The Rules of Scriptural Reasoning
James Buckley,
Loyola College in Maryland
jbuckley@loyola.edu
Peter
Ochs' "SSR: The Rules of Scriptural Reasoning" invites us not so much to turn
his essay-letter into a document for our common use as to be stimulated to
respond with " your own versions or partial versions of rules for SR" (I) as well as to gripe about his claims or make use of
them on our own. My own "partial version" will be three sorts of rules, simply borrowed from Ochs, with a couple
of gripes thrown in.
1. The most important feature of Ochs`
essay-letter is its constant referral to the theological issue of God. The aim
of the SSR, he has said, is " to recover the practice of listening for the
speech of God that both preceded and still provides the terms for modern
thinking" (I).
Our effort is one of " reasoning out the consequences of God's speech to
us in scripture"(2) rational reflection being "an
attribute of the life of God's word in our midst" (1).
"If we are not even prepared to acknowledge that our work must be made in
relation to God, then we cannot hope to bring about a new life that would
follow modernity " an acknowledgment that must be humble, " ultimately by
listening, alone"(C). I would call this "The God Rule. " It is not a simple one, as one
can tell by recalling Michael Wyschogrod on the One God of Israel and Dan
Hardy's paper on "the coherence of the abundance of God " from SSR 1996. But the
question of the identity and our identification of God is one I would like to
see continue to be on our front burner. In some of my remarks below I am
tempted to substitute the traditional Christian monastic term
"lectio divina " for "Scriptural
reasoning " as a way to highlight this theological focus.
2.
Significant numbers of all three communities (Jewish, Christian, Muslim) seem
to adhere to what we might call the "occasion-comprehensive character of
Scriptural performance. " This mouthful
requires some explaining. Scriptures
are "performed." [31] This is not a definition, as if Scripture
never corrects performance. It is simply a description of the way Scripture
appears in all three communities performed, or used, as we and they pray
alone and together, as we and they study and think, as we and they raise up the
lowly and humble the powerful in our political lives, etc. Scripture is thus
used or performed on a variety of specific occasions. Thus our uses of
Scripture are occasion-specific. But at least some members of these
communities, without denying that uses of Scripture are thus occasion-specific,
might also insist that Scriptures bear on all the specific occasions of our
lives our birth and death, our affections and political actions, our thoughts
about God as well as inner or outer space.
Scriptural performance is "occasion-comprehensive." This does not mean
that, on any of these occasions, all we need to do is understand Scripture. If
we bring Scripture to bear on our birth and death, for example, we need to
understand Scripture as well as our birth and death.
(William
Christian Sr., from whose Doctrines of
Religious Communities. A Philosophical Study[32]
I have borrowed the notions of "occasion-comprehensiveness and
occasion-specificity," contrasts occasion-comprehensive and
occasion-specific claims with
"topic-comprehensive claims " e.g. a claim that all we need to
understand any topic like our birth or death is Scripture. In William
Christian's technical argot, occasion-comprehensiveness includes but goes
beyond occasion-specificity but does not include topic-comprehensiveness.)
These technicalities aside, for the Christian theologian like myself to understand
Scripture in her or his own community is to understand a whole panoply of uses
of Scripture in the Church; similarly, if the Christian theologian is to
understand Scripture performed in another community, he or she needs to
understand a similar range of performances.
If
this notion of occasion-comprehensiveness is plausible, we can then read Ochs
paper as devoted to thinking out how this occasion-comprehensiveness can fail,
or succeed. For example, it fails in
the Jewish community, Ochs proposes, in secular universalism (in my terms
above: Scripture is virtually irrelevant to any occasion of activity) and its
dialectical counterpart: anti-modern Jewish orthodoxy (in my terms above: Scripture
is all we need to know and perform, sans any interruptions by modernity). It succeeds when it repairs a suffering,
when its thinking is "redemptive reasoning "
(5)
in the way Peirce's A-reasonings correct B-reasonings "redeeming, and not replacing,
modernity"(E). We might call this "The Reparative
Rule." I find all of this rich and suggestive, and will not here quibble about
details.
However,
I would like to see us pursue this occasion-comprehensive rule (e.g., "Always
use Scripture in a way that repairs a suffering" ) in a variety of
occasion-specific ways. Ochs mentions our common ground in the university, as
well as textual reasoning and depth historiography. Fair enough (although we
need to keep in mind the differences between the ancient and the modern
university). But I would also like to see how The Reparative Rule (along with
The God Rule) is performed on less academic occasions in our different and
competing rituals, political theologies, and nurturing of emotions, passions
and feelings.
By
the way, the necessary conjoining of The Reparative Rule and The God Rule could
raise a number of interesting questions about God's justice and mercy, as well
as our own, as Ochs hints.
By
"performed comprehensively" I do not mean that all we need on any specific
occasion (when we pray alone or together, when we raise up the lowly and bring
down the mighty from the pulpit or election booth, when we teach and study,
etc.) is Scripture; I simply mean that Scripture bears on all the occasions of
our lives, somehow. This "somehow" suggests that there are disputes over how
these texts are best performed comprehensively not only performed in our
liturgies but also performed in our affectional lives as haughty or
disconsolate persons, our political lives as powerful and powerless, our
economic lives as rich and poor, our academic lives as historians, philosophers
and literary critics, and so forth. Out of this welter of controversies and
occasions for mutual rebuke and reparation, let me mention just two examples
one challenging a specific occasion of such performance, the other challenging
the whole notion of comprehensive Scriptural performance.
