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Bishop Alexander (Mileant) Toward understanding the Bible IntraText CT - Text |
Revelation and Interpretation.
What is the Bible? Is it a book like any other intended for any occasional reader, who is
expected to grasp at once its proper meaning? . Rather, it is a sacred book addressed primarily
to believers. Of course, a sacred book can be read by anyone as well, just 'as literature.' But this is
rather irrelevant to our immediate purpose. We are concerned now not with the letter but with the
message. St. Hilary put it emphatically: Scriptura est non in legendo, sed in intelligendo. [Scrip-
ture is not in the reading, but in the understanding.] Is there any definite message in the Bible,
taken as a whole, as one book? And again, to whom is this message, if any, properly addressed?
To individuals, who would be, as such, entitled to understand the book and to expound its mes-
sage? Or to the community, and to individuals only in so far as they are members of that commu-
nity?
Whatever the origin of particular documents included in the book may have been, it is obvious
that the book, as a whole, was a creation of the community, both in the old dispensation and in
the Christian Church. The Bible is by no means a complete collection of all historical, legislative
and devotional writings available, but a selection of some, authorized and authenticated by the
use (first of all liturgical) in the community, and finally by the formal authority of the Church.
And there was some very definite purpose by which this .selection. was guided and checked.
“And many other signs truly did Jesus in the presence of his disciples, which are not written in
this book. But these are written that ye might believe that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God; and
that believing ye might have life through his name” (John 20:30-31). The same applies, more or
less, to the whole Bible. Certain writings have been selected, edited and compiled, and brought
together, and then commended to believers, to the people, as an authorized version of the divine
message. The message is divine; it comes from God; it is the Word of God. But it is the faithful
community that acknowledges the Word spoken and testifies to its truth. The sacred character of
the Bible is ascertained by faith. The Bible, as a book, has been composed in the community and
was meant primarily for its edification. The book and the Church cannot be separated. The book
and the Covenant belong together, and Covenant implies people. It was the People of the Cove-
nant to whom the Word of God had been entrusted under the old dispensation (Rom. 3:2), and it
is the Church of the Word Incarnate that keeps the message of the Kingdom. The Bible is the
Word of God indeed, but the book stands by the testimony of the Church. The canon of the Bible
is obviously established and authorized by the Church.
One has, however, not to overlook the missionary background of the New Testament. .The Ap-
ostolic Preaching,. therein embodied and recorded, had a double purpose: the edification of the
faithful and the conversion of the world. Therefore the New Testament is not a community-book
in the same exclusive sense as the Old Testament surely was. It is still a missionary book. Yet it
is no less fenced-off from the outsiders. Tertullian's attitude to the Scriptures was typical. He was
not prepared to discuss the controversial topics of the faith with heretics on the Scriptural ground.
Scriptures belonged to the Church. Heretics' appeal to them was unlawful. They had no right on
foreign property. Such was his main argument in the famous treatise: De praescriptione haereticorum.
An unbeliever has no access to the message, simply because he does not .receive. it. For
him there is no .message. in the Bible.
It was no accident that a diverse anthology of writings, composed at various dates and by
various writers, came to be regarded as a single book. Ta biblia is of course plural but the Bible is
emphatically singular. The scriptures are indeed one Holy Scripture, one Holy Writ. There is one
main theme and one main message through the whole story. For there is a story. Or, even more,
the Bible itself is this story, the story of God's dealings with his chosen people. The Bible records
first of all God's acts and mighty deeds, Magnalia Dei. The process has been initiated by God.
There is a beginning and an end, which is also a goal. There is a starting point: the original divine
fiat . “in the beginning” (Gen. 1:1). And there will be an end: “even so come” (Rev. 22:20).
There is one composite and yet single storyfrom Genesis to Revelation. And this story is history.
There is a process going on between these two terminal points. And this process has a definite di-
rection. There is an ultimate goal, an ultimate consummation is expected. Every particular mo-
ment is correlated to both terms and has thereby its proper and unique place within the whole. No
moment therefore can be understood except in the whole context and perspective.
God has spoken “at sundry times and in divers manners” (Heb. 1:1). He was revealing
himself through ages, not once, but constantly, again and again. He was leading his people from
truth to truth. There were stages in his revelation: per incrementa. This diversity and variety
should not be ignored or overlooked. Yet it was ever the same God, and his ultimate message
was ever the same. It is the identity of this message that gives to the various writings their real
unity, despite the variety of manners. Different versions were taken into the book as they stood.
