Source: https://www.biblearchaeology.org/post/2010/09/16/Inspiration-The-Oracles-of-God.aspx
Timestamp: 2019-04-21 00:43:55+00:00

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This article was first published in the Winter 2010 issue of Bible and Spade.
Paul considered the OT Scriptures to be not impressions various writers had about God, nor simply an account quoting God. Rather, the Scriptures were the oracles1 of God—they were His speech. God committed to the Jews His oracles, and they thus carried in the Scriptures His original and continuing speech, so that the immediate presence of God accompanied Holy Writ. Thus, Stephen declared that Moses received the living oracles to give to us (Acts 7:38), and the New Testament writers wrote in the present tense, “The Scripture speaks.”2 The presence of God in His Word is the essence of scriptural inspiration.
A scoffing attitude toward Scripture must not cloud our reason. Those who reject the idea of inspiration must either reject God, or reject the idea that God communicates with man. If we are not willing to reject God or His communication, the only issue left is whether the Bible is indeed His inspired Word, a question that should be resolved by testing the Word, rather than by testing the writers who must be—as we—subject to His miracles. The testing of the Word is not the province of this article, though it is of almost every other article in Bible and Spade.
The infant Samuel received the word of the LORD when he was near the oracle, the Holy of Holies (Reynolds 1776).
The oracle is an OT idea also. There, designating the Holy of Holies chamber as the oracle (debir, Hebrew, a cognate of dabar, Hebrew, “word” and of diber, Hebrew, “to speak”), references both the written word of God on the Sinai stones (resident in the ark of the covenant in the Holy of Holies) and the continuing revelation that would come there to Moses (Ex 30:6). It likewise applies to the high priest, to Samuel the prophet (1 Sm 3:2–4), and to Zacharias the priest by the altar of incense just outside the Holy of Holies (Lk 1). The splitting of the Temple veil at the time of Christ’s sacrifice (Mt 27:51) signified not only our free access to communion with God and to His salvific mercy, but also the breaking forth of God’s oracular principle, so that shortly after the splitting of the veil, the writing of the NT began. God was ready to breathe new Scripture.
“Every Scripture is God-breathed” (2 Tm 3:16).
Breath is the sign and substance of animal life (i.e., life that animates, vitality powered by the spirit).3 As God breathed into Adam and he became a living soul (Gn 2:7), as Jesus breathed on the disciples for them to receive the Holy Ghost (Jn 20:22), so the LORD breathed upon holy men, and they wrote the Holy Scripture (2 Pt 1:21). The breath of God, His Spirit, was in those writers and continues in His Holy Word today, so that inspiration imparted a quality to Scripture that has acquired no tarnish over the millennia separating Yahweh’s original expression and our modern reading.
“For not by the will of man was ever borne prophecy, but, by the Spirit Holy borne along, men—holy of God!—spoke” (2 Pt 1:21).
It was holy men of God who were inspired to write the Scriptures. Such inspiration distinguishes Scripture from the prophecies, for example, of Saul, who was spiritually overcome, but was not a holy man (1 Sm 19:19–24). Before and after being overcome, Saul walked in strident wickedness. The writers of Scripture were wholly other. They were not respected or popular spokesmen for their Hebrew and early Christian cultures (or when they were, that was not the point). They were not philosophers whose worldly sophistication qualified them as general-audience writers. They were members of the eternal kingdom, God-empowered in their kingdom work, imbued with holiness from on high.
Inspiration, then, involves not only the speech of the Spirit, but His sanctifying presence, His hallowing redemption of sinful man, His cleansing of his heart, His purification of his tongue. The inspiriting is not a mere mechanical transfer, but an infusion of character. The Holy Ghost comes upon the humble writer, the power of the Highest overshadows him, and he brings forth the word.
Quoters of God? They were far more. Eve quoted God, but not under inspiration, as she (fumbling?) added to His word (“neither shall ye touch it,” Gn 3:3; cf. 2:17). The consequence of that sin was destruction. The writers of Scripture—humble, lowly!—yet partook of the mind of God. They did quote, but they also entered into the mysteries (Eph 3:3f, Col 1:25f), and quested after those mysteries that lay beyond them in the words they wrote (Rom 16:25f; Eph 3:3–5; 1 Pt 1:10–12).
