Very thoughtful article that misses one essential  point. Yes, the Bible 
can be
and often is interpreted politically. Much of this  interpretation is 
unconscious
and the interpreters don't realize how political they  are.
 
However, is the always true? Not really. Someone's  objective, at every 
level,
may be philosophical, the search for truth, and be  inspired by Socrates or 
Kant
or simply the principle that there is no higher goal,  difficult as it may 
be to achieve,
than finding what is good and true.
 
Why search for truth? It is a question of integrity.  It also shows 
independence
of any institution, no matter how cherished it may be,  which then
must be justified on other grounds such as usefulness  or beauty
or even "truth"  -but understood in a different  sense than
scientific objectivity, for example, moral  truth.
 
Billy

 
 
 
================================================
 
Catholic World Report
 
 
 
The Roots of the Political Use and Abuse of the  Bible

September  02, 2014 
 
Scott Hahn and  Benjamin Wiker's book, Politicizing the Bible, examines how 
the  development of biblical scholarship has severed Scripture from the 
heart of the  Church. 
_Leroy Huizenga_ () 
 
 
Very thoughtful article that misses one essential  point. Yes, the Bible 
can be
and often is interpreted politically. Much of this  interpretation is 
unconscious
and the interpreters don't realize how political they  are.
 
However, is the always true? Not really. Someone's  objective, at every 
level,
may be philosophical, the search for truth, and be  inspired by Socrates or 
Kant
or simply the principle that there is no higher goal,  difficult as it may 
be to achieve,
than finding what is good and true.
 
Why search for truth? It is a question of  integrity.
 
Billy
 




The Bible continues to play a large role in American public life, as  
politicians, candidates, and activists advert to it directly and employ its  
cadences in support of a variety of positions, programs, and policies. In 
recent 
 decades, Barack Obama has been quite willing to _employ  the Bible in 
service of progressive purposes_ 
(http://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/28/us/politics/2006obamaspeech.html?pagewanted=all&_r=0)
 , while Bill Clinton went so far  
as to offer voters a “new covenant.” On the Republican side, George W. Bush 
 called America “the Light of the World”, while Ronald Reagan appropriated 
 biblical language and even declared 1983 _"The  Year of the Bible"_ 
(http://www.christianitytoday.com/ct/2004/juneweb-only/6-7-13.0.html?paging=off)
 . 
This political use of the Bible in American discourse is  not new, of 
course. The speeches, writings, and sermons of Dr. Martin Luther  King Jr. were 
well woven with the fine natural threads of biblical inflection  and images. 
Decades earlier in 1896, William Jennings Bryan warned that  advocates of 
the gold standard would “crucify mankind on a cross of gold.” And  of course 
well before that the Puritan settlers envisioned America as a new  promised 
land and the ultimate city on a hill, the latter a dominical phrase  
employed later by both John F. Kennedy and Reagan. 
 