The Church has resisted all attempts to substitute a single synthetic Gospel for four differing
Gospels, to transform the Tetraevangelion into a Dia-tessaron, in spite of the difficulties implied
in the .contradictions of the Evangelists. (with which St. Augustine was wrestling). These four
Gospels did secure the unity of the message well enough, and perhaps in a more concrete form
than any other compilation could afford.
The Bible is a book about God. But the God of the Bible is not Deus absconditus, but
Deus revelatus. God is manifesting and revealing himself. God intervenes in human life. And the
Bible is not merely a human record of these divine interventions and deeds. It is a kind of divine
intervention itself. It carries with itself a divine message. God's deeds constitute themselves a
message. No need therefore to escape time or history in order to meet God. For God is meeting
man in history, i.e. in the human element, in the midst of man's daily existence. History belongs
to God, and God enters human history. The Bible is intrinsically historical: it is a record of the
divine acts, not so much a presentation of God's eternal mysteries, and these mysteries them-
selves are available only by a historical mediation. “No man hath seen God at any time; the only
begotten Son, which is in the bosom of the Father, he hath declared him” (John 1:18). And he
declared him by entering history, in his holy incarnation. Thus the historical frame of the revela-
tion is not something that ought to be done away with. There is no need to abstract revealed truth
from the frame in which revelations took place. On the contrary, such an abstraction would have
abolished the truth as well. For the Truth is not an idea, but a person, even the Incarnate Lord.
In the Bible we are struck by the intimate relation of God to man and of man to God. It is
an intimacy of the Covenant, an intimacy of election and adoption. And this intimacy culminates
in the incarnation. “God sent forth his Son, born of a woman, born under the law” (Gal. 4:4). In
the Bible we see not only God, but man too. It is the revelation of God, but what is actually re-
vealed is God's concern about man. God reveals himself to man, .appears. before him, .speaks.
and converses with him so as to reveal to man the hidden meaning of his own existence and the
ultimate purpose of his life. In Scripture we see God coming to reveal himself to man, and we see
man meeting God, and not only listening to his voice, but answering him too. We hear in the Bi-
ble not only the voice of God, but also the voice of man answering him . in words of prayer,
thanksgiving and adoration, awe and love, sorrow and contrition, exultation, hope or despair.
There are, as it were, two partners in the Covenant, God and man, and both belong together, in
the mystery of the true divine-human encounter, which is described and recorded in the story of
the Covenant. Human response is integrated into the mystery of the Word of God. It is not a di-
vine monologue, it is rather a dialogue, and both are speaking, God and man. But prayers and in-
vocations of the worshipping psalmist are nevertheless .the Word of God.. God wants, and ex-
pects, and demands this answer and response of man. It is for this that he reveals himself to man
and speaks to him. He is, as it were, waiting for man to converse with him. He establishes his
Covenant with the sons of men. Yet, all this intimacy does not compromise divine sovereignty
and transcendence. God is “dwelling in light unapproachable” (1 Tim. 6.16). This light, how-
ever, “lighteth every man that cometh into the world” (John 1:9). This constitutes the mystery, or
the .paradox. of the revelation.
Revelation is the history of the Covenant. Recorded revelation, i.e. the Holy Scripture, is
therefore, above all, history. Law and prophets, psalms and prophecies, all are included and, as it
were, woven into the living historical web. Revelation is not a system of divine oracles only. It is
primarily the system of divine deeds; one might say, revelation was the path of God in history.
And the climax was reached when God entered history himself, and for ever: when the Word of
God was incarnate and .made man.. On the other hand, the book of revelation is as well the
book of human destiny. First of all, it is a book which narrates the creation, fall and salvation of
man. It is the story of salvation, and therefore man organically belongs to the story. It shows us
man in his obedience and in his obstinate rebellion, in his fall and in his restoration. And the
whole human fate is condensed and exemplified in the destiny of Israel, old and new, the chosen
people of God, a people for God's own possession. The fact of election is here of basic impor-
tance. One people has been elected, set apart from all other nations, constituted as a sacred oasis
in the midst of human disorder. With one people on earth only did God establish his Covenant
and grant his own sacred law. Here only a true priesthood has been created, even though but a
provisional one. In this nation only true prophets were raised, who spoke words inspired by the
Spirit of God. It was a sacred, though hidden centre for the whole world, an oasis granted by
God's mercy, in the midst of a fallen, sinful, lost and unredeemed world. All this is not the letter,
but the very heart of the Biblical message. And all this came from God, there was no human
merit or achievement. Yet, all this came for the sake of man, “for us men and for our salvation.”
