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THE CHICAGO STATEMENT ON BIBLICAL INERRANCY
PREFACE
The authority of Scripture is a key issue for the Christian
Church in this and every age. Those who profess faith in Jesus Christ as
Lord and Savior are called to show the reality of their discipleship by
humbly and faithfully obeying God's written Word. To stray from Scripture in
faith or conduct is disloyalty to our Master. Recognition of the total truth
and trustworthiness of Holy Scripture is essential to a full grasp and
adequate confession of its authority.
The following Statement affirms this inerrancy of Scripture afresh, making
clear our understanding of it and warning against its denial. We are
persuaded that to deny it is to set aside the witness of Jesus Christ and of
the Holy Spirit and to refuse that submission to the claims of God's own
Word that marks true Christian faith. We see it as our timely duty to make
this affirmation in the face of current lapses from the truth of inerrancy
among our fellow Christians and misunderstanding of this doctrine in the
world at large.
This Statement consists of three parts: a Summary Statement, Articles of
Affirmation and Denial, and an accompanying Exposition. It has been prepared
in the course of a three-day consultation in Chicago. Those who have signed
the Summary Statement and the Articles wish to affirm their own conviction
as to the inerrancy of Scripture and to encourage and challenge one another
and all Christians to growing appreciation and understanding of this
doctrine. We acknowledge the limitations of a document prepared in a brief,
intensive conference and do not propose that this Statement be given creedal
weight. Yet we rejoice in the deepening of our own convictions through our
discussions together, and we pray that the Statement we have signed may be
used to the glory of our God toward a new reformation of the Church in its
faith, life and mission.
We offer this Statement in a spirit, not of contention, but of humility and
love, which we propose by God's grace to maintain in any future dialogue
arising out of what we have said. We gladly acknowledge that many who deny
the inerrancy of Scripture do not display the consequences of this denial in
the rest of their belief and behavior, and we are conscious that we who
confess this doctrine often deny it in life by failing to bring our thoughts
and deeds, our traditions and habits, into true subjection to the divine
Word.
We invite response to this Statement from any who see reason to amend its
affirmations about Scripture by the light of Scripture itself, under whose
infallible authority we stand as we speak. We claim no personal
infallibility for the witness we bear, and for any help that enables us to
strengthen this testimony to God's Word we shall be grateful.
I. SUMMARY STATEMENT
1. God, who is Himself Truth and speaks truth only, has inspired Holy
Scripture in order thereby to reveal Himself to lost mankind through Jesus
Christ as Creator and Lord, Redeemer and Judge. Holy Scripture is God's
witness to Himself.
2. Holy Scripture, being God's own Word, written by men prepared and
superintended by His Spirit, is of infallible divine authority in all
matters upon which it touches: It is to be believed, as God's instruction,
in all that it affirms; obeyed, as God's command, in all that it requires;
embraced, as God's pledge, in all that it promises.
3. The Holy Spirit, Scripture's divine Author, both authenticates it to us
by His inward witness and opens our minds to understand its meaning.
4. Being wholly and verbally God-given, Scripture is without error or fault
in all its teaching, no less in what it states about God's acts in creation,
about the events of world history, and about its own literary origins under
God, than in its witness to God's saving grace in individual lives.
5. The authority of Scripture is inescapably impaired if this
total divine inerrancy is in any way limited of disregarded, or made
relative to a view of truth contrary to the Bible's own; and such lapses
bring serious loss to both the individual and the Church.
II. ARTICLES OF AFFIRMATION AND DENIAL
Article I.
We affirm that the Holy Scriptures are to be received as the authoritative
Word of God.
We deny that the Scriptures receive their authority from the Church,
tradition, or any other human source.
Article II.
We affirm that the Scriptures are the supreme written norm by which God
binds the conscience, and that the authority of the Church is subordinate to
that of Scripture.
We deny that church creeds, councils, or declarations have authority greater
than or equal to the authority of the Bible.
Article III.