One does not find this political use of the Bible very much across the 
ocean  in Europe, except among fringe Christian parties. Even politicians 
affiliated  with historic parties with “Christian” in their very name—such as 
the 
Christian  Democratic Union in Germany—generally don’t employ anything 
like “Gott segne  Deutschland”in the way American politicians toss out the 
tagline “God bless  America.” The reason, I suppose, is that the Bible holds 
little real cultural  authority in secular, post-Christian societies, and if 
America is indeed heading  that way, it’s not there yet. Enough American 
citizens regard themselves as  Christians for politicians to keep using the 
Bible politically, often in ways  that can only be deemed idolatrous in that 
they mistake America for God, or  Jesus, or biblical Israel, and blasphemous 
in that they may violate the Second  Commandment’s violation of taking the 
name of the LORD for vain purposes.  
Modern Scholarship, Secular Ends  
The rule, then: Where Christian faith matters to a substantial number of 
the  electorate, there politicians, candidates, and activists will employ the 
Bible.  But this is neither a new nor a uniquely American phenomenon. For 
the Bible has  played a role in a number of empires, societies, tribes, and 
nations, and where  it has, those who would wield power have tried to wield 
biblical interpretation  to serve their purposes.  
Such is the subtle line taken in Scott Hahn and Benjamin Wiker’s recent 
book,  _Politicizing  the Bible: The Roots of Historical Criticism and the 
Secularization of Scripture  1300-1700_ 
(http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0824599039/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&camp=1789&creative=390957&creativeASIN=0824599039&l
inkCode=as2&tag=lerohuiz-20&linkId=MCVRVZTPDHR3HGLC)  (Crossroad, 2013). 
(Full disclosure: I wrote an enthusiastic  recommendation for the book, and 
now appreciate the opportunity to review it in  some detail.) Until rather 
recently, most biblical scholars have presented the  modern historical-critical 
method of interpreting Scripture as the triumph of  dispassionate, neutral 
historical objectivity over the distorting interpretive  constraints imposed 
on the text by creed, dogma, tradition, and Church, the  triumph of the 
Enlightenment over the middle ages.  
With the postmodern turn in the humanities, however, ever more scholars and 
 theologians have been calling that narrative into question, those on the  
conservative side pointing out that the historical-critical method does 
indeed  have a history and is much more socially located than its partisans are 
wont to  admit, while radicals observe that most claims involving neutral 
objectivity  serve particular interests very well, whether (say) English 
interests, Prussian  interests, male interests, white interests, capitalist 
interests, hetero  interests, and so forth.  
Most histories of scholarship that tell the story of the rise of modern  
scholarship and its historical-critical method usually begin their narrative 
in  the eighteenth century, regardless of their ideological evaluation 
thereof (such  as Stephen D. Moore’s and Yvonne Sherwood’s fine book, _The  
Invention of the Biblical Scholar: A Critical Manifesto_ 
(http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B006QRCMR0/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&camp=1789&creative=390957&creativeA
SIN=B006QRCMR0&linkCode=as2&tag=lerohuiz-20&linkId=5UM7AODL4OFQUMNI) ), 
paying little  attention to early modern or medieval antecedents. Hahn and Wiker
’s  Politicizing the Bible achieves two ends: It shows both (1) that modern 
 scholarship and its methodology have deep roots in the late medieval and 
early  modern periods and also (2) that what becomes modern scholarship has 
always  functioned to serve secular, political ends, often by direct design. 
The first  would now be conceded by most scholars and historians, I think, 
while the second  will prove more controversial.  
Hahn and Wiker’s thesis is that what is called the “historical-critical  
method” is neither neutral nor objective but “a method largely defined by 
some  prior philosophical commitment” (1), and that prior philosophical 
commitments  have been determining interpretation of the Bible since the turn 
of 
the medieval  age to modernity in the fourteenth century with Marsilius of 
Padua and William  of Ockham.  
And those prior philosophical commitments generally involve political,  
secular goals, which seems in the authors’ view to involve misusing Scripture 
by  ignoring its ecclesial, heavenly purpose of the salvation of souls. With 
regard  to the title of their work, Hahn and Wiker write:  
Our argument, to put it all too simply, is that  the development of the 
historical-critical method in biblical studies is only  fully intelligible as 
part of the more comprehensive project of secularization  that occurred in 
the West over the last seven hundred years, and that the  politicizing of the 
Bible was, in one way or another, essential to this project.  By 
politicization, we mean the intentional exegetical reinterpretation of  
Scripture so as 
to make it serve a merely political, this-worldly (hence  secular) goal. 
Since this effort was largely undertaken by those who  embraced a new secular 
worldview, the effect was to subordinate the method of  interpreting 
Scripture to secular political aims. (8-9; emphasis in original)  
The presuppositions of the historical-critical method that drive the goal 
of  political secularization are (1) “the bias against the supernatural” and 
(2)  “the notion that the core of Christianity is moral rather than dogmatic
” (12),  and most of the book shows how those presuppositions became 
deliberately  ingrained in biblical studies to serve secular ends.  
Secular Reason Over Faith  
The strength of the book lies in its detailed examination of the several  
seminal figures it discusses at length in connection with their eras and 
others  working with and against them—Marsilius of Padua, William of Ockham, 