All these privileges granted to the Israel of old were subordinate to the ultimate purpose, that of a
universal salvation: “For salvation is of the Jews” (John 4:22). The redeeming purpose is ever
universal indeed, but it is being accomplished always by means of separation, selection or setting
apart. In the midst of human fall and ruin a sacred oasis is erected by God. The Church is also an
oasis still, set apart, though not taken out of the world. For again this oasis is not a refuge or shel-
ter only, but rather a citadel, a vanguard of God.
There is a centre in the Biblical story, or a crucial point on the line of the temporal events.
There is a new beginning within the process, which does not, however, divide or cut it into parts,
but rather gives to it an ultimate cohesion and unity. The distinction between the two Testaments
belongs itself to the unity of the Biblical revelation. The two Testaments are to be carefully dis-
tinguished, never to be confused. Yet they are organically linked together, not as two systems
only, but primarily in the person of the Christ. Jesus the Christ belongs to both. He is the fulfiller
of the old dispensation and by the same act that he fulfills the old, “the Law and the prophets,”
he inaugurates the new, and thereby becomes the ultimate fulfiller of both, i.e. of the whole. He is
the very centre of the Bible, just because he is the arche and the telos . the beginning and the
end. And unexpectedly this mysterious identity of the start, the centre and the goal, instead of de-
stroying the existential reality of time, gives to the time-process its genuine reality and full mean-
ing. There are no mere happenings which pass by, but rather events and achievements, and new
things are coming to existence, that which never existed before. “Behold I make all things new”
Ultimately, the Old Testament as a whole has to be considered as “a book of the generation
of Jesus Christ, the Son of David, the Son of Abraham” (Matt. 1:1). It was the period of
promises and expectation, the time of covenants and prophecies. It was not only the prophets that
prophesied. Events also were prophecies. The whole story was prophetical or .typical,. a pro-
phetical sign hinting forward towards approaching consummation. Now, the time of expectation
is over. The promise had been accomplished. The Lord has come. And he came to abide among
his people for ever. The history of flesh and blood is closed. The history of the Spirit is disclosed:
“Grace and truth came by Jesus Christ” (John 1:17). But it was an accomplishment, not destruc-
tion of the old. Vetus Testamentuni in Novo patet. [The Old Testament extends into the New].
And patet means precisely: is revealed, disclosed, fulfilled. Therefore, the books of the Hebrews
are still sacred, even for the new Israel of Christnot to be left out or ignored. They tell us still the
story of salvation, Magnalia Dei. They do still bear witness to Christ. They are to be read in the
Church as a book of sacred history, not to be transformed into a collection of proof-texts or of
theological instances (loci theologici), nor into a book of parables. Prophecy has been accom-
plished and law has been superseded by grace. But nothing has passed away. In sacred history,
.the past. does not mean simply .passed. or .what had been,. but primarily that which had been
accomplished and fulfilled. .Fulfilment. is the basic category of revelation. That which has be-
come sacred remains consecrated and holy for ever. It has the seal of the Spirit. And the Spirit
breathes still in the words once inspired by him. It is true, perhaps, that in the Church and for us
now the Old Testament is no more than a book, simply because the Law and the Prophets were
superseded by the Gospel. The New Testament is obviously more than a book. We do belong to
the New Testament ourselves. We are the People of the New Covenant. For that reason it is pre-
cisely in the Old Testament that we apprehend revelation primarily as the Word: we witness to
the Spirit .that spake through the prophets.. For in the New Testament God has spoken by his
Son, and we are called upon not only to listen, but to look at. “That which we have seen and
heard declare we unto you” (1 John 1:3). And, furthermore, we are called upon to be .in Christ..
