Why empathy matters. Reading the Bible to hear the word of God #1

I was revisiting Richard Hays’s The Moral Vision of the New Testament recently and was reminded of his very helpful description of how we can discern God’s word to us through the Scriptures. He speaks of a fourfold task:

  1. Descriptive Task: Reading the Text Carefully. This seeks to identify the messages of the various texts/books of the Bible “without prematurely harmonising them”. It is to make sense of a text on its own terms, within its historical context;
  2. Synthetic Task: Placing the Text in Canonical Context. How do the various texts fit together to contribute to a whole-of-bible ethical perspective? Hayes suggests that the themes of community, cross and new creation provide an interpretive framework we can employ to identify this;
  3. Hermeneutical task: Relating the Text to Our Situation. How do we bridge the “temporal and cultural distance between ourselves and the text…to appropriate the New Testament’s message as a word addressed to us?”
  4. The Pragmatic Task: Living the Text. How are the biblical imperatives embodied in the life of the Christian community? Hayes argues that “The value of our exegesis and hermeneutics will be tested by their capacity to produce persons and communities whose character is commensurate with Jesus Christ and thereby pleasing to God”.

I plan to write a few posts that use this fourfold task to reflect on what I have discovered about reading the Scriptures and being shaped by them. For now I want to suggest a fifth task to add to Hays’s list. This is “the empathetic task”.

For many years I saw the first three of Hayes’ four tasks as something I could achieve within the confines of my study. Close attention to the text in its original languages, appreciation of the genres of the Bible, and critical reading of the commentaries of scholars would be the keys to success.

Yet when I look back to those occasions my understanding of biblical ethics have most profoundly changed, the catalyst was not what happened in my study, but hearing the stories of those whose lives were most impacted by the church’s ethics. It was hearing the stories of people who had been divorced and subsequently marginalised in their churches that drove changes in how I read, synthesised and applied the relevant biblical texts. It was meeting women who had been wounded by the sexist attitudes that prevailed in our churches when I was a young man (and sadly in many ways continue to do so) that led to a revision of my reading of the Biblical texts on men and women. More recently it has been the voices of gay, lesbian, bisexual, asexual, transgender and intersex Christians that have caused me to revisit a biblical ethic of sexuality and gender.

I am not saying that hearing the voices of others should replace robust work across Hays’s four tasks, but that it indelibly shapes that work. So much so that I am convinced that it is near impossible to hear God’s word to us without hearing the voices of those who are marginalised, wounded and offended by our ethics.

There are, I think, at least two reasons for this. The first is that we all approach the text with assumptions, values, and biases that don’t simply impact on how we apply the text (Hays’s steps 3 and 4) but what we see in the texts (Hayes’s steps 1 and 2). This is true even for the greatest of biblical scholars. I have sufficient confidence in the capacity of human beings to communicate that I don’t buy into those theories that suggest reading the Bible is never an act of understanding another but only ever an act of self-expression. But I also accept that every reading of Scripture is an act of interpretation in which the interpreter is an active agent whose perspectives, assumptions, values, biases, etc shape their reading across all four of Hayes’s interpretive tasks. I think this is why hearing the voices of those who are marginalised and disempowered has been so powerful in my reading of Scripture. They see things I don’t and force me to recognise ways that the dominant readings of my particular church tradition may reflect the interests of power rather than the voice of the Spirit.

Second, history suggests that it is in the protest and pain of the marginalised rather than the intricacies of biblical interpretation, that new movements of the Spirit of God often emerge. Indeed robust biblical interpretation often lags behind the intuitions of the Spirit. It was the voices of slaves and the recounting of their cruel and indecent treatment that pricked the conscience and fired the compassion that drove the abolitionist movement. Mark Noll shows in his book on the US Civil War as a Theological Crisis, that the early abolitionist movement was driven by an intuitive sense that something was wrong rather than robust and defensible readings of Scripture. The theologies of the early abolitionists were weak and their “biblical ” arguments easily refuted. It would take some years for a robust biblical defence of abolition to emerge. Those who sat in their studies and didn’t take the time to listen to the voices of the marginalised and oppressed missed the early signals of a movement of God’s Spirit.

