Jesus and Scripture (Scripture and the Authority of God by N.T. Wright)

This is part 5  of the series blogging through the book Scripture and the Authority of God by N.T. Wright. You might want to start with part 1 and work your way through the series.

Wright uses chapters 3 through 6 to examine the use of the Scriptures throughout the history of the church. This post will review Wright’s cursory examination of ‘Scripture and Jesus’, which he summarizes as follows:

at the heart of his work lay the sense of bringing the story of scripture to its climax, and thereby offering to God the obedience through which the Kingdom would be accomplished.

For Wright, the Kingdom is about God putting ‘the world to rights, judging evil, and bringing forgiveness and new life’.

N.T. Wright on Colbert Report

In emphasizing the Kingdom storyline and the climatic entrance of Jesus, Wright downplays two aspects of scripture. Continue reading

Important Questions to Wrestle with on the Authority of Scripture (Scripture and the Authority of God by N.T. Wright)

This is part 4  of the series blogging through the book Scripture and the Authority of God by N.T. Wright. You might want to start with part 1 and work your way through the series.

Exploring the authority of Scripture opens up lots of questions as one wrestles through how scripture can have “authority”, what that might mean, and how to put it into practice.

Some of these questions include:

Continue reading

Israel and the Inspiration of Scripture (Scripture and the Authority of God by N.T. Wright)

This is part 3  of the series blogging through the book Scripture and the Authority of God by N.T. Wright. You might want to start with part 1. 

Having laid out a thesis (see part 1) and presenting the problems with how scripture is used as authoritative today (see part 2), Wright sets out to examine the use of scripture across different periods of time.

In chapter 2,Wright looks at Israel’s use of scripture and touches on the idea that these writings were inspired by God.

“Inspiration” is a shorthand way of talking about the belief that by his Spirit God guided the very different writers and editors, so that the books they produced were the books God intended his people to have. This is not the subject of the present book, but we should note that some kind of divine inspiration of scripture was taken for granted in most of the ancient Israelite scriptures themselves, as well as in the beliefs of the early Christians.

While it would be difficult to fully understand Wright’s view of inspiration since he leaves that term packed in a suitcase, it would appear that Wright holds to God being actively involved in the writing and editing process of the scriptures. Continue reading