Monday, December 10, 2018

The False Doctrine of Rob Bell and the Remedy of a Grounded Tradition


C. S. Lewis once observed that a well-traveled man is unlikely to fall prey to the local superstitions of his village; in the same way a scholar, because he has “lived” in many ages, is not likely to fall for the folly and nonsense of his own age.

Every age has its own nonsense, but each age tends to have its own “brand” of nonsense. This is why it is absolutely essential to understand our Christian tradition. Without knowing our tradition it is impossible to know if an idea or doctrine is in keeping with orthodox Christianity or if it is a heretical innovation. Providing young men and women with a foundation in the Christian tradition may be the most valuable aspect of a classical Christian education. To illustrate the value of this I’ll discuss a new, popular book about the Bible.

I recently picked up a copy of Rob Bell’s most recent book What is the Bible? at the library. First a disclaimer: I did not read the whole book. That being said, I have read significant chunks of it (it is broken up like a series of Twitter threads, so it reads really fast).

Bell’s book takes an innovative approach to the Bible. When discussing the question of whether or not the Bible is inerrant, Bell writes the following. “Where did people get the idea that without error is the highest form of truth? Is the sunset without error? Is the love between you and the person you’re in love with without error? Is the best meal you’ve eaten without error? You don’t think about those experiences in those terms because that would rob those experiences of their depth and joy(page 282, the italics and bold are in the original).

To begin with, these are very poor analogies! The Bible is not like a sunset! It repeatedly says things that are either true or false and if its promises are not true, we are fools to believe in them. “I am the way, the truth, and the life; no one comes to the Father except through me.” That is a truth claim; it is not something we enjoy like a good meal. If it is true we had better submit to Christ and trust Him for our salvation; if it is false we had better find another way. “If you confess with your mouth that Jesus is Lord and believe in your heart that God raised Him from the dead, you will be saved.” That is not analogous to being in love! That statement makes a truth claim: it is either true or false. If it is false my hope for salvation is in vain; if it is true then I can be confident and live in hope and joy.

When considering the question “Did Jesus Have to Die?” Bell answers “No. He didn’t. He was killed” (page 240). However, in the Gospels Jesus repeatedly stated that He had to die. After His resurrection both His Apostles and His Church came to share this understanding (c.f. Acts 3:18 and 4:28). On what reasonable basis can one believe, like Bell, that when Peter said “God was fulfilling what all the prophets had foretold about the Messiah—that he must suffer these things” Peter was simply sharing his perspective, but when, in the very same breath, Peter said “Now repent of your sins and turn to God, so that your sins may be wiped away” Peter was saying something that we can rely upon and that we should believe? How can anyone rationally divide the two and accept the latter claim, while rejecting the former? Peter’s understanding of salvation must be right or wrong—there is no rational or Biblical principle that allows us to divide it up and claim part is right and part is wrong. Furthermore, on what basis is Bell claiming that he is right that Jesus did not have to die and that Peter is wrong? And why on earth does he think we should not read the Bible in terms of truth and falsehood?

This is where it helps to be able to put together what Nietzsche (a very bad man, for what it is worth, but even a stopped clock is right twice a day) called “a genealogy of morals.” There are a ton of unspoken assumptions in Bell’s book. However, students like ours that have read a number of original sources will be able to see what sources Bell is drawing from. This in turn will allow them to better understand unstated and underdeveloped assumptions and premises.

For example, when discussing the crucifixion Bell states that it is “a story about humanity growing in maturity, leaving behind the idea that the divine needs blood. . . . The Bible is a reflection of a growing and expanding human consciousness” (page 245). In similar fashion, when discussing the conquest of the Promised Land Bell writes “when you read that God told them to kill everyone in the village, someone wrote that. That’s how someone understood that event. Don’t drag God into it. The Bible is a library of books reflecting how human beings have understood the divine. . . . What you’re reading is someone’s perspective that reflects the time and the place they lived in. It’s not God’s perspective—it’s theirs.” (page 295, italics and bold in the original.) Do you get that? According to Bell, the Bible is not God’s word about Himself and man, it is man’s word about God. This is not how orthodox Christians have seen the Bible. But if Bell’s is not an orthodox view of the Bible, where did it come from? 

A student familiar with the history of ideas will immediately say, “oh, that’s a mixture of Hegel and Natural Religion. Bell also has a lot of existentialism (c.f. chapter 40), with a pinch of post-modernism (c.f. chapter 37), all covered with a light glaze of New Ageism (c.f. pages 266-267). [I apologize that I only refer to these ideas, but this post will become far too long if I develop all of them.] This is nothing new! I’ve seen these ideas before, I’ve seen them articulated far more persuasively and effectively, and I’ve already worked my way through many of them. Bell believes the Bible is a collection of books written by people who put words and ideas into God’s mouth that He never said; if this was true, I wouldn’t trust these people to give me directions to Kwik Trip, let alone to instruct me in God’s plan for salvation. Ultimately Bell believes that the Bible is man’s Tower of Babel—it is our creation, something that we have constructed in our attempt to reach God (c.f. pages 304-305). I’ve read enough to know how that works out!” 

Specialists trained to spot counterfeit bills don’t spend their time looking at every type of false bill. Instead, they look at authentic bills over and over and over and over and over again. Because they know the truth they are able to spot the false. In the same way, a student, like our students, that has read Athanasius, Augustine, Bede, Benedict, Boethius, Dante, Luther, Lewis, and many more great authors has seen the truth articulated over and over again—in many ways, in many genres, and in many ages. Our students have a knowledge of the Christian tradition and because of this knowledge they can recognize whether or not someone is within that tradition. Knowing the Christian tradition they will recognize that Bell does not read the Bible as Christians historically have (he does not even read the Old Testament the way the New Testament authors do). This isn’t to say that the tradition is automatically right and Bell is automatically wrong, but instead of directly engaging the tradition and showing why he is right where Aquinas, Edwards, Irenaeus, Origen and countless others have been wrong, Bell time and time again side steps difficult questions by saying he “isn’t interested in those types of things” or that he is after “higher truths.” A student trained in logic will not find that compelling in the least! Finally, knowing the Bible, when they read passages wherein Bell does things like doubt the literal, physical resurrection of Jesus (page 185) our students will rightly see Bell for who he is: a false teacher. That is what a classical Christian education provides and this education is sorely needed.

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