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"Esotericism
and Biblical Interpretation"
by Ron
Rhodes
When
Jesus said, "Seek first his kingdom and his righteousness"
(Matt. 6:33, NIV), was He teaching His disciples, as New Ager
David Spangler argues, to seek "the state of identification
with one's true individuality, the source within, the Divine
center, that I AM THAT I AM?"[1]
When Jesus said, "Take my yoke upon you and learn from me"
(Matt. 11:29), was He teaching His disciples, as Church
Universal and Triumphant leader Elizabeth Clare Prophet argues,
to "take my consciousness of my sacred labor, my Christhood
bearing the burden of world karma and learn of my Guru, the
Ancient of Days?"[2]
When Moses composed the creation account in Genesis, was it
really his intention to communicate, as Christian Science
founder Mary Baker Eddy argues, that the name Adam represents a
dam (as in the dam at Niagara Falls) that "stands for
obstruction, error, even the supposed separation of man from
God?"[3]
The common link joining each of these Bible interpreters is
that they all utilize an esoteric system of interpreting
Scripture -- that is, each seeks hidden, secret, or inner
spiritual meanings of Bible verses, especially the teachings of
Jesus. If these and other esotericists are correct in their
approach to Scripture, then orthodox Christians have woefully
misrepresented the true meaning of Scripture for almost two
full millennia. We must therefore address the question, Is the
esoteric method of interpreting Scripture a legitimate
method?
In answering this question, we begin with the observation that
right from the first book in the Bible, there is virtually no
indication that Scripture was intended to be taken
esoterically. Rather, a plain (nonesoteric) reading of the text
seems to be assumed throughout. A plain reading of Genesis
indicates that when God created Adam in His own rational image,
He gave Adam the gift of intelligible speech, thus enabling him
to communicate objectively with his creator (and with other
human beings) via sharable linguistic symbols called words
(Gen. 1:26). Indeed, God sovereignly chose to use human
language as a medium of revelational communication.
If the primary purpose of God's originating of language was to
make it possible for Him to communicate with human beings, as
well as to enable human beings to communicate with each other,
then it must follow that He would generally use language and
expect man to use it in its literal, normal, and plain sense.
This view of language is a prerequisite to understanding not
only God's spoken word but His written word (Scripture) as
well.
Esotericists must be made to see that the Bible as a body of
literature exists because human beings need to know certain
spiritual truths to which they cannot attain by themselves.
Thus these truths must come to them from without -- that is,
via objective, special revelation from God (Deut. 29:29). And
this revelation can only be understood if one interprets the
words of Scripture according to God's original design for
language -- that is, according to the ordinary, plain, literal
sense of each word.
Now, in contrasting esotericism with a "literal" approach to
Scripture, I am not suggesting a "wooden literalism" that
interprets biblical figures of speech literally. But what is
understood to be a figure of speech and what is taken literally
should be based on the biblical text itself -- such as when
Jesus used obviously figurative parables to communicate
spiritual truth.
A literal approach to Scripture also recognizes that the Bible
contains a variety of literary genres, each of which have
certain peculiar characteristics that must be recognized in
order to interpret the text properly. Biblical genres include
the historical (e.g., Acts), the dramatic epic (e.g., Job),
poetry (e.g., Psalms), wise sayings (e.g., Proverbs), and
apocalyptic writings (e.g., Revelation). Obviously, an
incorrect genre judgment will lead one far astray in
interpreting Scripture. A parable should not be treated as
history, nor should poetry or apocalyptic literature (both of
which contain many symbols) be treated as straightforward
narrative. The wise interpreter allows his (or her) knowledge
of genres to control how he approaches each individual biblical
text. In this way, he can accurately determine what the
biblical author was intending to communicate to the reader.
Now, even though the Bible contains a variety of literary
genres and many figures of speech, the biblical authors most
often employed literal statements to convey their ideas. And
where they use a literal means to express their ideas, the
Bible expositor must employ a corresponding means to explain
these ideas -- namely, a literal approach. A literal method of
interpreting Scripture gives to each word in the text the same
basic meaning it would have in normal, ordinary, customary
usage -- whether employed in writing, speaking, or thinking.
Without such a method, communication between God and man is
impossible.
