Becoming a True Christian Scholar: Some Recommendations, Part 1
Reprinted with permission from As I See It. AISI is sent free to all who request it by writing to the editor at dkutilek@juno.com.
In run-of-the-mill conservative Christianity in general and Baptist Fundamentalism in particular there is, and has long been, an indigenous and deeply in-grained distrust and suspicion of highly educated men within our ranks. But this does not in the least reduce or detract from the great service and essential value such men have provided to Biblical Christianity through the centuries. If we may quote Erasmus (1466-1536) on Christianity’s debt to scholars:
Let it be remembered that the heretics were refuted by the scholars, and much more by the scholars than by the martyrs. By dying for a conviction a man proves only that he is sincere, not that he is right.1
In spite of this historic and continuing debt, there has been a parallel perverse distrust and contempt toward Christian scholars (even devout and spiritually-minded ones) by much of conservative evangelical Christianity. I recall well a conversation I was party to some 25 years and more ago with an independent, fundamental Baptist pastor—a man who himself had been unable to complete even a basic, un-demanding three-year Bible institute degree, a deficiency he had not remedied by extensive personal study in succeeding years—in which he told me that “I just don’t trust men with a lot of education.” As though abject ignorance somehow made a man more spiritual and useful to God!
John Gill (1697-1771) wrote a scathing rebuke of this absurd perspective nearly 250 years ago:
Here I cannot but observe the amazing ignorance and stupidity of some persons, who take it into their heads to decry learning and learned men; for what would they have done for a Bible, had it not been for them as instruments? and if they had it, so as to have been capable of reading it, God must have wrought a miracle for them; and continued that miracle in every nation, in every age, and to every individual; I mean the gift of tongues, in a supernatural way, as he bestowed upon the apostles on the day of Pentecost; which there is no reason in the world ever to have expected. Bless God, therefore, and be thankful that God has, in his providence, raised up such men to translate the Bible into the mother-tongue of every nation, and particularly ours; and that he still continues to raise up such who are able to defend the translations made, against erroneous persons, and enemies of the truth; and to correct and amend it in lesser matters, in which it may have failed, and clear and illustrate it by their learned notes upon it.2
All other things being equal—zeal, dedication, faithfulness, opportunity, personal ability—the man with the better education will do the better, more effective and more far-reaching work. Consider the case of the Apostles. All of the original twelve, as far as we can tell, apparently came from what today would be called “blue collar” occupations, rather than from the “professional” or “academic” classes (Matthew Levi, as a tax collector, may be an exception, depending on how one classifies government bureaucrats!). Peter and John were expressly described by their adversaries as uneducated and ordinary men (Acts 4:13).
Example of the apostles
Even so, the Apostles did excellent work in evangelizing Jerusalem, Judea and Samaria, and to some degree further afield. But who was it that planted the gospel throughout Asia, Greece, the islands of the Mediterranean and beyond? It was the formally—and highly—educated former Pharisee and student of the learned Rabbi Gamaliel, Saul of Tarsus who became Paul the Apostle. And what was Paul’s testimony in this regard? That, by the grace of God upon him, he labored more extensively, and effectively, than the rest (I Cor. 15:9-10). It is a certainty that Paul’s extensive training in Hebrew Bible and Rabbinics were essential to his accomplishing what he accomplished, and in writing what he wrote—the doctrinal heart of the New Testament, Romans through Philemon.
Reaching back to the Old Testament, let us not forget that when God brought His people out of Egypt, His chosen leader was Moses, a man educated in “all the wisdom of Egypt,” (Acts 7:22). And the leading spokesman for God during the Babylonian captivity was the man Daniel, who providentially was trained at the king’s expense in the learning and language of the Chaldeans (Dan. 1:5).
Church history
In ecclesiastical history, we often see that the highly educated made contributions that greatly overshadowed the achievements of men of lesser training.
Wycliffe, a university professor at Oxford, produced the first complete English Bible, which he could not have done without his mastery of Latin.
All the leading Reformers in Europe, and many of the less prominent ones, were highly educated men, men thoroughly versed in Latin, Greek, often Hebrew and sometimes Aramaic and Syriac, and with a strong familiarity with both classical and Christian literature stretching back to antiquity (which constituted virtually the whole of collective “knowledge” in that era)—Luther, Calvin, Zwingli, Tyndale, Melanchthon, Beza, even Menno Simons and many more. Without their extensive knowledge of languages and literature, they could not have made their vernacular Bible translations (which gave the unlearned masses access to Divine revelation), nor written their treatises, commentaries and tracts that shook Europe, and beyond.
In the following centuries, highly educated men were the leaders in Christianity. Some were formally trained—the men of the Westminster Assembly, the Puritans in general, John and Charles Wesley, George Whitefield, Jonathan Edwards, Adoniram Judson—while others, lacking “higher education,” were self-taught: John Gill, William Carey (who never spent a day in college, yet mastered numerous languages and was in his day acknowledged as the world’s greatest living linguist), and Spurgeon, to note only a few. And even men who began with essentially no education at all nevertheless saw the need to inform their minds in preparation for God’s service—John Newton (the converted slaver who studied Latin and Greek after entering the ministry), D. L. Moody and Gipsy Smith to list some few obvious examples. None of these men decried learning and learned men, but valued their own education and prized what other men’s minds had made available to them through their writings.
