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Reframing
One of the theological sticking points amongst Christians is the concept of continuing revelation. While this is mostly applied today to LGBT inclusion, from a historical perspective, what at one time is seen as “continuing revelation” beyond the Bible eventually becomes the plain reading of Scripture.
Varieties of Revelation
The doctrine of revelation refers not to the last book of the Christian Bible “The Revelation to John” but instead to God’s act of self-disclosure: who or what is God and how is God best known?
Faithful Christians disagree in fundamental ways as to how God self-discloses. Some see…
- …the Revelation is through Jesus: For many theologians (ie. Barth, Luther, Pannenberg) penultimate knowledge of God is through Jesus Christ (incidentally, though, Pascal places God’s clearest self-revelation in the Eucharist itself).
- …the Revelation is through the Bible: For some Protestants, The Bible is God’s self revelation and fully reliable even though there are human errors in transmission and translation of the Bible.
- …the revelation is through participation in the kingdom of God: 20th century theologian Albrecht Ritschl believed revelation centered on humankind’s involvement in the kingdom of God, primarily through prophets who speak with the voice of God and authenticate themselves by miracles and other signs which God provides. Jesus was the one who was most perfectly involved in the kingdom of God (this also has echoes in Process Theology).
Revelation is different from inspiration or interpretation (as one commenter pointed out recently) in that revelation is God’s self-disclosure. The common denominator of the above is that God’s revelation is complete within the context of the Bible: whether it is Jesus, the prophets, or the Bible itself.
However, there’s a fourth understanding called “Continuing Revelation” which claims that God reveals more divine disclosure beyond the Bible, or beyond Christ as known in the Bible. You see it clearly in the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints who claim continuing revelation through Joseph Smith. You hear an echo of it in the United Church of Christ’s slogan “God is Still Speaking” or their bumper sticker “never put a period where God put a comma” (weird since the Hebrew Bible has no punctuation, but whatever). But in short: God’s self is made known through individual or common experience through the Holy Spirit which continues beyond biblical times. Of the four, this one is the most trinitarian, but also the least supported by mainline institutions or evangelical movements.
Not Clear Divisions on Revelation
Progressives and conservatives find themselves in conflict over whether revelation has ceased or whether it is ongoing, though the lines are not clearly drawn:
- Conservatives tend to say no, that the sufficiency of what God has to say to humanity is found in the Bible, be it sola scriptura or a prioritizing of Scripture over other sources of authority. There are some evangelicals (primarily pentecostals) who believe otherwise.
- Progressives tend to agree but a sizable minority say yes, God continues to reveal aspects of the divine nature in the continuing human story. The Bible is a few chapters of the human story, and they are important, but God is not confined to a few centuries of activity in the Middle East.
In my own denomination of the United Methodist Church, its founder John Wesley is squarely in the Bible-only camp. In “Thoughts Upon Methodism” he states that the fundamental doctrine for Methodists is:
“The Bible is the whole and sole rule both of Christian faith and practice.”
Revelation and LGBT Inclusion
But so what? Why does this matter?
It matters a great deal when it comes to LGBT inclusion.
When LGBT persons claim to have felt a call to ordained ministry or to Christian marriage, the allegation is that “clearly” the Scripture does not support such things and “never” has. Thus the support is called a continuing revelation and heretical or at least wrong.
So most often, it is conservatives claiming that progressives are promoting “continuing revelation” when they claim God’s acceptance of LGBT persons as an allegedly extra-biblical revelation. In the words of one conservative activist:
Fundamental Methodist doctrine contrasts sharply with such liberal ideologies as faith in “continuing revelation” which can even directly contradict Scripture…
Revelation: a Matter of Dates
The biggest criticism of continuing revelation is that it allows personal experience to trump Scripture. But such criticism ignores that it is collective experience that has changed the reading of Scripture time and again.
- The majority reading of scripture said that women could not be clergy. People who promoted women’s ordination were accused of promoting continuing revelation that God had revealed ordained ministry being open to women. In fact, it was shut down early on as a Christian heresy (Montanism). But when it became a reality in many denominations, then they saw it as the plain reading of Scripture, pointing to Scriptures that overcame the letters of Paul.
- The majority reading of Scripture in the South said that slaves were permissible. People who were abolitionists were accused of not believing in the Bible. But when it became abolished, many framed the scriptures supporting slavery differently. It became the plain reading of Scripture—almost universally now—that Scripture does not support slavery.
- So it will be with LGBT inclusion. The majority reading of Scripture is currently that the Bible condemns homosexuality. People who see it differently are accused of promoting continuing revelation that God had revealed ordained ministry being open to LGBT persons. And yet mark my words: when we are on the other side of this debate, it will not be seen as “continuing revelation” but the “plain reading” of Scripture.
Continuing revelation, it seems to me, is a placeholder criticism when the minority reading hasn’t overcome the majority yet. And when it does, it ceases to be “continuing revelation” and instead becomes the plain reading.
A Set Canon with Emerging Interpretations
Even within a set canon of the Bible, there is room for God to continue to reveal its meaning over time.
Conservatives who accuse “that’s…continuing revelation!” to progressive movements over LGBT inclusion do so without acknowledging its historical precedents. Far from being driven by personal experience, such movements include entire churches, cities, and whole regions of Christianity that have come to a different understanding of the Bible, which is not dependent on extra-biblical revelation.
Eventually, perhaps, we will no longer see continuing revelation as beyond the Bible and instead see revelation as how God continues to bring amazing new things and emerging understandings even millennia later through the Bible that we have already. And that will be inspirational indeed.
Thoughts?
The Rev. Jeremy Smith serves as minister of discipleship for First United Methodist Church of Portland, Ore. He blogs at Hacking Christianity.