LEGITIMATE
AND ILLEGITIMATE INTERPRETATIONS
In keeping with a
literal approach to Scripture, we must emphasize that each
biblical text has only one legitimate meaning and therefore
only one legitimate interpretation. In 1983 the International
Council on Biblical Inerrancy (ICBI) published a small
commentary on "The Chicago Statement on Biblical Hermeneutics,"
in which Article VII states: "We affirm that the meaning in
each biblical text is single, definite, and fixed."[4]
The commentary explains that "the affirmation here is directed
at those who claim a 'double' or 'deeper' meaning of Scripture
than that expressed by the authors. It stresses the unity and
fixity of meaning as opposed to those who find multiple and
pliable meanings."[5]
Esotericists may respond to this statement by saying that their
interpretation of Scripture is just as legitimate as anyone
else's. Certainly, in a sense, everyone is entitled to his or
her own interpretation of the Bible. At the same time, however,
we must insist that not all interpretations are equally
correct. New Age analyst Douglas Groothuis comments:
You may, in fact, "interpret" the bright, large orb that
irradiates the solar system as being a remarkably durable and
powerful satellite constructed by Peruvian peasants in A.D.
300. You have a "right," so to speak, to interpret things that
way; but that in no way makes your view correct. Your
interpretation is either true or false; you are either right or
wrong. Having "your own interpretation" about the Bible does
not, in itself, legitimate that interpretation as truth any
more than "your interpretation" of your IRS return legitimates
itself before the penetrating eyes of an income-tax auditor. He
goes by "the book," not your book. The it's-my-interpretation
cop-out may land you a big fine or even time behind bars (which
no amount of creative interpretation will
dissolve).[6]
In the it's-my-interpretation approach of esotericism, the
basic authority in interpretation ceases to be Scripture, but
is rather the mind of the individual interpreter. And because
of this, esoteric interpreters offer us irreconcilable
contradictions in their interpretations of specific Bible
verses.
New Ager Benjamin Creme, for example, believes that references
to the second coming of Christ in the New Testament point to
the coming of a single individual known as Maitreya.[7]
Other New Agers, such as David Spangler, believe these same
references point to an incarnation of the cosmic Christ in all
of humanity, and are not fulfilled in a single
individual.[8] Contradictions such as these are
inevitable when the mind of the interpreter is made the
authority instead of Scripture.
A plain reading of Scripture indicates that Christ Himself will
physically and visibly come again in cataclysmic fashion to
judge the living and the dead (Matt. 24; Rev. 19). Indeed, just
as Jesus literally fulfilled hundreds of biblical prophecies
dealing with His first coming -- including where He would be
born (Mic. 5:2), the time of His ministry (Dan. 9:24-27), His
miracles (Isa. 35:5-6), His parables (Ps. 78:2), His death
(Isa. 53; Ps. 22) and resurrection (Ps. 16:10) -- so He will
personally return in literal fulfillment of the remaining
prophecies regarding the Second Coming.
Now, having said this, I do not mean to imply that orthodox
Bible interpreters unanimously agree on all the finer points of
theology, for they clearly do not. However, their differences
of opinion on relatively minor details (the nonessentials) must
be seen in the broader context of their unanimous agreement on
the major details (the essentials) of Christianity. This
impressive widespread agreement on the essentials of
Christianity stems from an objective methodology that takes the
words of Scripture in their ordinary, plain sense -- just as
God intended.
Unlike objective methodology, in which interpretations (of both
the major and minor details in Scripture) can be rationally
evaluated and tested by comparing Scripture with Scripture and
by objectively weighing historical and grammatical
considerations, there is no objective way to test esoteric
interpretations of Scripture. By nature, esotericism is
subjective and nonverifiable. There is no way to prove that a
given interpretation is right or wrong since "proof"
presupposes rationality and objectivity. A New Ager relying on
an esoteric approach cannot know for sure, then, whether Creme
or Spangler is correct (or whether either is correct) regarding
the Second Coming. Addressing esotericism's nonverifiability,
James Sire says that "there is no way to tell if the system
that derives from esotericism is really so or merely a figment
of the esotericist's imagination -- or worse -- a direct plant
by the Father of Lies."[9]
SEEKING THE
AUTHOR'S INTENDED MEANING
The objective
interpreter of Scripture seeks to discover the author's
intended meaning (the only true meaning). We must recognize
that what a passage means is fixed by the author and is not
subject to alteration by readers. Meaning is determined by the
author; it is discovered by readers.[10]
Our goal must be exegesis (drawing the meaning out of the text)
and not eisogesis (superimposing a meaning onto the text). By
using eisogesis instead of exegesis, a Marxist interpreter
could, for example, so skew the meaning of the U.S.
Constitution that it comes out sounding like it supported
socialism.[11] Esotericists have done the same type of
thing with God's Word. They approach Scripture with a
particular mystical preunderstanding and so skew the meaning of
the biblical text that it comes out saying something entirely
different than what was intended by the author.
