Is the Bible Inconsistent with Itself?
Just this
week the President of Maritime Conference placed this comment on social media “If you're
gonna use the *argument* "because it says so in the Bible!" to explain
why you think being gay is a sin, you better also believe that wearing blended
fabrics, or being nearsighted in church, is a sin too. Just sayin'.” I have to say that I find it frustrating when I
read or hear columnists, pundits, or journalists dismiss Christians as
inconsistent because “they pick and choose which of the rules in the Bible to
obey.” What I hear most often is “Christians ignore lots of Old Testament texts—about
not eating raw meat or pork or shellfish, not executing people for breaking the
Sabbath, not wearing garments woven with two kinds of material and so on. Then
they condemn homosexuality. Aren’t you just picking and choosing what they want
to believe from the Bible?”
It is not
that I expect everyone to have the capability of understanding that the whole
Bible is about Jesus and God’s plan to redeem his people, but I vainly hope
that one day someone will access their common sense (or at least talk to an
informed theological advisor) before leveling the charge of inconsistency.
However, when the President of Maritime Conference is making these kinds of
statements it is far more concerning as this issue should have been part of a minister's education and it has been dealt with almost
2000 years ago and was written about and discussed by Paul and many others since then.
The issue of homosexuality aside, let’s get back to considering the larger issue of inconsistency regarding
things mentioned in the OT that are no longer practiced by the New Testament
people of God. Most Christians don’t know what to say when confronted about
this. Here’s a short course on the relationship of the Old Testament to the New
Testament:
The Old
Testament devotes a good amount of space to describing the various sacrifices
that were to be offered in the tabernacle (and later temple) to atone for sin
so that worshippers could approach a holy God. As part of that sacrificial
system there was also a complex set of rules for ceremonial purity and
cleanness. You could only approach God in worship if you ate certain foods and
not others, wore certain forms of dress, refrained from touching a variety of objects,
and so on. This vividly conveyed, over and over, that human beings are
spiritually unclean and can’t go into God’s presence without
purification.
But even
in the Old Testament, many writers hinted that the sacrifices and the temple
worship regulations pointed forward to something beyond them. (cf. 1 Samuel
15:21-22; Psalm 50:12-15; 51:17; Hosea 6:6). When Christ appeared he declared
all foods ‘clean’ (Mark 7:19) and he ignored the Old Testament clean laws in
other ways, touching lepers and dead bodies.
But the
reason is made clear. When he died on the cross the veil in the temple was
ripped through, showing that the need for the entire sacrificial system with
all its clean laws had been done away with. Jesus is the ultimate sacrifice for
sin, and now Jesus makes us “clean.”
The
entire book of Hebrews explains that the Old Testament ceremonial laws were not
so much abolished as fulfilled by Christ. Whenever we pray ‘in Jesus name’, we
‘have confidence to enter the Most Holy Place by the blood of Jesus’ (Hebrews
10:19). It would, therefore, be deeply inconsistent with the teaching of the
Bible as a whole if we were to continue to follow the ceremonial laws.
The New
Testament gives us further guidance about how to read the Old Testament. Paul
makes it clear in places like Romans 13:8ff that the apostles understood the
Old Testament moral law to still be binding on us. In short, the coming
of Christ changed how we worship but not how we live. The moral law is
an outline of God’s own character—his integrity, love, and faithfulness. And so
all the Old Testament says about loving our neighbor, caring for the poor,
generosity with our possessions, social relationships, and commitment to our
family is still in force. The New Testament continues to forbid killing or
committing adultery, and all the sex ethic of the Old Testament is re-stated
throughout the New Testament (Matthew 5:27-30; 1 Corinthians 6:9-20; 1 Timothy
1:8-11.) If the New Testament has reaffirmed a commandment, then it is still in
force for us today.
Further,
the New Testament explains another change between the Testaments. Sins continue
to be sins—but the penalties change. In the Old Testament things like adultery
or incest were punishable with civil sanctions like execution. This is because at
that time God’s people existed in the form of a nation-state and so all sins
had civil penalties.
But in
the New Testament the people of God are an assembly of churches all over the
world, living under many different governments. The church is not a civil government,
and so sins are dealt with by exhortation and, at worst, exclusion from
membership. This is how a case of incest in the Corinthian church is dealt with
by Paul (1 Corinthians 5:1ff. and 2 Corinthians 2:7-11.) Why this change? Under
Christ, the gospel is not confined to a single nation—it has been released to
go into all cultures and peoples.
Once you
grant the main premise of the Bible—about the surpassing significance of Christ
and his salvation—then all the various parts of the Bible make sense. Because
of Christ, the ceremonial law is repealed. Because of Christ the church is no
longer a nation-state imposing civil penalties. It all falls into place.
However, if you reject the idea of Christ as Son of God and Savior, then, of
course, the Bible is at best a mish-mash containing some inspiration and
wisdom, but most of it would have to be rejected as foolish or erroneous.
So where
does this leave us? There are only two possibilities. If Christ is God, then
this way of reading the Bible makes sense and is perfectly consistent with its
premise. The other possibility is that you reject Christianity’s basic
thesis—you don’t believe Jesus was the resurrected Son of God—and then the
Bible is no sure guide for you about much of anything. But the one thing you
can’t really say in fairness is that Christians are being inconsistent with
their beliefs to accept the moral statements in the Old Testament while not
practicing other ones.
One way
to respond to the charge of inconsistency may be to ask a counter-question—“Are
you asking me to deny the very heart of my Christian beliefs?” If you are
asked, “Why do you say that?” you could respond, “If I believe Jesus is the
resurrected Son of God, I can’t follow all the ‘clean laws’ of diet and
practice, and I can’t offer animal sacrifices. All that would be to deny the
power of Christ’s death on the cross. And so those who really believe in Christ
must follow some Old Testament texts and not others.”
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