The fullness of revelation is Christ Jesus. And the New Testament is history no less than
the Old: the Gospel history of the Incarnate Word and the beginnings of church history, and the
apocalyptic prophecy too. The Gospel is history. Historic events are the source and the basis of
all Christian faith and hope. The basis of the New Testament is facts, events, deeds . not only
teaching, commandments or words. From the very beginning, from the very day of Pentecost,
when St. Peter as an eye-witness (Acts 2:32: “whereof we are all witnesses,” martyres) wit-
nessed to the fulfilment of salvation in the Risen Lord, apostolic preaching had emphatically an
historical character. By this historical witness the Church stands. Creeds have an historical struc-
ture too, they refer to the events. Again, it is a sacred history. The mystery of Christ is precisely
in that “in Him dwelleth all the fulness of the Godhead bodily” (Col. 2:9). This mystery cannot
be comprehended within the earthly plane alone, there is another dimension too. But historical
boundaries are not obliterated, not dimmed: in the sacred image historical features are dearly
seen. Apostolic preaching was always a narrative, a narrative of what had really happened, hic et
nunc. But what happened was ultimate and new: “The Word was made flesh” (John 1:14). Of
course, the Incarnation, the Resurrection, the Ascension are historical facts not quite in the same
sense or on the same level as the happenings of our own daily life. But they are no less historical
for that, no less factual. On the contrary, they are more historical . they are ultimately eventful.
They cannot obviously be fully ascertained except by faith. Yet this does not take them out of the
historical context. Faith only discovers a new dimension, apprehends the historical datum in its
full depth, in its full and ultimate reality. The Evangelists and the Apostles were no chroniclers. It
was not their mission to keep the full record of all that Jesus had done, day by day, year by year.
They describe his life and relate his works, so as to give us his image: an historic, and yet a di-
vine image. It is no portrait, but rather an ikon . but surely an historic ikon, an image of the In-
carnate Lord. Faith does not create a new value; it only discovers the inherent one. Faith itself is
a sort of vision, “the evidence of things not seen” (Heb. 11:1: St. John Chrysostorn explains el-
enchos precisely as opsis). The .invisible. is no less real than .visible. . rather more real. “And
yet no man can say that Jesus is the Lord, but by the Holy Ghost” (1 Cor. 12:3). It means that the
Gospel itself can be apprehended in all its fulness and depth only in spiritual experience. But
what is discovered by faith is given in very truth. The Gospels are written within the church. In
this sense they are the witness of the Church. They are records of church experience and faith.
But they are no less historical narratives and bear witness to what had really taken place, in space
and in time. If .by faith. we discover much more than what can be detected .by senses,. this
only discloses the utter inadequacy of .senses. in the knowledge of spiritual matters. For what
had really happened was the mighty deed of the Redeeming God, his ultimate intervention in the
stream of historical events. One should not divorce the .fact. and the .meaning. . both are
Revelation is preserved in the Church. Therefore, the Church is the proper and primary
interpreter of revelation. It is Protected and reinforced by written words; protected, but not ex-
hausted. Human words are no more than signs. The testimony of the Spirit revives the written
words. We do not mean now the occasional illumination of individuals by the Holy Ghost, but
primarily the permanent assistance of the Spirit given to the Church, that is “the pillar and bulwark
of the truth” (1 Tim. 3:15). The Scriptures need interpretation. Not the phrasing, but the
message is the core. And the Church is the divinely appointed and permanent witness to the very
truth and the full meaning of this message, simply because the Church belongs itself to the reve-
lation, as the Body of the Incarnate Lord. The proclamation of the Gospel, the preaching of the
Word of God, obviously belongs to the esse of the Church. The Church stands by its testimony
and witness. But this witness is not just a reference to the past, not merely a reminiscence, but
rather a continuous rediscovery of the message once delivered to the saints and ever since kept by
faith. Moreover, this message is ever re-enacted in the life of the Church. Christ himself is ever
present in the Church, as the Redeemer and head of his Body, and continues his redeeming office
in the Church. Salvation is not only announced or proclaimed in the Church. but precisely en-
acted. The sacred history is still continued. The mighty deeds of God are still being performed.
Magnalia Dei are not circumscribed by the past; they are ever present and continued, in the
Church and, through the Church, in the world. The Church is itself an integral part of the New
Testament message. The Church itself is a part of revelation . the story of .the Whole Christ.
(totus Christus: caput et corpus, in the phrase of St. Augustine) and of the Holy Ghost. The ulti-
mate end of revelation, its telos, has not yet come. And only within the experience of the Church
is the New Testament truly and fully alive. Church history is itself a story of redemption. The
truth of the book is revealed and vindicated by the growth of the Body.
We must admit at once that the Bible is a difficult book, a book sealed with seven seals.
And, as time runs on, it grows no easier. The main reason for that, however, is not that the Book
is written in an .unknown tongue. or contains some .secret words that man may not repeat.. On
the contrary, the very stumbling-block of the Bible is its utter simplicity: the mysteries of God are
framed into the daily life of average men, and the whole story may seem to be all too human. just
as the Incarnate Lord himself appeared to be an ordinary man.