We affirm that the written Word in its entirety is revelation given by God.
We deny that the Bible is merely a witness to revelation, or only becomes
revelation in encounter, or depends on the responses of men for its
validity.
Article IV.
We affirm that God who made mankind in His image has used language as a
means of revelation.
We deny that human language is so limited by our creatureliness that it is
rendered inadequate as a vehicle for divine revelation. We further deny that
the corruption of human culture and language through sin has thwarted God's
work of inspiration.
Article V.
We affirm that God's revelation in the Holy Scriptures was progressive.
We deny that later revelation, which may fulfill earlier revelation, ever
corrects of contradicts it. We further deny that any normative revelation
has been given since the completion of the New Testament writings.
Article VI.
We affirm that the whole of Scripture and all its parts, down to the very
words of the original, were given by divine inspiration.
We deny that the inspiration of Scripture can rightly be
affirmed of the whole without the parts, or of some parts but not the whole.
Article VII.
We affirm that inspiration was the work in which God by His Spirit, through
human writers, gave us His Word. The origin of Scripture is divine. The mode
of divine inspiration remains largely a mystery to us.
We deny that inspiration can be reduced to human insight, or to heightened
states of consciousness of any kind.
Article VIII.
We affirm that God in His work of inspiration utilized the distinctive
personalities and literary styles of the writers whom He had chosen and
prepared.
We deny that God, in causing these writers to use the very words that He
chose, overrode their personalities.
Article IX.
We affirm that inspiration, through not conferring omniscience, guaranteed
true and trustworthy utterance on all matters of which the Biblical authors
were moved to speak and write.
We deny that the finitude or falseness of these writers, by necessity or
otherwise, introduced distortion or falsehood into God's Word.
Article X.
We affirm that inspiration, strictly speaking, applies only
to the autographic text of Scripture, which in the providence of God can be
ascertained from available manuscripts with great accuracy. We further
affirm that copies and translations of Scripture are the Word of God to the
extent that they faithfully represent the original.
We deny that any essential element of the Christian faith is affected by the
absence of the autographs. We further deny that this absence renders the
assertion of Biblical inerrancy invalid or irrelevant.
Article XI.
We affirm that Scripture, having been given by divine inspiration, is
infallible, so that, far from misleading us, it is true and reliable in all
the matters it addresses.
We deny that it is possible for the Bible to be at the same time infallible
and errant in its assertions. Infallibility and inerrancy may be
distinguished but not separated.
Article XII.
We affirm that Scripture in its entirety is inerrant, being free from all
falsehood, fraud, or deceit.
We deny that Biblical infallibility and inerrancy are limited to spiritual,
religious, or redemptive themes, exclusive of assertions in the fields of
history and science. We further deny that scientific hypotheses about earth
history may properly be used to overturn the teaching of Scripture on
creation and the flood.
Article XIII.
We affirm the propriety of using inerrancy as a theological term with
reference to the complete truthfulness of Scripture.
We deny that it is proper to evaluate Scripture according to standards of
truth and error that are alien to its usage or purpose. We further deny that
inerrancy is negated by Biblical phenomena such as a lack of modern
technical precision, irregularities of grammar or spelling, observational
descriptions of nature, the reporting of falsehoods, the use of hyperbole
and round numbers, the topical arrangement of metrical, variant selections
of material in parallel accounts, or the use of free citations.
Article XIV.
We affirm the unity and internal consistency of Scripture.
We deny that alleged errors and discrepancies that have not yet been
resolved violate the truth claims of the Bible.
Article XV.
We affirm that the doctrine of inerrancy is grounded in the teaching of the
Bible about inspiration.
We deny that Jesus' teaching about Scripture may be dismissed by appeals to
accommodation or to any natural limitation of His humanity.
Article XVI.
We affirm that the doctrine of inerrancy has been integral to the Church's
faith throughout its history.
We deny that inerrancy is a doctrine invented by scholastic Protestantism,
or is a reactionary position postulated in response to negative higher
criticism.