Certainly an esoteric interpreter would object if an orthodox
Christian interpreted Eastern mystical texts in such a way that
they came out sounding like they support orthodox
Christianity.[12] The Christian would be guilty of
reading something into the Eastern text that simply is not
there, and would be rightly reprimanded by the esotericist.
Groothuis thus suggests that the Golden Rule applies here:
'Interpret others' texts as you would have them interpret your
own."[13]
Context. In seeking the biblical author's intended meaning, it
is critical to interpret Bible statements in context. Every
word in the Bible is part of a sentence; every sentence is part
of a paragraph; every paragraph is part of a book; and every
book is part of the whole of Scripture. There is thus both an
immediate and a broader context of a given verse.
The immediate context of a statement is the paragraph (or
paragraphs) of the biblical book in question. No text of
Scripture is independent from the statements around it.
Interpreting a text apart from its immediate context is like
trying to make sense of a Rembrandt painting by looking at only
a single square inch of the painting, or like trying to analyze
Handel's "Messiah" by listening to a few short notes. The
immediate context is absolutely critical to a proper
understanding of individual Scripture texts.
The broader context of any given text is the whole of
Scripture. We must ever bear in mind that the interpretation of
a specific passage must not contradict the total teaching of
Scripture on a point. Individual texts do not exist as isolated
fragments, but as parts of a whole. The exposition of these
texts must therefore involve exhibiting them in right relation
both to the whole and to each other. This principle is grounded
in the fact that each of the biblical writers wrote within the
larger context of previous biblical teaching. And they all
assumed that all of Scripture -- though communicated through
human instruments -- had one Author (God) who didn't contradict
Himself (2 Pet. 1:21).
History. Historical considerations are especially important as
a backdrop in ascertaining the author's intended meaning.
Christianity is based on historical fact. More specifically,
Christianity rests on the foundation of the historical Jesus of
Nazareth whose very life represents God's full and objective
self-communication to humankind (John 1:18). In the empirical
(experiential) world of ordinary sense perceptions, Jesus was
seen and heard by human beings as God's ultimate revelation (1
John 1:1-3). This is why He could claim, "If you really knew
me, you would know my Father as well" (John 14:7).
The apostle Paul warned the religious men of Athens of the
objective reality of the future judgment of all humanity on the
basis of the objective, historical evidence for the
resurrection of Jesus (Acts 17:16f.). This evidence is recorded
for us in propositional statements (i.e., affirmations of
specific truths) in the New Testament Gospels, documents that
are based on eyewitness testimony and written very close in
time to the events on which they report. Based on how people
respond to God's objective, historical revelation contained in
Scripture, they will spend eternity in a real heaven or a real
hell. Esoteric manipulation of truth will not be possible on
the day of judgment.
ILLUMINATION
BY THE HOLY SPIRIT
Esotericists rely on
their own inner "illumination" to determine the hidden meaning
of Scripture verses. Orthodox Christians, by contrast, rely on
the Holy Spirit's illumination to gain insights into the plain
meaning and application of Scripture (John 16:12-15; 1 Cor.
2:9-11). The Holy Spirit as the "Spirit of truth" (John 16:13)
guides us so that "we may understand what God has freely given
us" (1 Cor. 2:12). This is quite logical: full comprehension of
the Word of God is impossible without prayerful dependence on
the Spirit of God, for He who inspired the Word (2 Pet. 1:21)
is also its supreme interpreter.
It is beyond the scope of this article to provide a full
discussion of the Holy Spirit's ministry of illumination. Other
good sources are available for this.[14] However, I do
want to emphasize that this aspect of the Holy Spirit's
ministry operates within the sphere of man's rational capacity,
which God Himself gave man (cf. Gen. 2-3). James Sire comments
that "illumination comes to the 'minds' of God's people -- not
to some nonrational faculty like our 'emotions' or our
'feelings.' To know God's revelation means to use our minds.
