jonathan.borland
Active Member
I'm starting a new thread in case other examples wish to be discussed. This is an expansion of a thread started by GreekTim, Entering or Exiting Jericho: a contradiction?.
My response was . . .
To this Tim responded that it changed the account, and asked . . .
Nothing really, depending on how you define inerrancy. (The CSBI is a good place to start.)
A more flexible view of inerrancy allows people to tell the same incidents in different ways. It allows, for example, Matthew to say that Jesus healed two specific demoniacs (Matt 8:28–34) even though the two were actually healed individually (cf. Mark 1:21–28 and Mark 5:1–13).
It allows Matthew to tell that Jesus healed two blind men (Matt 20:29–34) even though each was probably healed individually (cf. Mark 8:22–26 and 10:46–52; but cf. also Matt 9:27–30, which I, as Eusebius, consider to be unique Matthew material without a synoptic parallel).
It allows Matthew to relate a single message that Jairus' daughter is dead (Matt 9:18--before the healing of the woman), whereas really there were two messages, the first that the daughter was near death (Mark 5:23) and the second that the daughter was dead (Mark 5:35--after the healing of the woman).
It allows Matthew to say that Jesus cursed a vine and made it wither and discussed it with the disciples all in one episode (Matt 21:20–22), whereas it appears that Jesus cursed it one day (Mark 11:14) and the disciples noticed it withered and asked Jesus about it the next (Mark 11:20–21).
In my view, all of these narrative choices are allowed the human component of God-inspired Scripture without negating inerrancy. From the above I think you can tell what I think of those who try to "harmonize" each and every difference among the Gospel accounts, whereas in reality all such differences have answers in broader view of inerrancy that allows God-inspired human freedom in the composition of the narrative stories. In this sense, Scripture is like the Jesus himself, both 100% God and 100% human.
Sincerely,
Jonathan C. Borland
My response was . . .
Considering the circumstances of narrative construction, perhaps the clause in Luke may best be rendered, "Now while he was near Jericho, . . . ." It seems that Luke is putting the blind man incident before his Zacchaeus episode for a very special purpose. One man could not see Jesus because of his eyes, another because of his stature. Both stories lead up to the thrilling statement that the Son of man has come to seek and save the lost. If he had left the blind man incident to come after the Zacchaeus incident, he could have moved the thrilling climactic statement to go with the blind man instead of Zacchaeus, but instead he decided to keep the thrilling statement in its original context and to move the blind man episode to become the anticipatory intro to the great Zacchaeus story and climax. A good choice I do believe.
To this Tim responded that it changed the account, and asked . . .
What does this do to inerrancy though?
Nothing really, depending on how you define inerrancy. (The CSBI is a good place to start.)
A more flexible view of inerrancy allows people to tell the same incidents in different ways. It allows, for example, Matthew to say that Jesus healed two specific demoniacs (Matt 8:28–34) even though the two were actually healed individually (cf. Mark 1:21–28 and Mark 5:1–13).
It allows Matthew to tell that Jesus healed two blind men (Matt 20:29–34) even though each was probably healed individually (cf. Mark 8:22–26 and 10:46–52; but cf. also Matt 9:27–30, which I, as Eusebius, consider to be unique Matthew material without a synoptic parallel).
It allows Matthew to relate a single message that Jairus' daughter is dead (Matt 9:18--before the healing of the woman), whereas really there were two messages, the first that the daughter was near death (Mark 5:23) and the second that the daughter was dead (Mark 5:35--after the healing of the woman).
It allows Matthew to say that Jesus cursed a vine and made it wither and discussed it with the disciples all in one episode (Matt 21:20–22), whereas it appears that Jesus cursed it one day (Mark 11:14) and the disciples noticed it withered and asked Jesus about it the next (Mark 11:20–21).
In my view, all of these narrative choices are allowed the human component of God-inspired Scripture without negating inerrancy. From the above I think you can tell what I think of those who try to "harmonize" each and every difference among the Gospel accounts, whereas in reality all such differences have answers in broader view of inerrancy that allows God-inspired human freedom in the composition of the narrative stories. In this sense, Scripture is like the Jesus himself, both 100% God and 100% human.
Sincerely,
Jonathan C. Borland