Article XVII.
We affirm that the Holy Spirit bears witness to the Scriptures, assuring
believers of the truthfulness of God's written Word.
We deny that this witness of the Holy Spirit operates in isolation from or
against Scripture.
Article XVIII.
We affirm that the text of Scripture is to be interpreted by grammatico-historical
exegesis, taking account of its literary forms and devices, and that
Scripture is to interpret Scripture.
We deny the legitimacy of any treatment of the text or quest for sources
lying behind it that leads or relativizing, dehistoricizing, or discounting
its teaching, or rejecting its claims of authorship.
Article XIX.
We affirm that a confession of the full authority, infallibility and
inerrancy of Scripture is vital to a sound understanding of the whole of the
Christian faith. We further affirm that such confession should lead to
increasing conformity to the image of Christ.
We deny that such confession is necessary for salvation. However, we further
deny that inerrancy can be rejected without grave consequences, both to the
individual and to the Church.
III. EXPOSITION
Our understanding of the doctrine of inerrancy must be set in the context of
the broader teachings of Scripture concerning itself. This exposition gives
an account of the outline of doctrine from which our Summary Statement and
Articles are drawn.
A. Creation, Revelation and Inspiration
The God, who formed all things by his creative utterances and governs all
things by His Word of decree, made mankind in His own image for a life of
communion with Himself, on the model of the eternal fellowship of loving
communication within the Godhead. As God's image-bearer, man was to hear
God's Word addressed to him and to respond in the joy of adoring obedience.
Over and above God's self-disclosure in the created order and the sequence
of events within it, human beings from Adam on have received verbal messages
from Him, either directly, as stated in Scripture, or indirectly in the form
of part or all of Scripture itself.
When Adam fell, the Creator did not abandon mankind to final judgement, but
promised salvation and began to reveal Himself as Redeemer in a sequence of
historical events centering on Abraham's family and culminating in the life,
death, resurrection, present heavenly ministry and promised return of Jesus
Christ. Within this frame God has from time to time spoken specific words of
judgement and mercy, promise and command, to sinful human beings, so drawing
them into a covenant relation of mutual commitment between Him and them in
which He blesses them with gifts of grace and they bless Him in responsive
adoration. Moses, whom God used as mediator to carry his words to His people
at the time of the exodus, stands at the head of a long line of prophets in
whose mouths and writings God put His words for delivery to Israel. God's
purpose in this succession of messages was to maintain His covenant by
causing His people to know His name--that is, His nature--and His will both
of precept and purpose in the present and for the future. This line of
prophetic spokesmen from God came to completion in Jesus Christ, God's
incarnate Word, who was Himself a prophet--more that a prophet, but not
less--and in the apostles and prophets of the first Christian generation.
When God's final and climactic message, His word to the world concerning
Jesus Christ, had been spoken and elucidated by those in the apostolic
circle, the sequence of revealed messages ceased. Henceforth the Church was
to live and know God by what He had already said, and said for all time.
At Sinai God wrote the terms of His covenant on tablets of stone as His
enduring witness and for lasting accessibility, and throughout the period of
prophetic and apostolic revelation He prompted men to write the messages
given to and through them, along with celebratory records of His dealings
with His people, plus moral reflections on covenant life and forms of praise
and prayer for covenant mercy. The theological reality of inspiration in the
producing of Biblical documents corresponds to that of spoken prophecies:
Although the human writers' personalities were expressed in what they wrote,
the words were divinely constituted. Thus what Scripture says, God says; its
authority is His authority, for He is its ultimate Author, having given it
through the minds and words of chosen and prepared men who in freedom and
faithfulness "spoke from God as they were carried along by the Holy Spirit"
(I Pet 1:21). Holy Scripture must be acknowledged as the Word of God by
virtue of its divine origin.
