Evangelicals and Redaction Criticism:
Dancing on the Edge
Dr. Geisler first delivered these notes to the faculty of Trinity Evangeicaly Divinity School in the late 1970s when faculty member Grant Osborne began to adopt a form of redaction criticism. This was also delivered by Dr. Geisler in a course on Bibliology at Dallas Theological Seminary in 1987.
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I. Things Surely to be Believed by
Evangelicals
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A. The Gospel writers (except
possibly Luke) were eyewitnesses of the events.
B. The Gospels were written
during the lifetime of these witnesses by the disciples' names
they bear.
C. Jesus promised the Holy
Spirit would supernaturally activate the apostle's memories on
all that He taught (John 14:26; 16:13).
D. The NT documents should be
considered authentic until proven otherwise (just as one is
presumed innocent until proven guilty)
E. What the Gospels say that
Jesus said (and did), He actually said (and did).
F. It is the written gospels
(not their alleged sources) that are inspired (2 Tim. 3:16).
So truth is in the text, not behind it.
G. Conclusions:
1. The Gospel records are
authentic, biographical, and historical.
2. The records present
accurately what Jesus really said and did.
3. In view of IA, IB and IC,
the Gospel writers were not dependent on other sources for their
teachings. |
II. Things Surely not to be Believed by
Evangelicals
|
A. That the Gospels were
written by persons who were not contemporaries of Christ.
B. That Redaction Criticism
is necessary to discover what Jesus taught.
C. That without the aid of
Redaction we cannot understand the message of the Gospels.
D. That the Gospels create,
rather than report, what Jesus said and did.
E. Conclusions:
1. Accepting criticism of this
kind [or, these kinds] is incompatible with evangelical
Christianity.
2. No evangelical institution
should keep teachers who teach what is incompatible with
evangelical Christianity. |
III. Things Apparently Believed by Some
Evangelicals
|
A. The Gospels are a
reinterpretation of the life of Christ to fit the needs of the
readers of a later generation.
B. Gospel writers redacted
earlier sources to construct their Gospels.
C. By getting behind the Gospel
record, redaction criticism is helpful (essential?) in
interpreting the text.
D. Redaction criticism should
be used to establish the authenticity of the sayings and events
recorded in the Gospels.
E. Gospel writers sometimes
placed what Jesus said (or did) on one occasion into another
occasion where He did not actually say (or do) it. |
IV. Things Safely to be Believed by
Evangelicals
|
A. All Redaction Criticism is
UNNECESSARY in view of I above.
B. Most of Redaction Criticism
is INCOMPATIBLE with evangelical Christianity (namely II above).
C. Even "modified" Redaction
Criticism is dangerous (namely IIII above) because:
1. This special use of the term
is easily misunderstood (since its original and
common meaning is anti-evangelical).
2. It is difficult to divorce
totally redaction and other ideologies from their original
non-evangelical presuppositions (There is a high fatality rate
among those who try—Gundry, Guelich, et. al.).
3. To refer to a Gospels as a
"reinterpretation" is at best ambiguous. This may imply
misrepresentation or error.
4. The attempt to get behind
the text, rather than to stay in it, is hermeneutically
misdirected.
5. The role of the Gospel
writers as eyewitnesses whose memories were supernaturally
guided by the Holy Spirit is neglected.
6. It undermines confidence in
the authenticity and authority of the text by treating it as a
literary creation rather than a historical report (Luke 1:1-4). |
CONCLUSION: Since I is necessary to
evangelical belief, II is incompatible with it, and III is dangerous to
it, the practice of redaction is UNNECESSARY, UNWISE, and
UNHEALTHY for evangelicals to adopt such unorthodox ideologies.
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A CHART ON
GOSPEL WRITERS' USE OF JESUS'
WORDS & DEEDS
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