Westminster Confession of Faith 1.9 – Scripture Interprets Scripture

The week has flown by and we are back to Wednesday again which means Westminster Confession of Faith day! Last week we focused on the authority of the original languages. While these are the final authority, we learnt that good translations in the language of ordinary people are good and necessary. Today we look at the penultimate point in the first section of the Confession ‘Of the Holy Scriptures’ and our key focus today is the way Scripture is its own interpreter.

IX. The infallible rule of interpretation of Scripture is the Scripture itself: and therefore, when there is a question about the true and full sense of any Scripture (which is not manifold, but one), it must be searched and known by other places that speak more clearly.

What do we learn here? Firstly, that Scripture interprets Scripture. We have seen hints of this in WCF 1.7 where we learned of the perspicuity of Scripture. The “things which are necessary to be known, believed, and observed for salvation are clear to such a degree that ordinary people can by ordinary means of careful reading understand the Scriptures. The point made here is related. We do not need an authoritative Church to interpret Scripture for us. The Scriptures are authoritative and we look to them to understand them! Note for example how Paul charged Timothy in 2 Timothy 2:15 to work diligently to be a man who rightly handles the Word of Truth. In Acts, the Berean Christians were noted for their noble-mindedness when Paul preached to them. What did they do? They examined the Scriptures daily to see if what Paul was teaching was what the Scriptures taught (Acts 17:11).

Secondly, we are informed in passing that there is one right and true sense of any Scripture. Wilkinson in his study of the Confession mentions that medieval scholars spoke of four levels of meaning in a text, and there was a tendency to allegorise Scripture which led to a twisting of Scripture by some to make it say whatever they already believed. This ought to be avoided. Even today, in some Christian circles the tendency to allegorise is a problem. I remember preaching a sermon on David and Goliath and after the service a man came up to me and explained to me the real meaning of the five smooth stones. The details are no longer clear in my mind, but I do remember him speaking of the smooth stones and the many aeons of water and physical weathering and hitting up against other rocks that made them ready to be used by David in his takedown of Goliath. God’s works in our lives to make us smooth stones ready for his use. What he said was not bad or evil, but clearly not what the passage is about.

How do we understand what a given Scripture is saying? We must interpret it in a literal manner. And here, Wilkinson is again helpful. Some of our godly brothers misunderstand the meaning of literal and take it to mean literalistic and they tend to approach Scripture in a wooden way. A literalistic reading might argue that the Scripture teaches the earth is flat because four corners of the earth are spoken of, or that people will literally have 666 written on their hands and forehead. What we mean by literal is taking into account the genre and understanding how language is used within this genre to determine what the author intended to say. It will not do to read, “He kicked the bucket” and assume a literalistic interpretation of a chap booting a poor defenceless bucket. A lot more could be said here, and perhaps in the future we will look at this in more detail.

Finally, we are given the well-known principle that we must let the places where Scripture speaks more clearly be our guide. Many have taken obscure passages out of context, misinterpreted them and made whole doctrines out of them. This will not do. We must let all of Scripture help us interpret any one Scripture, allowing the more clear to help us determine the meaning of the less clear.

2 thoughts on “Westminster Confession of Faith 1.9 – Scripture Interprets Scripture

  1. I don’t know what to think about this article.

    I do know the Holy Spirit has a central place in interpreting His meaning as Author of the scriptures, and His meaning may not be exactly what men decipher in all their individual or collective wisdom.

    And when I want to understand anything in the scriptures, I start by surveying the WHOLE book, from Genesis to Revelation, first. So for example, if I want to understand ‘The Two Witnesses’ of Revelation, there are HUNDREDS of scriptures which bear on it…and after looking at all of them, I may still not understand, and have to ask the Holy Spirit for understanding.

    There are places where ‘rules’ fall down, ‘contradictions’ in scripture which can be ‘rationally’ but incorrectly resolved.

    For example, the missing name in the Matthew 1 genealogy has many ‘rational’ explanations, most of which do violence to the scripture. And the answer to the discrepancy can be and has been given by the Holy Spirit, if one asks. And that opens up a solution which is not ‘literal’ in one sense, and yet very literal in another sense. The third set of 14 generations where only 13 names are given is intentional because the Holy Spirit changed His meaning of ‘generation’ in that one particular instance from procreative to 40 year interval. Both definitions of ‘generation’ are biblically valid if one surveys the scriptures. And both are used in the immediate context. Other scriptures corroborate this 40 year meaning here, but the answer (for me at least) had to come from God not the commentaries.

    So I get a little concerned when the Holy Spirit is left out of the interpretation altogether. It is His book, and He is not dead but alive. He still answers. Our grey matter is still insufficient. Our minds are still not completely regenerate. We still suffer blindness. Okay, I still suffer these maladies.

    This is still true:

    (1Jn 2:27)  “But the anointing which ye have received of him abideth in you, and ye need not that any man teach you: but as the same anointing teacheth you of all things, and is truth, and is no lie, and even as it hath taught you, ye shall abide in him.”

  2. I’ll give another example where one can argue what is ‘literal’. Peter asked Jesus how many times he should forgive someone, offering ‘7 times’; Jesus countered with ‘seventy times seven times’. The literal calculation here would be 490 times. The commentaries are nearly universal in stating that Jesus is not providing a literal number but simply indicating an indefinitely large number i.e. one should always forgive.

    The commentaries are wrong and right at the same time. How can that be? Does it sound like an irrational statement?

    Most don’t recognize that Jesus (the Holy Spirit in fact) is invoking several other relevant scriptures which flies right over people’s heads because ‘they know neither the scriptures nor the power of God’. Jesus is invoking Daniel’s seventy weeks prophecy, for one. He is also invoking Cain’s vengeance of ‘seven times’ and Lamech’s vengeance of ‘seventy times seven times’.

    In other words, far from saying that forgiveness is infinitely available as the commentaries would have it, Jesus is teaching two things at once: there is a time of forgiveness available in which forgiveness asked for should be granted…AND this time of forgiveness has a DEFINITE END when Daniel’s seventy weeks conclude and the time of (God’s) vengeance begins.

    Cain/Lamech portray vengeance juxtaposed against Peter/Jesus portraying forgiveness. The whole thing works together at several levels…and most of the scriptures are like this.

    So we ought be careful give the Holy Spirit a wide berth to open the eyes of the reader.

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