The
first objection is this. "Occasion-comprehensive performance of Scripture" is a
theological reading of Scriptural texts not simply on one occasion but at all
times, comprehensively. But this seems to exclude a great many people. That is,
"occasion-comprehensive performance of Scripture" is still "reading," a
practice engaged by educated Christians usually far from the illiteracy that is
the fate of most of the world. Whatever differences there are among Jews,
Christians and Muslims in this regard, many of their adherents are not readers
(theological or otherwise), and never have been. Occasion-comprehensive
performance of Scripture can never, this counter-argument goes, be performed
comprehensively except by the few, the relatively well-educated, and the
relatively rich.
This is an understandable objection that I need to repair.
"Occasion-comprehensive performance of Scripture" is, I have so far presumed, a
communal enterprise a set of practices that particular members of the
community engage in, in different ways. Precisely because lectio divina is practiced comprehensively, it is not necessary for
an individual or even most members of a local church to know how to read to
engage in this practice and people who do know how to read may not be able to
perform Scripture comprehensively, particularly if they are those Paul
Griffiths calls "consumerist" readers who read for self-satisfying or
self-devouring ends.[33] This is one reason, I take it, that
Christians like St. Clare encouraged her sisters not to be eager to learn how
to read, unless they already knew how. Surely some members of the community
must know how to read (e.g., how to pick up Scripture and read it out loud to a
community), but not everyone does. "Lector" is an order or ministry of the
Christian Church but only one of the minor orders, or ministries. I would be
interested in knowing what, if any, the theological differences are between
Jews, Christians, and Muslims on matters of (il)literacy.
I do think the Church should encourage universal literacy in particular cultures,
even at the risk of creating more consumerist readers (much as Scriptural
reasoners might encourage reasoning more generally). Abusus non tollit usus. The few illiterate persons I have known
have yearned to read and, indeed, insisted on being taught how. But my point
here is not to argue for such universal literacy. In fact, the goal of such
literacy is not to be confused with the theological literacy that is not simply
reading the Scriptures but performing them comprehensively, consuming them like
Ezechiel. Here I touch upon and leave unsettled crucial issues with regard to
the occasion-comprehensive performance of Scripture issues Catholics know as
one version of nature and grace. That is, how does lectio divina (occasion-comprehensive performance of Scripture)
exceed and perfect without destroying lectio
humana, especially the humanity of those who are poor or in any way
afflicted and here I mean those who cannot read? My point has been to suggest
that occasion-comprehensive performance of lectio
divina is theologically specific that, for all its common ground with
reading as a human practice, it has its own specific shape. But I must forgo
further analysis to turn to a second objection to the occasion-comprehensive
performance of Scripture.
There
is a second sort of rebuke to my claim that lectio
divina involves the occasion-comprehensive performance of Scripture is that
it embodies an unacceptable Scriptural pragmatism, reducing texts and their
Holy Inspirer to their uses by human communities.[34]
The simple answer to the charge of Scriptural pragmatism is this. The
occasion-comprehensive performance of Scripture is one of three features of
Scriptural reasoning I am abstracting from Ochs' paper. It would be wrong to
think it is the whole.
The more important and difficult answer would be to argue,
as Ochs has done, that "scriptural pragmatism" (embracing Jewish and Christian
readers) is not only or primarily a subspecies of "scriptural pragmatism." [35] There is no reason Christians cannot use
pragmatic gold, suitably distinguished from its dross. For example, one of the theological
weaknesses of some American pragmatists is that they seem not to recognize that
occasion-comprehensive performance (including their own) is relative to
specific communities — Jewish, Christian, pragmatist or other. For example, if
Ochs is right, the theist Peirce does not seem to notice that his God is a word
that comes from a linguistically-shaped tradition that is neither Jewish nor
Christian.[36] For those who insist that how we name God
(or how God is a proper name) is the crucial determinant of how we engage in
lectio divina, there can be no reduction
of lectio divina to its performance,
no matter how occasion comprehensive.
3. A third and necessarily brief point. Scriptures are writings and this raises
a nest of questions about canonicity that arise in similar as well as different
ways for our three communities. "Textual problems are thus like sufferings, and
pragmatic readings are like acts of care or redemption." [37]
We have focused on specific Scriptural texts in the past, and I am sure we will
do so in the future. The two issues I abstracted from Ochs the identity and
identification of God and the occasion-comprehensive performance of Scripture
should (at least in the SSR) be handled in relation to specific Scriptural
texts rather than in the general form I have raised them. Would the different
ways Abraham is reparatively woven into our (Jewish, Christian, Muslim) canons
be of use? There is probably already abundant material on this issue, although
I doubt the issue has been considered from our point of view. Such a focus
might also connect our discussions to those of non-theological historians who
have their versions of the formation of Israel.
Title Page |
Archive
© 2002, Society for Scriptural Reasoning
|