This is why I now find my desire to hear God’s voice on social and ethical issues takes me out of my study and into conversation with those most impacted. In their experiences of pain and struggle, of dissonance between their experience of God and the dominant theologies of the church, in the gap between their present treatment by their fellow human beings and their hope, and in their questions and their alternate readings of Scripture, is often found the whispering of God that allows us to go back into the study and together seek the mind of Christ.

9 comments

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  • Hi Scott, I’m also looking forward to reading your thoughts and challenges in this space. Please clarify how you’re using the word “alternate” in your last sentence. I’m a little confused. Thank you.

    • Hi Wade,

      By “alternate” I simply mean “different”. For example, people living in poverty commonly understand Jesus’s statement that “the poor are always with you” to mean something very different to how wealthy people read it.

  • How in your desire to hear God’s voice on social and ethical issues can you be led anywhere other than His Word?! And to approach it as in Isaiah 66:2 “he who is humble and contrite in spirit and trembles at my word”. If we assent to the authority of Scripture then all other conversations, questions, experiences and, struggles must come under the scrutiny of God’s revealed word; they do not add to it nor shape it. Are you suggesting God’s word is insufficient for all things pertaining to life and godliness? As for alternate readings, are these ones where we change what God has clearly said to suit our own, often ignorant understandings? Are we saying we are more compassionate than God Himself? Surely not! I find you are treading on dangerous ground, looking for ‘God whispering ‘ through voices He has not said he’d whisper through.

    • How can it be ‘nearly impossible to hear God’s word to us’? So many Scriptures attest to it being God speaking. Let’s not muddy the waters and dethrone God by thinking we puny, sinful, rebellious, grasshoppers could in any way add to God’s revelation through Scripture. If we struggle with competing voices, we need to be sure we listen to those through the lens of Scripture and not vice versa.

      • Reposting this as I think it helpful in the above discussion (not my own..):
        I suspect that one of the most objections against Christians and against Christianity in the West today is that Christians are intrinsically narrow and bigoted. They hold that certain things are true and that certain things are not true. They distinguish between orthodoxy and heresy. They have their own rules of conduct, of morality. Some things they approve, and some things they disapprove. This is arrogant. It is divisive. Instead of building up civic community and establish a genuinely tolerant society, it has the inevitable result of proving divisive. For those who are brought up in some of the strongest postmodern trends under the influence of, say, Michel Foucault, then all claims to speak the truth are really claims to power; they are forms of manipulation. Instead of fostering freedom, they merely engender constraint.
        And yet when you look at the claims on the surface, they are problematic. No community is completely inclusive. Tim Keller, a pastor in New York, likes to give this example: Supposing you have a gay-lesbian-transgender committee working in some big city, working in inclusiveness, they get along pretty well together. They’re trying to strengthen their hand. Then let us suppose that one of their number comes to one of the committee meetings one day and says, “You know this has been embarrassing, but I’ve had this strange religious experience. I’ve met this odd bunch of people—they’re Christians—and my whole life has been changed. I just don’t view things the same way. I’m not convinced anymore that homosexuality is merely an alternative lifestyle.” And the others say to him, “Well, we think that you’re dead wrong on that, but you’re welcome to your views. We still want to cherish you.” And then as the weeks go by, the tensions build up because they’re heading in different directions. They have different values that they are espousing until eventually the people on the committee say to this committee member, “You know, you really don’t espouse our views anymore. You’re heading in another direction. Your perception of right and wrong are different from our perception of right and wrong. We’re not sure that you belong in this committee anymore. We think that it’d be a good thing for you to resign.” They have just engaged in excommunication.
        It is impossible to be completely, endlessly open because even that very endless openness is predicated upon the assumption that that endless openness is a good thing such that if somebody then begins to say, “It’s not a good thing to be endlessly open,” then they feel like they must reject that person precisely because they cannot be endlessly open to the person who does have their view of being endlessly open. In other words, in a finite world in any community, there are inevitably boundaries. There are inevitably inclusions and exclusions.
        Moreover, even appeal to truth is inevitable. In an earlier generation, often truth was analyzed to death under the rubric of psychiatry and psychology. That’s changing again now. A generation ago the popular lyricist Anna Russell to the mickey out of this me-generation with its forms of explaining away all strange behavior:
        I went to my psychiatrist
        To be psychoanalyzed
        To find out why I killed the cat
        And blacked my husband’s eyes.
        He laid me on a downy couch
        To see what he could find,
        So this is what he dredge-ed up
        From my subconscious mind:
        When I was one, my mommy hid
        My dolly in a trunk,
        And so it follows naturally
        That I am always drunk.
        When I was two, I saw my father
        Kiss the maid one day,
        And that is why I suffer now
        From kleptomania.
        At three, I had the feeling of
        Ambivilance towards my brothers,
        And so it follows naturally
        I poisoned all my lovers.
        But I am happy; now I’ve learned
        The lesson this has taught;
        That everything I do that’s wrong
        Is someone else’s fault.
        That was a generation ago. Now we handle things just a wee bit differently. Now we say that truth is shaped by community. Truth at the end of the day is merely what some particular group or individual perceives: what is true for you may not be true for me. But, of course, if you hold that view, then you’re holding that that perspective is true. At the end of the day you simply cannot escape the notion of truth. Moreover, freedom cannot itself be endlessly open-ended. Would you like to be free to play the piano extremely well? Then inevitably you must learn a lot of discipline, that certain chords sound right and certain chords to not sound right. There are principles of the way music works. Do you want to be free to have a really, really excellent trusting, joyous marriage? If you do, then you are not free to do certain things. In other words, an endless openness towards freedom becomes a kind of slavery.
        All of these things have to be borne in mind when we come to the Bible and discover that God (here in the passages we’re going to look at in this first session) legislates. He proscribes rules. Unless we’re willing to think outside of our own cultural Western box, we may find that somewhat offensive. Yet within the Bible’s storyline, we discover that it’s actually part of joyous freedom under the God who made us.