John  Wycliffe, Machiavelli, Luther, Henry VIII, Descartes, Hobbes, Spinoza, 
Richard  Simon, John Locke, and John Toland. The reader will learn much about 
European  church history and history in general over the past several 
centuries and the  Bible’s role therein, and a particular strength is the 
book’s 
going beyond raw  intellectual history into the ecclesial and political 
struggles on the ground.  Without summarizing the several hundred pages the 
bulk 
of the book comprises, I  wish to discuss two figures and one episode to 
give readers a taste of the  book’s meat.  
In many intellectual histories William of Ockham has been seen as one of 
the  main culprits giving us modernity (thinking of Richard Weaver’s _Ideas  
Have Consequences_ 
(http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0226876802/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&camp=1789&creative=390957&creativeASIN=0226876802&linkCode=as2&tag=le
rohuiz-20&linkId=L4U6AB74YVKJNQOD) or Michael Allen Gillespie’s _The  
Theological Origins of Modernity_ 
(http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0226293467/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&camp=1789&creative=390957&creativeASIN=0226293467&linkCode
=as2&tag=lerohuiz-20&linkId=QTQS4BPK2DS3UTDG) ), and Hahn and Wiker’s work 
is  similar. But where other works expend their energies examining the 
effects of  Ockham’s philosophical nominalism and concomitant voluntarism upon 
intellectual  history, Hahn and Wiker also examine Ockham’s more practical 
struggles for  Franciscan identity and liberty and the arguments he provided to 
support them.  Above all they detail how Ockham wrote against “that heretic,
” the “pseudo-pope”  John XXII at Avignon and “his heresies” (42). In 
doing so, Ockham used the very  modern appeal to experts: “But many experts 
know the true meaning of the  commandments of God and Christ. They can 
interpret those commandments to those  who do not know, because such 
interpretation 
is nothing but an exposition,  clarification, or making manifest of the true 
meaning of God’s commandments,”  writes Ockham, and those experts have 
authority because God’s mind can be known  not by authority of the Pope as 
guardian of tradition but “through reasoning and  the Scriptures” (45).  
Benedict de (Baruch) Spinoza has been figuring ever more prominently in  
evaluations of the development of biblical scholarship, and for good reason, 
as  his views on Scripture were radical indeed. So radical, in fact, that 
they seem  to have occasioned perhaps the most brutal letter of excommunication 
in  Judeo-Christian history, _as  his synagogue’s ma’amad pulled no 
punches in damning him_ 
(http://www.neh.gov/humanities/2013/septemberoctober/feature/why-spinoza-was-excommunicated)
 :  
By decree of the angels and by the command of the  holy men, we 
excommunicate, expel, curse and damn Baruch de Espinoza, with the  consent of 
God, 
Blessed be He, and with the consent of the entire holy  congregation, and in 
front of these holy scrolls with the 613 precepts which are  written therein; 
cursing him with the excommunication with which Joshua banned  Jericho and 
with the curse which Elisha cursed the boys and with all the  castigations 
which are written in the Book of the Law. Cursed be he by day and  cursed be he 
by night; cursed be he when he lies down and cursed be he when he  rises 
up. Cursed be he when he goes out and cursed be he when he comes in. The  Lord 
will not spare him, but the anger of the Lord and his jealousy shall smoke  
against that man, and all the curses that are written in this book shall 
lie  upon him, and the Lord shall blot out his name from under heaven.  
Scholars aren’t quite sure precisely what specific views or actions  
occasioned his excommunication, but Spinoza’s mature beliefs are clear enough.  
Above all Spinoza was a pantheist, and that involved him in both a denial of 
the  possibility of divine, personal revelation as well as the miraculous and 
also a  purely Cartesian view of the world. Hahn and Wiker write:  
[B]y identifying God with nature and assuming that  the order of nature was 
identical to the clearest, most certain science of  mathematics, Spinoza 
completely and purposely eliminated supernatural revelation  as a possibility. 
God’s essence is entirely revealed in nature; He is nature;  therefore the 
highest science, the one that truly grasps God’s essence, is  
mathematical-mechanical natural science, which, since God is identified with  
nature, is 
identical to natural theology. (362)  
Spinoza’s work fundamentally cements the idea that religion cannot be  
supernatural and can concern only mere morality. Politically, the Bible is  
removed from synagogue (and in effect Church) and given into the hands of  
experts. With Spinoza we also see the modern chasm between meaning and truth  
opening, as well as the separation of faith and a very truncated form of 
reason.  Politically, Spinoza’s work has the effect of privileging a secular 
reason over  any sort of faith and thus the State over any particular religious 
claims.  
The burden of their work has been to show how what comes to be called the  
historical-critical method did not originate as late as the nineteenth 
century  but several centuries earlier. Having done that, they then sketch 
historical  criticism in more recent centuries in their conclusion, and an 
episode 
closer to  our own times and concerns as scholars not given its own chapter 
but discussed  in the conclusion may help readers grasp how Hahn and Wiker 
envision the  politicization of the Bible.  
Most scholars today believe that Mark was the first Gospel written, and 
that  whoever wrote Matthew used it as a source, whereas the Church (and many  
scholars) held (and some still hold) that Matthew was first. When one reads  
commentaries or introductory literature, rational arguments for Markan 
priority  are presented: Mark wouldn’t omit the Sermon on the Mount if Matthew 
were first,  Matthew’s literary construction is superior, Matthew’s Greek is 
superior,  Matthew’s Christology is higher, and so forth. Fair questions, 