This makes knowledge something we can share with others,
something we can talk about. God's Word is in words with
ordinary rational content."[15]
Related to this, theologian Roy B. Zuck reminds us that the
ministry of the Holy Spirit in interpretation does not mean
interpreters can ignore common sense and logic. Since the Holy
Spirit is "the Spirit of truth" (John 14:17; 15:26; 16:13), "He
would not teach concepts that failed to meet the tests of
truth. The Holy Spirit does not guide into interpretations that
contradict each other or fail to have logical, internal
consistency."[16]
It must also be kept in mind that the function of the Holy
Spirit is not to communicate to the minds of people any
doctrine or meaning of Scripture that is not contained already
in Scripture itself. The Holy Spirit makes men "wise up to what
is written, not beyond it."[17] Indeed, "the function
of the Spirit is not to communicate new truth or to instruct in
matters unknown, but to illuminate what is revealed in
Scripture."[18]
One further point bears mentioning. Though esotericists claim
to depend on their own "inner illumination," they are utterly
blind to the possibility, as Sire has noted, that the unholy
spirit -- Satan, the Father of lies -- may be behind their
"illumination." that Satan is a crafty misinterpreter of God's
Word. Indeed, in his attempt to bring about Christ's downfall,
he quoted two passages out of context (Matt. 4:1-11). Christ
responded by quoting the Word of God in context, thus defeating
Satan's purposes. However, though Satan lost in this encounter
with Jesus, he is still promoting the misinterpretation of
Scripture through esotericism.
THE EXAMPLE
OF JESUS CHRIST
Esotericists would do
well to consider the example set by Jesus Christ in how to
properly interpret Scripture. Jesus never sought a hidden or
secondary meaning when interpreting the Old Testament
Scriptures. On the contrary, He consistently interpreted the
Old Testament quite literally, including the Creation account
of Adam and Eve (Matt. 13:35; 25:34; Mark 10:6), Noah's Ark and
the Flood (Matt. 24:38-39; Luke 17:26-27), Jonah and the whale
(Matt. 12:39-41), Sodom and Gomorrah (Matt. 10:15), and the
account of Lot and his wife (Luke 17:28-29). In his book The
Savior and the Scriptures, theologian Robert P. Lightner notes
-- following an exhaustive study -- that Jesus' interpretation
of Scripture "was always in accord with the grammatical and
historical meaning. He understood and appreciated the meaning
intended by the writers according to the laws of grammar and
rhetoric."[19]
Jesus affirmed the Bible's divine inspiration (Matt. 22:43),
its indestructibility (Matt. 5:17-18), its infallibility (John
10:35), its final authority (Matt. 4:4, 7, 10), its historicity
(Matt. 12:40; 24:37), its factual inerrancy (Matt. 22:29-32),
and its spiritual clarity (Luke 24:25). Moreover, He emphasized
the importance of each word of Scripture (Luke 16:17). Indeed,
He sometimes based His argumentation on a single expression of
the biblical text (Matt. 22:32, 43-45; John 10:34).
Unlike esotericists -- who say there is a hidden, spiritual
meaning in Bible verses discernible only by esoteric
"initiates" -- Jesus taught openly and with clarity. Recall
that following His arrest, Jesus was questioned by the High
Priest about His disciples and His teaching. Jesus responded:
"I have spoken openly to the world. I always taught in
synagogues or at the temple, where all the Jews come together.
I said nothing in secret. Why question me? Ask those who heard
me. Surely they know what I said" (John 18:20, emphases added).
Since Jesus had said nothing in secret, those who heard Him
would be able to clearly enunciate what He had openly
communicated. There were no hidden meanings beneath His
words.
That Jesus taught openly and with clarity is attested by the
doctrinal influence He had on His followers. Several scholars
have noted that if Jesus had intended to teach esoteric
Christianity, He was a failure as a teacher, for His words led
those who followed Him in the precise opposite direction than
He would have intended.[20] For example, instead of
becoming pantheists (pantheism -- the belief that God and all
things are one -- is a common belief among esotericists),
Jesus' followers were theists who believed in a personal
Creator God who is distinct from His creation. Jesus' followers
took Him at His word, interpreting what He said plainly, just
as He interpreted the Old Testament Scriptures
plainly.
ESOTERICISM
AND MATTHEW 13
Some esotericists may
appeal to Matthew 13 in an attempt to refute the idea that
Jesus taught openly and with clarity. In this chapter, Jesus is
portrayed as being in front of a mixed multitude comprised of
both believers and unbelievers. He did not attempt to separate
the believers from the unbelievers and then instruct only the
believers. Rather, He constructed His teaching in such a way
that believers would understand what He said but unbelievers
would not -- and He did this by using parables.
After teaching one such parable, a disciple asked Jesus: "Why
do you speak to the people in parables?" (Matt. 13:10). Jesus
answered: "The knowledge of the secrets of the kingdom of
heaven has been given to you [believers], but not to
them [unbelievers]" (v. 11, inserts mine). What did
Jesus mean by the word secrets in this verse? Was He lending
support to esotericism?