The Scriptures are .inspired,. they are the Word of God. What is the inspiration can never
be properly defined . there is a mystery therein. It is a mystery of the divine-human encounter.
We cannot, fully understand in what manner .God's holy men. heard the Word of their Lord and
how they could articulate it in the words of their own dialect. Yet, even in their human transmis-
sion it was the voice of God. Therein lies the miracle and the mystery of the Bible, that it is the
Word of God in human idiom. And, in whatever the manner we understand the inspiration, one
factor must not be overlooked. The Scriptures transmit and preserve the Word of God precisely
in the idiom of man. God spoke to man indeed, but there was man to attend and to perceive. .An-
thropomorphism. is thus inherent in the very fact. There is no accommodation to human frailty.
The point is rather that the human tongue does not lose its natural features to become a vehicle of
divine revelation. If we want the divine word to ring clear, our tongue . is not to leave off being
human. What is human is not swept away by divine inspiration, it is only transfigured. The .su-
pernatural. does not destroy what is .natural": hyper physin does not mean para physin. The hu-
man idiom does not betray or belittle the splendour of revelation, it does not bind the power of
God's Word. The Word of God may be adequately and rightly expressed in human words. The
Word of God does not grow dim when it sounds in the tongue of man. For man is created in the
image and likeness of God . this .analogical. link makes communication possible. And since
God deigned to speak to man, the human word itself acquires new depth and strength and be-
comes transfigured. The divine Spirit breathes in the organism of human speech. Thus it becomes
possible for man to utter words of God, to speak of God. .Theology. becomes possible . the-
ologia, i.e. logos peri Theou. Strictly speaking, theology grows possible only through revelation.
It is the human response to God, who has spoken first. It is man's witness to God who has
spoken to him, whose word he has heard, whose words he has kept and is now recording, and re-
peating. Surely this response is never complete. Theology is ever in the process of formation. The
basis and the starting point are ever the same: the Word of God, the revelation. Theology wit-
nesses back to the revelation. It witnesses in divers manners: in creeds, in dogmas, in sacred rites
and symbols. But in a sense Scripture itself is the primary response, or rather Scripture itself is at
once both the Word of God and the human response . the Word of God mediated through the
faithful response of man. There is always some human interpretation in any Scriptural presen-
tation of the divine Word. So far it is always inescapably .situation-conditioned.. Is it ever pos-
sible for man to escape his human situation?
The Church has summarized the Scriptural message in creeds, and in many other ways and
methods. Christian faith has developed or grown into a system of beliefs and convictions. In any
such system the inner structure of the basic message is shown forth, all particular articles of faith
are presented in their mutual interdependence. Obviously, we need a system, as we need a map in
our travels. But maps refer to a real land. And any doctrinal system too must be related to the
revelation. It is of utter importance that the Church has never thought of her dogmatic system as a
kind of substitute for the Scriptures. Both are to be kept side by side: a somewhat abstract or gen-
eralized presentation of the main message in a creed or in a system, and all particular documents
referring to the concrete instances of revelation. One might say a system and the history itself .