all, and not  without answers, but the consensus on Markan priority was not 
achieved in a  sterile vacuum. It has a political, ideological history. In 
short, _as New Testament  scholar and Catholic convert William Farmer argued_ 
(http://www.churchinhistory.org/pages/booklets/farmer.pdf) , Markan priority 
became  dominant in the time of Bismarck’s Second Reich and his 
Kulturkampf. It  served Bismarck’s German Protestantism and nationalism by 
suggesting 
that the  passage supporting Petrine and thus papal primacy in Matthew 16 was 
not  eyewitness reporting of Jesus’ own words but something invented later, 
since the  passage was altogether lacking in Mark. German universities came 
under  increasing state control, and all clergy—including Catholic 
seminarians—were to  be educated in state institutions. Markan priority became 
state 
dogma serving  the undermining of papal claims and the buttressing of 
budding German  nationalism (see 564-565).  
Two Criticisms  
Hahn and Wiker have done well to show that what passes for modern 
methodology  is not recent but old and not neutral but often ideological. Given 
the 
copious  quotes from and abundant information the book provides about these 
and other  crucial figures, Hahn and Wiker’s book should be required reading 
for any  budding biblical scholar—and for those more mature scholars who 
simply assume  the supposed neutrality and supremacy of the so-called 
historical critical  method. Still, as much as I appreciated the book, it left 
me 
wanting even more,  in a certain sense, in spite of the book’s surfeit of 
information. My  fundamental critique is twofold.  
First, the book can feel episodic, with raw chronology as an organizing  
principle (although the authors deny such on p. 8). To be sure, Hahn and Wiker 
 sketch lines of influence from thinker to thinker and upon history, but 
the work  would be strengthened by a thicker conception of history that would 
explain more  precisely how the individual giants discussed affected the 
course of history,  and indeed how politics and intellectual history relate to 
socio-cultural  development more broadly. Moreover, especially crucial for a 
work dealing with  the Bible, more attention to the the effects of the 
technology of the printing  press and literacy upon the history of the Bible’s 
interpretation and use would  be welcome. In short, a thicker description of 
the forest of the Bible’s  function in the last several centuries would be 
helpful to complement the  painstaking, detailed description of the several 
giant redwoods Hahn and Wiker  discuss.  
Second, I would welcome more exploration of critical concepts crucial for  
Hahn and Wiker’s project, namely modernity, secularization, and politics, 
for  they leave them too simply defined (see their thesis quoted above, from 
pp.  8-9). What is modernity? Is it the supremacy of the State? The 
centrality of  economics to life? The domination of technocracy and 
_technopoly_ 
(http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0679745408/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&camp=1789&creat
ive=390957&creativeASIN=0679745408&linkCode=as2&tag=lerohuiz-20&linkId=JFDNH
GZZOIYZP7FR) ?  Rank individualism? A new or anti-metaphysics? What role 
does religion play  therein?  
So too with their explicit use of the term “secularization.” Much has been 
 written about the roots and nature of secularization and its relationship 
to  religion, and so some discussion of the work of (say) _Charles  Taylor_ 
(http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0674026764/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&camp=1789&c
reative=390957&creativeASIN=0674026764&linkCode=as2&tag=lerohuiz-20&linkId=B
EVQREIMMUHOIFH5)  or _Peter  Berger_ 
(http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0385073054/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&camp=1789&creative=390957&creativeASIN=0385073054
&linkCode=as2&tag=lerohuiz-20&linkId=GVVXVHK3LXPJSSUW)  or (especially) 
Brad Gregory’s _The  Unintended Reformation_ 
(http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0674045637/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&camp=1789&creative=390957&creativeASIN=067404
5637&linkCode=as2&tag=lerohuiz-20&linkId=M6UZ7ISZQUFADTMX)  would be 
welcome. Is secularization the removal  of religion to the margins of a 
culture, 
or does it afford a reconfiguration of  religion in healthy ways? Does 
modernity necessarily involve secularization?  
Above all, I think thoughtful theological readers might have the most  
difficulty with the term “politicizing,” and here too much more could be said.  
Hahn and Wiker seem to use the term to refer to the growth of the State at 
the  expense of the Church and faith, as ever more in societies became ever 
more  politicized, all of which is true cause for concern. And yet, the 
implication  that biblical interpretation could be apolitical suffers from an 
impoverished  conception of politics and indeed the Church’s mission in the 
world. For the  Church has a politics, and Christians live in light of the 
city (polis)  of God, as our ultimate citizenship (politeuma) is in heaven (see 
 Philippians 3:17-20). Instead of talking about “politicizing” and  “
secularization,” Hahn and Wiker might have done better to talk more explicitly  
about how the development of biblical scholarship took the Bible away from 
the  Church and gave it to the State.  
Far from seeing the above concerns as fatal flaws, however, I think it best 
 to see them as opportunities. One of the great strengths of the book’s  
recounting of the history of development of biblical scholarship is its 
implicit  invitation for further constructive work in rescuing the Bible from 
its 
academic  and political captivity and reclaiming it for the Church, whose 
Scripture it  ultimately is.  
Politicizing the Bible: The Roots of Historical Criticism and the  
Secularization of Scripture 1300-1700
by Scott Hahn and  Benjamin Wiker
The Crossroad Publishing Company, 2013
Hardcover, 624 pages 

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