B. Authority: Christ and the Bible
Jesus Christ, the Son of God who is the Word made flesh, our Prophet, priest
and King, is the ultimate Mediator of God's communication to man, as He is
of all God's gifts of grace. The revelation He gave was more that verbal; He
revealed the Father by His presence and His deeds as well. Yet His words
were crucially important ; for He was God, He spoke from the Father, and His
words will judge all men at the last day.
As the prophesied Messiah, Jesus Christ is the central theme of Scripture.
The Old Testament looked ahead to Him; the New Testament looks back to His
first coming and on to His second. Canonical Scripture is the divinely
inspired and therefore normative witness to Christ. No hermeneutic,
therefore, of which the historical Christ is not the focal point is
acceptable. Holy Scripture must be treated as what it essentially is--the
witness of the Father to the incarnate Son.
It appears that the Old Testament canon had been fixed by the time of Jesus.
The New Testament canon is likewise now closed, inasmuch as no new apostolic
witness to the historical Christ can now be borne. No new revelation (as
distinct from Spirit-given understanding of existing revelation) will be
given until Christ comes again. The canon was created in principle by divine
inspiration. The Church's part was to discern the canon that God had
created, not to devise one of its own.
The word 'canon', signifying a rule of standard, is a pointer to authority,
which means the right to rule and control. Authority in Christianity belongs
to God in His revelation, which means, on the one hand, Jesus Christ, the
living Word, and, on the other hand, Holy Scripture, the written Word. But
the authority of Christ and that of Scripture are one. As our Prophet,
Christ testified that Scripture cannot be broken. As our Priest and King, He
devoted His earthly life to fulfilling the law and the prophets, even dying
in obedience to the words of messianic prophecy. Thus as He saw Scripture
attesting Him and His authority, so by His own submission to Scripture He
attested its authority. As He bowed to His Father's instruction given in His
Bible (our Old Testament), so He requires His disciples to do--not, however,
in isolation but in conjunction with the apostolic witness to Himself that
He undertook to inspire by his gift of the Holy Spirit. So Christians show
themselves faithful servants of their Lord by bowing to the divine
instruction given in the prophetic and apostolic writings that together make
up our Bible.
By authenticating each other's authority, Christ and Scripture coalesce into
a single fount of authority. The Biblically-interpreted Christ and the
Christ-centered, Christ-proclaiming Bible are from this standpoint one. As
from the fact of inspiration we infer that what Scripture says, God says, so
from the revealed relation between Jesus Christ and Scripture we may equally
declare that what Scripture says, Christ says.
C. Infallibility, Inerrancy, Interpretation
Holy Scripture, as the inspired Word of God witnessing authoritatively to
Jesus Christ, may properly be called 'infallible' and 'inerrant'. These
negative terms have a special value, for they explicitly safeguard crucial
positive truths.
'Infallible' signifies the quality of neither misleading nor being misled
and so safeguards in categorical terms the truth that Holy Scripture is a
sure, safe and reliable rule and guide in all matters.
Similarly, 'inerrant' signifies the quality of being free from all falsehood
or mistake and so safeguards the truth that Holy Scripture is entirely true
and trustworthy in all its assertions.
We affirm that canonical Scripture should always be interpreted on the basis
that it is infallible and inerrant. However, in determining what the
God-taught writer is asserting in each passage, we must pay the most careful
attention to its claims and character as a human production. In inspiration,
God utilized the culture and conventions of his penman's milieu, a milieu
that God controls in His sovereign providence; it is misinterpretation to
imagine otherwise.
So history must be treated as history, poetry as poetry, hyperbole and
metaphor as hyperbole and metaphor, generalization and approximation as what
they are, and so forth. Differences between literary conventions in Bible
times and in ours must also be observed: Since, for instance,
non-chronological narration and imprecise citation were conventional and
acceptable and violated no expectations in those days, we must not regard
these things as faults when we find them in Bible writers. When total
precision of a particular kind was not expected nor aimed at, it is no error
not to have achieved it. Scripture is inerrant, not in the sense of being
absolutely precise by modern standards, but in the sense of making good its
claims and achieving that measure of focused truth at
which its authors aimed.