Here a problem arises: how, and to what extent, can history be framed into a system? This is
the main problem of theological hermeneutics. What is the theological use of the Bible? How
should the divers and concrete witnesses, covering hundreds of years, be used for the construc-
tion of a single scheme? The Bible is one indeed, and yet it is, in fact, a collection of various
writings. We are not entitled to ignore that. The solution depends ultimately upon our conception
of history, upon our vision of time. The easiest solution would have been indeed if we could
simply overlook or overcome the diversity of times, the duration of the process itself. Such a
temptation faced Christianity from an early date. It was at the root of all allegorical interpreta-
tions, from Philo and Pseudo-Barnabas to the new revival of allegorism in post-Reformation
times. It was a permanent temptation of all mystics. The Bible is regarded as a book of sacred
parables, written in a peculiar symbolical language, and the task of exegesis is to detect their hid-
den meaning, to detect the eternal Word, which happens to have been uttered in divers manners
and under divers veils. The historical truth and perspective are irrelevant in this case. Historical
concreteness is no more than a pictorial frame, a poetical imagery. One is in search of eternal
meanings. The whole Bible would be then reconstructed into a book of edifying examples, of
glorious symbols, which point out the supertemporal truth. Is not the truth of God ever the same,
identical and eternal? In that mood, it is but natural to look in the Old Testament for the evi-
dences of all distinctive Christian beliefs and convictions. Two Testaments are as it were melted
into one, super-temporal, and their distinctive marks obliterated. The dangers and shortcomings
of such a hermeneutical approach are too obvious to need an extensive refutation. But the only
real remedy against this temptation would be the restoration of historical insight. The Bible is
history, not a system of belief, and should not be used as a sunima theologiae. At the same time,
it is not history of human belief, but the history of the divine revelation. The basic problem re-
mains, however, still unsolved: for what purpose do we need both system and history? By what
reason and for what purpose did the Church keep them always together? Again, the easiest an-
swer to this question is theleast satisfactory: one may suggest at once that the Scriptures are the
only authentic record of the revelation, and everything else is no more than a commentary there-
upon. And Commentary can never have the same authority as the original record. There is some
truth in this suggestion, but the true difficulty, we have to face is elsewhere. Why are not the ear-
lier stages of the revelation superseded by the later ones? Why do we still need the law and the
prophets even in the new covenant of Christ, and, to a certain extent, on the same level of author-
ity as the Gospels and the rest of the New Testament writings? I mean, as chapters of the same
unique book, as it were. For, obviously, they are included in the canon of Scripture, not as his-
torical documents only, not as chapters on the stages of history already passed away. This applies
particularly to the Old Testament. “For all the prophets and the law prophesied until John”
(Matt. 11:13). Why do we still keep both the law and the prophets, and in what sense? What can
be the right use of the Old Testament in the Church of Christ?
First of all, it needs to be an historical use. Yet, again this history is a sacred history . not a
history of human convictions and their evolution, but a history of the mighty deeds of God. And
these deeds are not disconnected irruptions of God into human life. There was an intimate unity
and cohesion. They led and guided the chosen people into God's supreme purpose, unto Christ.
Therefore, in a sense, the earlier ones were reflected, as it were, or implied in the later ones.
There was a continuity of the divine action, as there was an identity of the goal and purpose as
well. This continuity is the basis of what was called the .typological. interpretation. Patristic
terminology was at that point rather fluent. Still, there was always a clear distinction between two
methods and approaches. .Allegory. was an exegetical method indeed. An allegorist dealt pri-
marily with the texts; he searched out the hidden and ultimate meaning of Scriptural passages,
sentences and even particular words, behind and beneath .the letter.. On the contrary, .typology.
was not an exegesis of the texts themselves, but rather an interpretation of the events. It was an
historical, and not merely a philological method. It was the inner correspondence of the events
themselves in the two Testaments that had to be detected, established and brought forward. A ty-
pologist looked not for the .parallels. or similarities. And not every event of the Old Testament
has its .correspondence. in the New. Yet there are certain basic events in the old dispensation
which were the .figures. or .types. of the basic events in the new. Their .correspondence. was
of divine appointment: they were, as it were, stages of a single process of the redemptive Provid-
ence. In this manner .typology. was practiced already by St. Paul (if under the name of an .alle-
gory.: Gal. 4:24: Hatina estin allegoroumena). There is an identical purpose of God behind all
his mighty interventions, and in full it has been revealed in Christ. St. Augustine put it very
clearly: “in ipso facto, non solum in dicto, mysterium requirere debemus [We ought to seek the
mystery not just in word, but in the fact itself] (in ps. 68, sermo, 2, 6). And .the mystery. of the
Old Testament was Christ; not only in the sense that Moses or the prophets .spoke. of him, but
primarily because the whole stream of sacred history was divinely oriented towards him. And in
this sense he was the fulfilment of all prophecies. For that reason, it is only in the light of Christ
that the Old Testament can be properly understood and its .mysteries. unveiled . they were, in
fact, unveiled by the coming of him .who should come.. The true prophetic meaning of' the
prophecies is clearly seen only, as it were, in retrospect, after they have been actually fulfilled.
An unaccomplished prophecy is always dim and enigmatic (so are the prophecies of the Book of
Revelation, which point to what is still to come, .at the end.). But it does not mean that we sim-
ply put arbitrarily a new meaning into the old text: the meaning was there, though it could not yet
be seen clearly. When, for instance, we, in the Church, identify the Suffering Servant (in the
Book of Isaiah) as Christ the crucified, we do not simply It apply. an Old Testament vision to a
New 'Testament event: we detect the meaning of the vision itself, although this meaning surely
could not have been clearly identified in the times preceding Christ. But what had been first just a
vision (i.e. an .anticipation.) has becomes an historical fact.
