Episode 239: Cameron B. R. Howard - How Is the Bible Authoritative?

What does it mean for the Bible to be authoritative? In this episode of The Bible for Normal People, Cameron B. R. Howard joins Pete and Jared to discuss how tradition has impacted the idea of authority of the biblical text, and how reading the Bible as a collection of multi-vocal testimonies can inspire a new outlook on its authority. Join them as they explore the following questions:

  • What does it mean for the Bible to be authoritative?

  • How could we view authority as relational instead of transactional?

  • How does acknowledging different genres in the Bible help us process what authority means?

  • What can Nehemiah 8 teach us about biblical authority?

  • How did ancient Israelites view the authority of Scripture prior to having access to the written Bible as we know it today?

  • Which parts of history reveal gatekeepers of the Bible who try to claim authority over the “right” interpretations of the Bible?

  • What does it mean for the Bible to be authoritative when it is a multi-vocal text?

  • How does the idea of Scripture as a collection of testimonies tie into the idea of its authority?

  • Cameron asserts that the biblical writers adapted to popular culture of their times. What implications does that have for understanding the Bible as an authoritative text?

  • In matters of things like ethics and morality, what role does the Bible play in our communities of faith?

Tweetables

Pithy, shareable, sometimes-less-than-280-character statements from the episode you can share.

  • At the heart of the issue of biblical authority is the question: How does the Bible matter for my life? What difference does it make in my life? Why should I care about the Bible? — Cameron B. R. Howard

  • How you define biblical authority is going to influence how you interpret scripture, but then how you interpret scripture is also going to influence how you define biblical authority. — Cameron B. R. Howard

  • You open up the Bible and there aren't a lot of rules in there. There are a lot of stories, there are poems, there's a love poem in it. There are so many different kinds of texts there and already it's not what we've maybe been taught to expect. — Cameron B. R. Howard

  • Even if we are to say that the Bible is God talking to us in some way, God is doing that talking through a lot of different literary forms, a lot of different voices from different time periods with different ideas. So, it's not just the sort of straightforward imparting of information. — Cameron B. R. Howard

  • In Scripture's account of the first public reading of the Torah—some version of the first five books of the Bible—it wasn't ever self-evident. It always needed interpretation.— Cameron B. R. Howard

  • The loss of the temple, I think, is one thing that starts to cultivate this sense of the text as the place to look for understanding God and the encounter with God. — Cameron B. R. Howard

  • If I read with my hermeneutic of generosity, I see that from this very first reading of the Torah, interpretation is a communal act. We need each other to read and understand. — Cameron B. R. Howard

  • I deeply believe that we do our best interpretation in community, listening to each other, hearing people interpret who are different from us, or who have different interpretations than we have. — Cameron B. R. Howard

  • If I read with a hermeneutic of suspicion, I'm more suspicious of the text. From the very first reading of the Torah, there are people with power who are trying to tell everybody the right way to interpret things.— Cameron B. R. Howard

  • I've really liked this category of thinking of Scripture as testimony. Rather than a kind of rule book, or rather than this centralized kind of inert authority, Scripture is a collection of testimonies. — Cameron B. R. Howard

  • A lot of the reason that we read the Bible and consider the Bible authoritative is because tradition has told us so. — Cameron B. R. Howard

  • I'm interested in taking the Bible as authoritative in its totality. Not just for the words on the page, not just for its content, but also for how it came together, how it exists as this multi-vocal set of testimonies, and to not be afraid of that. — Cameron B. R. Howard

  • We are not doing theology and religious practice in a vacuum, but we are always in a particular culture, and that's okay. The Bible was too, and that's okay. We share that across time and space with the voices of witness in Scripture. — Cameron B. R. Howard

Mentioned in This Episode


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Episode 240: Dan McClellan - Why God Is Like a Hotdog

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Episode 238: Josh James - Psalms Isn't What You Think It Is