        • Hi Catherine,

          Recognising that we bring our biases, culture and history of reading the Bible with us when we come to Scripture does not undermine the authority of Scripture.

          • Hi Scott

            I agree, but your article seems to be advocating for the elevation of the voices around us, the ‘5th task’, to a necessary component when undertaking the weighty work of understanding Scripture. Given that we already do come with biases, cultural baggage, ignorance and so forth, I’d suggest that allowing extra voices, the ‘5th task’ to be added to God’s revelation is an unhelpful and dangerous stance to adopt because it is precisely at that point that we start allowing the values, ideas, views of the culture around us to shape our reading.

            Our minds need transformation, renewal, discernment not muddying by the voices of the prevailing ideologies.

            Do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewal of your mind, that by testing you may discern what is the will of God, what is good and acceptable and perfect. – Romans 12:2

            And these verses alert us to the dangers I allude to:

            I charge you in the presence of God and of Christ Jesus, who is to judge the living and the dead, and by his appearing and his kingdom:
            preach the word; be ready in season and out of season; reprove, rebuke, and exhort, with complete patience and teaching.
            For the time is coming when people will not endure sound teaching, but having itching ears they will accumulate for themselves teachers to suit their own passions, and will turn away from listening to the truth and wander off into myths.
            2 Timothy 4:1-4

  • I agree wholeheartedly with your fifth task Scott. I do understand your point Catherine, though appreciate that Scott’s fifth task as he describes it, is actually not doing what you are rightly concerned about.

    In answer to your question Catherine, “How in your desire to hear God’s voice on social and ethical issues can you be led anywhere other than His Word?!” I respond:

    We depend upon the Spirit of God, who breathed the Word into being in the first instance, to breath it into life in our minds and hearts as we read it. However, in his sovereign purposes, the Spirit is not constrained in application of the Word in us. He teaches us from within since he resides within us in our meditation as well as when we engage in community – church and civil. He doesn’t suddenly become silent in the latter contexts.

    The Scriptures themselves encourage its public reading – in my experience the richest learning context. One significant benefit among many is the Spirit’s powerful teaching of his Word on social and ethical issues from BOTH its reading AND Spirit empowered concurrent engagement with our neighbour, e.g., just as Jesus taught the expert in the law described in Matthew 10.

    Thank you Scott and Catherine.

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