Another point is of utter importance. For an .allegorist. the .images. he interprets are re-
flections of a pre-existing prototype, or even images of some eternal or abstract .truth.. They are
pointing to something that is outside of time. On the contrary, typology is oriented towards the
future. The .types. are anticipations, pre-figurations; their .prototype. is still to come. Typology
is thus an historical method, more than a philological one. It presupposes and implies intrinsi-
cally the reality of history, directed and guided by God. It is organically connected with the idea
of the covenant. Here the past, the present and the future are linked in a unity of divine purpose,
and the purpose was Christ. Therefore typology has emphatically a Christological meaning (the
Church is included here, as the Body and the Bride of Christ). In practice, of course, a true bal-
ance was never strictly kept. Even in patristic use typology was variously contaminated by alle-
gorical deviations or accretions, especially in the devotional and homiletic use. What is, however,
of importance is that in the catechetical tradition of the Early Church, closely related to the ad-
ministration of the sacraments, this balance was always kept. This was the tradition of the
Church, and deviations were due more to the curiosity or imagination of individual scholars. The
Church was, in full sobriety, historically minded. Along with a presentation of the doctrine (i.e. a
system) the Holy Bible was always read in the churches, with the deliberate purpose of reminding
the faithful of the historical basis and background of their faith and hope.
St. Augustine suggested that the prophets spoke of the Church even more clearly than of
Christ himself, i.e. of the Messiah (in ps. 30.2, enarratio, 2, M.L., 36, 244). In a sense, this was
only natural. For there was already a Church. Israel, the chosen people, the people of the cove-
nant, was much more a Church than a nation, like other .nations.. Ta ethne, nationes or gentes
. these kindred terms were used in the Bible (and later) precisely to describe the heathen or pa-
gans in contrast to the only nation or people that was also (and primarily) a Church of God. The
Law was given to Israel just in her capacity as a Church. It embraced the whole life of the people,
the .temporal. as well as the .spiritual,. precisely because the whole of human existence had to
be regulated by the divine precepts. And the division of life into .temporal. and .spiritual. de-
partments is, strictly speaking, precarious. In any case, Israel was a divinely constituted commu-
nity of believers, united by the Law of God, the true faith, sacred rites and hierarchy . we find
here all elements of the traditional definition of the Church. The old dispensation has been, ac-
complished in the new, the covenant has been reconstituted, and the old Israel was rejected, be-
cause of her utter unbelief: she missed the day of her visitation. The only true continuation of the
old covenant was in the Church of Christ (let us remember that both terms are of Hebrew origin:
the Church is qahal and Christ means Messiah). She is the true Israel, kata pneuma. In this sense
already St. Justin emphatically rejected the idea that the Old Testament was a link holding to-
gether the Church and the Synagogue. For him the opposite was true. All Jewish claims were to
be formally rejected: the Old Testament no longer belonged to the Jews, as they had not believed
in Christ Jesus. The Old Testament belonged now to the Church alone. Nobody could any longer
claim Moses and the prophets, if he was not with Jesus the Christ. For the Church was the New
Israel and the only heir of the promises of old. A new and important hermeneutical principle was
implied in these rigoristic utterances of the early Christian apologist. The Old Testament was to
be read and interpreted as a book of the Church. The book on the Church, we should add.
The Law was superseded by the truth, and in it has found its accomplishment, and thereby
was abrogated. It no longer had to be imposed upon the new converts. The New Israel had its
own constitution. This V art of the Old Testament was antiquated. It proved to be basically
.situation-conditioned. . not so much in the sense of a general historical relativity as in a
deeper providential sense. The new redemptive situation had been created or inaugurated by the
Lord: a new situation in the sacred perspective of salvation. Everything that belonged essentially
to the previous stage or phase had now lost its meaning, or rather kept its meaning as a prefigura-
tion only. Even the Decalogue perhaps was not exempt from this rule and was overruled by the
.new commandment.. The Old Testament is now to be used solely in its relation to the Church.
