Eldric wrote:Erm, well not really, no, you seem to be making a distinction between discussing textual issues and Theological ones it seems that they would be more or less one and the same.
I think we are having somewhat of miscommunication problem due to the technical nature of the terminology I'm using. In Biblical studies we tend separate 'external' and 'internal' factors when looking at the Biblical text. Historico-critical questions (was there an Exodus? did Moses really exist? did the walls of Jericho come tumbling down?) fall under the category of external issues. Source-criticism (who wrote the pentateuch? how many sources did Luke rely on to write his gospel? was Daniel written by a 6th or 2nd century B.C. writer?)and text-criticism (what is the meaning of the Hebrew word barah? in what context is barah usually used? how many instances of barah are there in the OT?) are internal factors.
Before we can arrive at a good interpretation of the text (i.e. understand the theology behind it), one needs to address all these external and internal
peripheral issues (yet at the same time foundational) on which interpretation is based. Whe two people come to discuss a theological question, they need to have a shared understanding and agreed upon assumptions about the text they mean to discuss. If you and I sit down to talk about the theological significance of the Sanctuary, for instance, and we cannot agree on the contextual meaning of the word kaphar (atonement) in such-n-such passage, then we need to take a step back and address that text-critical point before we can continue.
Text-critical and interpretive (i.e. theological) issues are related to the extent that the latter is (partly) based upon the former, but they are not one and the same. When I argue the martureo (witness) in John 1:7 has a sense of advocate-for-someone instead of just merely eyewitness to an event (just to pose an example), my conclusion has theological significance for what it will do to my interpretation, but it is not immediately evident (or necessarily true) that my theological understanding of John 1:7 will be based interely on my understanding of the word martureo.
To use a less technical analogy, if I go to a chatroom where I know most people don't believe in God or don't care for the authenticity of the Bible and I start making theological postulations left and right, I will inevitably start getting responses like "science has
proven God does not exist" or "the archaeological record denies the existance of King David" or "the Bible has been translated so many times it's not accurate anymore." These are all interesting and debatable issues that I can spend my time discussing,
but they are not theological. I started off by making theological assertions about the Bible and ended up talking about how science cannot
prove God does not exist anymore that it prove it does exist, or how (1993) excavations at tel-Dan have uncovered evidence that point to the existance of the Biblical David, or why careful analysis of original textual records allow us to come up with a valid and accurate Bible translation, all peripheral aspects of interpretation but not theology itself.
On the other hand, if I go to a chatroom of Bible-believe christians where I don't feel the need to convince everyone else of my religious views about God and the Bible, we can move right along and get to the core theological stuff. It just makes things much easier if people can understand each other and actually
know what the other person is talking about.
If Theological issues can only be debated between people who believe in God, it wouldn't seem there would be a whole lot to debate would there?
*chuckles* You really don't know much about the Christian world, do you? Let's just say the thousand and one Christian denominations out there (including the Catholic Church) did not result from the fact they could not agree on set date for the Exodus. However, whether Jesus Christ is only God, only human, or fully human and fully God, I think that might've proven to be a more divisive factor.
I hope this explains a bit better why I'm reluctant to discuss theology with people who only want to argue, and arguing is something I cannot do in this case (unless we can actually understand each other). If you want to
listen to my views on theology I'm more than happy to share them with you. Somehow, I doubt that's what you were actually asking me to do.