because the Fourth Gospel,
whoever the author may be, is accepted by the Church and in the Church.
Secondly, we interpret Scripture through and in the
Church. If it is the Church that tells us what is Scripture, equally it
is the Church that tells us how Scripture is to be understood. Coming
upon the Ethiopian as he read the Old Testament in his chariot, Philip
the Apostle asked him, "Do you understand what you are
reading?" "How can I," answered the Ethiopian,
"unless someone guides me?" (Acts 8:30, 31).
His difficulty is also ours. The words
of Scripture are not always self-explanatory. The Bible has a marvelous
underlying simplicity but when studied in detail it can prove a
difficult book. God does indeed speak directly to the heart of each one
of us during our Scripture reading—-as Saint Tikhon says, our reading
is a personal dialogue between each one and Christ Himself—but we also
need guidance. And our guide is the Church. We make full use of our
private understanding, illuminated by the Spirit. We make full use of
biblical commentaries and of the findings of modern research. But we
submit individual opinions, whether our own or those of the scholars, to
the judgment of the Church.
We read the Bible personally, but not as isolated
individuals. We say not "I" but "we." We read as the
members of a family, the family of the Orthodox Catholic Church. We read
in communion with all the other members of the Body of Christ in all
parts of the world and in all generations of time. This communal or
catholic approach to the Bible is underlined in one of the questions
asked of a convert at the reception service used in the Russian Church:
"Do you acknowledge that the Holy Scripture must be accepted and
interpreted in accordance with the belief which has been handed down by
the Holy Fathers, and which the Holy Orthodox Church, our Mother, had
always held and still does hold?" The decisive criterion of our
understanding of what Scripture means is the mind of the Church.
To discover this "mind of the
Church," where do we begin? A first step is to see how Scripture is
used in worship. How in particular are biblical lessons chosen for
reading at the different feasts? A second step is to consult the
writings of the Church Fathers, especially St. John Chrysostom. How do
they analyze and apply the text of Scripture? An ecclesial manner of
reading the Bible is in this way both liturgical and patristic.
To illustrate what it means to
interpret Scripture in a liturgical way, consider the Old Testament
lessons at Vespers for the Feast of the Annunciation (March 25) and at
Vespers on Holy Saturday, the first part of the ancient Paschal Vigil.
At the Annunciation there are five readings:
(1) Genesis 28:10-17: Jacob's dream of a ladder set
up from earth to heaven.
(2) Ezekiel 43:27-44: the prophet's
vision of the Jerusalem temple, with the closed gate through which none
but the Prince may pass.
(3) Proverbs 9:1-11: one of the great
Sophianic passages in the Old Testament, beginning "Wisdom has
built her house."
(4) Exodus 3:1-8: Moses at the Burning Bush.
(5) Proverbs 8:22-30: another Sophianic text,
describing Wisdom's place in God's eternal providence: "I have been
established from everlasting, from the beginning, before there was ever
an earth."
In these passages from the Old
Testament, we have a series of powerful images to indicate the role of
the Theotokos in God's unfolding plan of salvation. She is Jacob's
ladder, for by means of her. God comes down and enters our world,
assuming the flesh that she supplies. She is both Mother and
Ever-Virgin; Christ is born from her, yet she remains still inviolate,
the gate of her virginity sealed. She provides the humanity or house
which Christ the Wisdom of God (1 Cor. 1:24) takes as His dwelling;
alternatively, she is herself to be regarded as God's Wisdom. She is the
Burning Bush, who contains within her womb the uncreated fire of the
Godhead and yet is not consumed. From all eternity, "before there
was ever an earth," she was forechosen by God to be His Mother.
Reading these passages in their
original context within the Old Testament, we might not at once
appreciate that they foreshadow the Savior's Incarnation from the
Virgin. But, by exploring the use made of the Old Testament in the
Church lectionary, we can discover layer upon layer of meanings that are
far from obvious at first sight.
The same thing happens when we
consider how Scripture is used on Holy Saturday. Here there are no less
than fifteen Old Testament lessons. Regrettably, in many of our parishes
the majority of these are omitted, so God's people are starved of their
proper biblical nourishment. This long sequence Of readings sets before
us the deeper significance of Christ's "passing over" through
death to resurrection. First among the lessons is the account of the
creation (Gen. 1:1-13): Christ's Resurrection is a new creation (2 Cor.
5:17; Rev. 21:5), the inauguration of a new age, the age to come. The
third lesson describes the Jewish ritual of the Passover meal: Christ
crucified and risen is the new Passover, the Paschal Lamb who alone can
take away the sin of the world (1 Cor. 5:7; John 1:29). The fourth
lesson is the book of Jonah in its entirety." the prophet's three
days in the belly of the fish foreshadow Christ's resurrection after
three days in the tomb (Matt. 12:40). The sixth lesson recounts the
crossing of the Red Sea by the Israelites (Ex. 13:20—15:19): Christ
leads us from the bondage of Egypt (sin), through the Red Sea (baptism),
into the promised land (the Church). The final lesson is the story of
the three Holy Children in the fiery furnace (Dan. 3), once more a
"type" or foreshowing of Christ's rising from the tomb.
How can we develop this ecclesial and
liturgical way of reading Scripture in the Bible study circles within
our parishes? One person can be given the task of noting whenever a
particular passage is used for a festival or saint's day, and the group
can then discuss together the reasons why it has been so chosen. Others
in the group may be assigned to do homework among the Fathers, relying
above all upon the biblical homilies of St. John Chrysostom, which are
available in English translation in the series Nicene and Post-Nicene
Fathers, reissued by Eerdmans. Initially we may be disappointed: the
Fathers' manner of thinking and speaking is often strikingly different
from our own today. But there is gold in the patristic texts, if only we
have the persistence and imagination to discover it.
Excerpted from "The Orthodox Study Bible: New Testament and Psalms,"
St. Athanasius Orthodox Academy, Thomas Nelson Publishers: Nashville, Tennessee, 1993.
The Orthodox Study Bible may be obtained from: Conciliar Press
To: Previous Orthodox Articles
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