Kelsey on Choices that Govern the Deployment of Scripture in Theological Arguments
David Kelsey is here at PTS this week giving this year's Warfield lectures, so it seemed fitting to put up a quote from one of his earlier works.
David Kelsey, Providing Doctrine: The Uses of Scripture in Modern Theology, 169-70.
==================================
David Kelsey, Providing Doctrine: The Uses of Scripture in Modern Theology, 169-70.
[T]heologians' decisions about which role in an argument supporting a theological proposal ought to be filled by scripture [ed. aside: Kelsey earlier gives a very complex analysis of how Scripture actually gets used in supporting theological arguments] is largely determined by a decision about how best to characterize the subject matter theological proposals are chiefly to elucidate. But that is to say that they are determined by the particular way each theological tries to catch up the full complexity and singularity of the mode in which God is present in a single imaginative judgment. Theologians' decisions about how to use scripture, like their decisions about how to construe the scripture they use, are determined by decisions that are literally pre-text, i.e., logically prior to any attention to any particular text taken as authority for any particular theological proposal.Kelsey's analysis certainly gives one pause about too quickly claiming that one's own theological position is scripturally superior to another, given that the relationship between how Scripture is deployed in theology is so complicated. More work needs to be done, I think, in bringing together Kelsey's functional analysis and a more theoretical doctrine of Scripture and revelation.
==================================
Comments
Joshua H.
How could it be otherwise?
I see two alternatives: either the scriptures themselves determine their own use, or theologians' decisions are not really determined by prior decisions at all, but rather by something like habit, tradition, or by some subterranean working of the mind. I'm skeptical of the first alternative.
Barth doesn't seem to be suggesting that we should move away from certain narratives (such as the creation narratives of Genesis 1 as Kesley does) because they do not comport with the theological/ethical/philosphical vision that we inevitably bring to the text. Quite the opposite. My question has to do with whether or not we allow *all* scripture narratives to question our pre-text baggage, and I hold out that *all* scripture has the power to do so.
As the Kesley quote stands on its own, I have no problem with it. Of course all readers bring something to the text! But if we allow our pre-text assumptions to Lord over the text, we end up scrapping entire narratives that we do not like (as Kelsey does with Genesis creation narratives, keeping only the parts of Priestly revision that comport with his pre-text assumptions about what a good anthropology of creation might be). We listen only to what "fits" our pre-text, and scripture exegesis becomes wholly an anthropological exercise. Barth's understanding of scripture works well the quote from Kelsey *up to a point*. But, according to Barth, we aren't to just listen for what we want to Scripture. Nor is it the case that we already know before hand what we will get. We don't just find ourselves in the Bible.
Getting down to business is the right move. And we have to do so as the contingent creatures we are, for good or ill with a wealth of pre-text baggage. But this doesn't give us license to cherry pick narratives for our theological work based on our pre-text assumptions. To do so, for Barth, is to do "violence to the text."
I think we seem to be in general agreement. It has been little while since I've read Kelsey's text, so I was definitely not trying to defend him with Barth. However, I think the potential risk for "Lording over the text" will always remain, which is why I made the comment about working with humility. I also share your concern about cherry-picking narratives, though I don't see how that can be avoided for the one who preaches on sunday morning or writes a thesis statement. At some point, you have to say "something" and that means excluding other possibilities. I would appreciate your thoughts.
Best,
Joshua H.
I was more or less after putting some distance between Kelsey's hermeneutics as I've seen them played out in Eccentric Existence and Barth's, though I think they have some commonalities as well.