Under the old dispensation the Church was limited to one nation. In the new all national dis-
criminations are emphatically abrogated: there is no more distinction between a Jew and a Greek
. all are indiscriminately in the same Christ. In other words, one has no right to isolate certain
elements of the old dispensation, apart from their immediate relation to the life of the Church,
and set them as a Scriptural pattern for the temporal life of the nations. The old Israel was a pro-
visional Church, but she was not a pattern nation. One may put it this way. Obviously, we can
learn a lot from the Bible on social justice . this was a part of the message of the Kingdom to
come. We can learn a lot about a particular political, social and economic organization of the
Jews through the ages. All that may possibly be of great help in our sociological discussions. And
yet it is hardly permissible to detect in the Bible (viz. in the Old Testament) any permanent or
ideal pattern of political or economic settlement for the present or for any other historical realm
at all. We may learn quite a lot from Hebrew history. This will, however, be only a historical les-
son, not a theological one. Biblical fundamentalism is no better in sociology than anywhere else.
The Bible is no authority on social science, as it is no authority on astronomy. The only socio-
logical lesson that can be extracted from the Bible is precisely the fact of the Church, the Body of
Christ. But no reference to the Bible in .temporal. affairs can be regarded as a .Scriptural evi-
dence.. There are .Scriptural evidences. only in theology. It does not mean that no guidance
whatever can be found or even sought there in the Bible. In any case, such a search will not be a
.theological use. of the Bible. And perhaps the lessons of the old Hebrew history are on the same
level as any other lessons of the past. We have to distinguish more carefully between what was
permanent and what was but provisional (or .situation-conditioned.) in the old covenant (and
first of all we have to overcome its national limitations). Otherwise we would be in danger of
overlooking what was new in the new covenant. In the New Testament itself we have to make a
clear distinction between its historical and prophetical aspects too. The true theme of the whole
Bible is Cbrist and his Church, not nations or societies, nor the sky and the earth. The old Israel
was the .type. of the new, i.e. of the Church Universal, not of any particular or occasional na-
tion. The national frame of the provisional Church has been done away by the universality of sal-
vation. There is, after Christ, but one .nation,. the Christian nation, genus Christianum . in the
ancient phrase, tertium genas . i.e. precisely the Church, the only people of God, and no other
national description can claim any further Scriptural warrant: national differences belong to the
order of nature and are irrelevant in the order of grace.
The Bible is complete. But the sacred history is not yet completed. The Biblical canon itself
includes a prophetical Book of Revelation. There is the Kingdom to come, the ultimate consum-
mation, and therefore there are prophecies in the New Testament as well. The whole being of the
Church is in a sense prophetical. Yet, the future has a different meaning post Christum natum.
The tension between present and future has in the Church of Christ another sense and character
than it had under the old dispensation. For Christ is no more in the future only, but also in the
past, and therefore in the present also. This eschatological perspective is of basic importance for
the right understanding of the Scriptures. All hermeneutical .principles. and .rules. should be
re-thought and re-examined in this eschatological perspective. There are two major dangers to be
avoided. On the one hand, no strict analogy can be established between the two Testaments, their
.covenantal situations. being profoundly different: they are related as .the figure. and .the
truth.. It was a traditional idea of patristic exegesis that the Word of God was revealing himself
continuously, and in divers manners, throughout the whole of the Old Testament. Yet all these
theophanies of old should never be put on the same level or in the same dimension as the incar-
nation of the Word, lest the crucial event of redemption is dissolved into an allegorical shadow.
A .type. is no more than a .shadow. or image. In the New Testament we have the very fact. The
New Testament therefore is more than a mere .figure. of the Kingdom to come. It is essentially
the realm of accomplishment. On the other hand, it is premature to speak of a .realized eschatol-
ogy,. simply because the very eschaton is not yet realized: sacred history has not yet been closed.
One may prefer the phrase: .the inaugurated eschatology.. It renders accurately the Biblical di-
agnosis . the crucial point of the revelation is already in the past. .The ultimate. (or .the new.)
had already entered history, although the final stage is not yet attained. We are no more in the
world of signs only, but already in the world of reality, yet under the sign of the Cross. The
Kingdom has been already inaugurated, but not yet fulfilled. The fixed canon of Scripture itself
symbolizes an accomplishment. The Bible is closed just because the Word of God has been in-
carnate. Our ultimate term of reference is now not a book, but a living person. Yet the Bible still
holds its authority . not only as a record of the past, but also as a prophetical book, full of hints,
pointing to the future, to the very end.
The sacred history of redemption is still going on. It is now the history of the Church that is
the Body of Christ. The Spirit-Comforter is already abiding in the Church. No complete system
of Christian faith is yet possible, for the Church is still on her pilgrimage. And the Bible is kept
by the Church as a book of history to remind believers of the dynamic nature of the divine revela-
tion, .at sundry times and in divers manners..