The truth be told, Christian scholars of the 19th and previous centuries were as a class far better educated individually than today’s scholars. Consider Henry Alford’s famous commentary in 4 volumes, The Greek Testament. Published in the 1860s, it regularly quotes various texts and authors in Latin, Greek, German, French and other languages, with the unspoken assumption that of course his readers had no need of translation of any of these. That we collectively fall far short of the achievements of earlier generations of Christian scholars is to our great loss, and embarrassment. Our need is not for fewer scholars today—we very much need many more than we have.
I am by no means arguing that education is a substitute for spirituality, or that it can make up for defective devotion or commitment, but I am arguing that extensive education can be a mighty adjunct to spirituality, devotion and commitment in the work of God, and we are desperately in need of a continually-maturing “crop” of new Fundamentalist scholars, if we are to do the work of the ministry as effectively as we ought in this and future generations. Education is not an end in itself, but a means to a very important end.
Douglas K. Kutilek Bio
Doug Kutilek is the editor of www.kjvonly.org, which opposes KJVOism. He has been researching and writing in the area of Bible texts and versions for more than 35 years. He has a BA in Bible from Baptist Bible College (Springfield, MO), an MA in Hebrew Bible from Hebrew Union College and a ThM in Bible exposition from Central Baptist Theological Seminary (Plymouth, MN). His writings have appeared in numerous publications.
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For now, I’ll just point out that Scripture tells us where pride comes from and the preferred biblical term is “heart.”
2 Chron. 32:26
Isaiah 9:9
Jer. 48:29
Jer. 49:16
Dan. 5:20
Obadiah 3
There are also a couple of references linking pride and intellect. Certainly there is an intellectual component sometimes. As you say, the Scriptures do warn that our minds are “subject to corruption, vanity and pride” etc. They also warn that every part of our being is susceptible to corruption of one sort or another. There is no biblical justification for viewing the intellect with greater suspicion than any other aspect of our being.
Views expressed are always my own and not my employer's, my church's, my family's, my neighbors', or my pets'. The house plants have authorized me to speak for them, however, and they always agree with me.
[RP] So what? No one has said that he didn’t [study]. It is just that education and study was not the source of Solomon’s wisdom.I’ve already said God was the source of his wisdom… and that he also studied. Are you suggesting that Solomon studied but it was a complete waste of time because nothing came of it?
[RP]Hmmm…. so one example of God producing a result directly proves that He never produces a result indirectly?[Aaron] Every good thing comes from God (James 1:17). The Israelite’s victories in Canaan came from God but they still had to fight (e.g., Josh.10:8). David attributed to God his ability to “leap over a wall” but he still had to use his muscles (Psalm18:29).No, this is pretty lame reasoning. I suppose Samson’s strength came from pumping iron too. And he had the right genetics to give him bulk.
Did David not have to use his muscles? Did Isreal not have to fight? Does every good gift not come from the Father of Lights?
These examples are just a few among many that prove God uses secondary causes and that something that comes “from Him” can still be accurately said to have come “from our efforts.” The biblical way to think is to recognize He holds our breath in His hand (Dan. 5:23). We don’t even exhale without Him. But we still use our diaphragms. It’s both-and, not either-or.
[RP]I think you know the answer to that. Even when He parts the Red Sea He employs an east wind.[Aaron] God is able to act directly to produce a result, of course, but He usually uses secondary causes.Is this Scripture or your opinion?
[RP] How do you know Solomon “studied the world around him”? Scripture doesn’t say. This is purely speculative to fit your own neat conceptualization of Solomon and his intellectual prowess. This, I believe, is eisegesis.Are you suggesting God imparted detailed knowledge of trees and birds etc. directly to Solomon’s brain? This is not impossible, of course, but who is doing the esegesis? People normally acquire knowledge by study and so it is not not eisegetical to suppose that study was involved. Of course, anybody rich enough to not have to labor for a wage all day could study the same things Solomon did, but it seems that God gifted him to understand and retain what he studied to a superlative degree.
[RP] Again, you and I operate from different paradigm, although you will not admit it. You look for natural (i.e. rationalistic explanations within the realm of natural phenomena) explanations whereas I accept it by faith as a work of God without speculation or rationalization.Different paradigm… Roland, I mean this in the nicest possible way, but I don’t believe you have a paradigm. You’ve never articulated one despite having made that claim/accusation dozens of times.
Christian faith is a response to what God has said. When He has not said, “faith” has nothing to do with it. It’s presumption or intuition or whatever.
He has not said that He imparted wisdom to Solomon’s mind with zero effort from Solomon. So who’s doing the speculating?
Of course, we can’t prove either that he did study or that he didn’t. But I’ve already explained why these two options are not equally likely.
Views expressed are always my own and not my employer's, my church's, my family's, my neighbors', or my pets'. The house plants have authorized me to speak for them, however, and they always agree with me.
Aaron, this is honestly a waste of time and bandwidth. You are attributing all kinds of things to me that I have not said. You are inferring certain things where no inferences are indicated. Your argument pretty much inane and ridiculous.Presumably your posts had some kind of point. It was quite clear that the point was trying to reject my claim that Solomon used his intellect and studied and that Scripture presents this as a good thing.
Your counterargument did indeed deny (or at least question) that he studied, and labeled my point about secondary causes as contrary to faith.
So I offered more evidence that he probably studied and cross examined your case against both that and secondary causes in general… and pointed out what you had left unanswered.
That’s what happened here. I wonder sometimes if we’re reading the same thread.
Views expressed are always my own and not my employer's, my church's, my family's, my neighbors', or my pets'. The house plants have authorized me to speak for them, however, and they always agree with me.
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