By no means! The Greek word for secret simply means mystery,
and is even translated this way in the New American Standard
Bible. A mystery in the biblical sense is a truth that cannot
be discerned simply by human investigation, but requires
special revelation from God. Generally speaking, this word
refers to a truth that was unknown to people living in Old
Testament times, but is now revealed to humankind by God (see
Matt. 13:17 and Col. 1:26). In Matthew 13, Jesus provides
information to believers about the kingdom of heaven that has
never been revealed before.
Some have wondered why Jesus engineered His parabolic teaching
so that believers could understand His teaching but unbelievers
could not. The backdrop to this is that the disciples, having
responded favorably to Jesus' teaching and placed their faith
in Him, already knew much truth about the Messiah. Careful
reflection on Jesus' parables would enlighten them even
further. However, hardened unbelievers who had willfully and
persistently refused Jesus' previous teachings -- such as those
set forth in the Sermon on the Mount -- were prevented from
understanding the parables. Jesus was apparently observing an
injunction He provided earlier in the Sermon on the Mount: "Do
not give dogs what is sacred; do not throw your pearls to pigs"
(Matt. 7:6). Yet there is grace even here. For, as many
scholars have noted, it is possible that Jesus may have
prevented unbelievers from understanding the parables because
He did not want to add more responsibility to them by imparting
new truth for which they would be held accountable.
That Jesus wanted His parables to be clear to those who were
receptive is evident in the fact that He carefully interpreted
two of them for the disciples -- the parables of the Sower
(Matt. 13:3-9) and the Tares (13:24-30). He did this not only
so there would be no uncertainty as to their meaning, but to
guide believers as to the proper method to use in interpreting
the other parables. The fact that Christ did not interpret His
subsequent parables indicates that He fully expected believers
to understand what He taught by following the methodology He
illustrated for them. Clearly, then, Matthew 13 does not
support but rather argues against esotericism.
A CLOSING
CHALLENGE
Jesus said His words
lead to eternal life (John 6:63). But for us to receive eternal
life through His words, they must be taken as He intended them
to be taken. An esoteric reinterpretation of Scripture that
yields another Jesus and another gospel (2 Cor. 11:3-4; Gal.
1:6-9) will yield only eternal death. Jesus' life-giving
invitation is plainly open to all: "Whoever hears my word and
believes him who sent me has eternal life and will not be
condemned; he has crossed over from death to life" (John
5:24).
NOTES
1 David Spangler, The
Laws of Manifestation (Forres, Scotland: Findhorn Publications,
1983), 23-24.
2 Mark L. Prophet and Elizabeth Clare Prophet, The Lost
Teachings of Jesus 3: Masters and Disciples on the Path
(Livingston, MT: Summit University Press, 1988), 273-74.
3 Mary Baker Eddy, Science and Health with Key to the
Scriptures (Boston: The First Church of Christ, Scientist,
1971), 338.
4 Norman L. Geisler, Explaining Hermeneutics: A Commentary
(Oakland, CA: International Council on Biblical Inerrancy,
1983), 6.
5 Ibid., 7.
6 Douglas Groothuis, Confronting the New Age (Downers Grove,
IL: InterVarsity Press, 1988), 85.
7 Benjamin Creme, The Reappearance of the Christ and the
Masters of Wisdom (Los Angeles: Tara Press, 1980), 48, 55.
8 David Spangler, Reflections on the Christ (Forres, Scotland:
Findhorn Publications, 1981), 86.
9 James W. Sire, Scripture Twisting (Downers Grove, IL:
InterVarsity Press, 1980), 113.
10 Geisler, 7.
11 Tal Brooke, When the World Will Be as One (Eugene, OR:
Harvest House Publishers, 1989), 118.
12 I am indebted to Douglas Groothuis for this observation;
89-90.
13 Ibid.
14 E.g., Roy B. Zuck, "The Role of the Holy Spirit in
Hermeneutics," Bibliotheca Sacra 141 (April-June
1984):120-30.
15 Sire, 17.
16 Zuck, 126.
17 Cited in Bernard Ramm, Protestant Biblical Interpretation
(Grand Rapids: Baker Book House, 1978), 14.
18 Ibid., 18.
19 Robert P. Lightner, The Savior and the Scriptures (Grand
Rapids: Baker Book House, 1966), 30.
20 Groothuis, 89; and Peter Kreeft, "The Most Important
Argument," in The Intellectuals Speak Out about God, ed. Roy
Abraham Varghese (Chicago: Regnery Gateway, 1984), 251.
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