The truthfulness of Scripture is not negated by the appearance in it of
irregularities of grammar or spelling, phenomenal descriptions of nature,
reports of false statements (for example, the lies of Satan), or seeming
discrepancies between one passage and another. It is not right to set the
so-called "phenomena" of Scripture against the teaching of
Scripture about itself. Apparent inconsistencies should not be ignored.
Solution of them, where this can be convincingly achieved, will encourage
our faith, and where for the present no convincing solution is at hand we
shall significantly honor God by trusting His assurance that His Word is
true, despite these appearances, and by maintaining our confidence that one
day they will be seen to have been illusions.
Inasmuch as all Scripture is the product of a single divine mind,
interpretation must stay within the bounds of the analogy of Scripture and
eschew hypotheses that would correct one Biblical passage by another,
whether in the name of progressive revelation or of the imperfect
enlightenment of the inspired writer's mind.
Although Holy Scripture is nowhere culture-bound in the sense that its
teaching lacks universal validity, it is sometimes culturally conditioned by
the customs and conventional views of a particular period, so that the
application of its principles today calls for a different sort of action.
D. Skepticism and Criticism
Since the Renaissance, and more particularly since the Enlightenment, world
views have been developed that involve skepticism about basic Christian
tenets. Such are the agnosticism that denies that God is knowable, the
rationalism that denies that He is incomprehensible, the idealism that
denies that He is transcendent, and the existentialism
that denies rationality in His relationships with us. When these un- and
anti-Biblical principles seep into men's theologies at presuppositional
level, as today they frequently do, faithful interpretation of Holy
Scripture becomes impossible.
E. Transmission and Translation
Since God has nowhere promised an inerrant transmission of Scripture, it is
necessary to affirm that only the autographic text of the original documents
was inspired and to maintain the need of textual criticism as a means of
detecting any slips that may have crept into the text in the course of its
transmission. The verdict of this science, however, is that the Hebrew and
Greek text appears to be amazingly well preserved, so that we are amply
justified in affirming, with the Westminster Confession, a singular
providence of God in this matter and in declaring that the authority of
Scripture is in no way jeopardized by the fact that the copies we possess
are not entirely error-free.
Similarly, no translation is or can be perfect, and all
translations are an additional step away from the autograph. Yet the verdict
of linguistic science is that English-speaking Christians, at least, are
exceedingly well served in these days with a host of excellent translations
and have no cause for hesitating to conclude that the true Word of God is
within their reach. Indeed, in view of the frequent repetition in Scripture
of the main matters with which it deals and also of the Holy Spirit's
constant witness to and through the Word, no serious translation of Holy
Scripture will so destroy its meaning as to render it unable to make its
reader "wise for salvation through faith in Christ Jesus" (2 Tim. 3:15)
F. Inerrancy and Authority
In our affirmation of the authority of Scripture as involving its total
truth, we are consciously standing with Christ and His apostles, indeed with
the whole Bible and with the main stream of Church history from the first
days until very recently. We are concerned at that casual, inadvertent and
seemingly thoughtless way in which a belief of such far-reaching importance
has been given up by so many in our day.
We are conscious too that great and grave confusion results from ceasing to
maintain the total truth of the Bible whose authority one professes to
acknowledge. The result of taking this step is that the Bible that God gave
loses its authority, and what has authority instead is a Bible reduced in
content according to the demands of one's critical reasoning and in
principle reducible still further once one has started. This means that at
bottom independent reason now has authority, as opposed to Scriptural
teaching. If this is not seen and if for the time being basic evangelical
doctrines are still held, persons denying the full truth of Scripture may
claim an evangelical identity while methodologically they have moved away
from the evangelical principle of knowledge to an unstable subjectivism, and
will find it hard not to move further.
We affirm that what Scripture says, God says. May He be glorified.
Amen and Amen.
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