Paul was difficult to understand (2 Pt 3:16). Isaiah was very bold (Rom 10:20). The writers had their individualities, yet all were kept by the one Spirit absolutely to the truth and to the express desire of God for each book, each sentence, each letter, each pen stroke. Christ, the Author, in the Sermon on the Mount (Mt 5:17f), would not have promised to fulfill Scripture, would not have declared the inviolability of Scripture to the point of each jot and tittle, had the Lawgiver and the prophets written of their own accord; if that were so, God would be subject to man. Rather, God elevated His chosen men to be the inscripturators of His truth. Christ fulfilled the Scripture carried from God to man: He recognized the Word as His own.
Exercisers of spiritual gifts? Yes, but much more. As the first-century Christians, when we exercise spiritual gifts, error is possible (1 Cor 14:9, 27–33). The writers of Scripture were borne along errorlessly, as if writing with the very finger of God.
“And He gave unto Moses, at His completion of speaking with him on Mount Sinai, two tables of testimony—tables of stone—graven with the finger of God” (2 Pt 1:21).
Dictation—John’s letter to the Seven Churches, “To the angel of the church in Ephesus write...” (Rv 2:1).
Impartation—Paul’s account of the Last Supper, “For I received from the Lord what also I entrusted to you” (1 Cor 11:23); Ezekiel’s vision by Chebar, “The heavens were opened and I saw the visions of God” (Ez 1:1). The LORD would impart truth to the writers also through other Scripture writers (Mk 15:28), through extrabiblical, secular and even pagan writers (Acts 17:28; Jude 14f, cf. Enoch 1973: chap. 2), and through other living people (Gal 1:18).
Impression—Paul’s word concerning marriage, “But to the remaining speak I, not the Lord” (1 Cor 7:12). Even when Scripture is manifestly from the pen of man, as those psalms addressed from man to the LORD, it is the Word of God (Ps 104:1–4; cf. Heb 1:7). Indeed, Paul wrote of his very distinctive expression,“But I would have you know, brothers, concerning the gospel that was preached by me, that it is not according to man” (Gal 1:11). The enigma of God’s Word expressed in men’s words is a small taste of the mystery of predestination and free will, but the firmness of that Word is as if all had been written on tables of stone. “For if the word spoken through angels was firm...how shall we escape when we disregard so great a salvation, which, taking beginning to be spoken through the Lord, by His hearers was confirmed unto us?” (Heb 2:2f). The writer of Hebrews took the testimony of the hearers of the Lord to be firm, to the point of dividing the heirs of salvation from the heirs of damnation. Such was the solidity of the NT Scriptures.
“Every word of God is pure” (Prv 30:5) wrote Agur when the OT was yet unfinished; Peter wrote of Paul’s letters as Scripture (2 Pt 3:15f) when the NT was yet unfinished, when the inspiring was yet in process, when the canon was incomplete.
“The Scripture cannot be dissolved” (Jn 10:35).
This impossible dissolution, expressed by the Greek word luō (λύω), can indicate that the integrity of the Scripture cannot be assailed—that no part can fall. No part of what can fall? The people whom Jesus addressed in John 10 knew the Scripture to be the OT canon, the books that long had been recognized as the Word of God, and as distinct from all other literature. There must be a canon, or the term “Scripture” has no definite meaning. Christ affirmed the inspiration of the canonizers when he used the word “Scripture” and when He referred to two sections5 into which the canonizers had organized that Scripture—the Law and the Prophets (Mt 5:17, 7:12, 11:13, 22:40; Lk 16:31; 24:44); quoted from them and from the third section, Holy Writings (Mt 24:15, cf. Dn 9:27, 11:31, 12:11; Mt 22:43–45, cf. Ps 110:1; Mk 12:10f, cf. Ps. 118:22f); and called a few canonical books by name (Mt 13:14, 24:15; Lk 20:42; perhaps Mt 12:39).
Scripture must be recognizable if the Church is to receive it.
As the NT writers were about their work, Peter referred to the writing as Scripture (2 Pt 3:16), so a NT canon should be expected, directed still by that same infallibly inspiring Holy Spirit. As the book of Revelation was delivered from the Father to the Son to an angel to a man to a Church which was to receive a sure blessing from the reading and hearing of the book (Rv 1:1–4), so all the books of the NT, as with the OT before it, are to be embraced as the Word of God, confirmed by canonization.
The Canon has been achieved through the Church, the Body of Christ, with its many members coordinated by one inspiring Spirit.
If we reject inspiration, we reject that one inspiring Spirit, amputate ourselves from the one eternal Body of Christ, and abjure our adoption by the Father, Who sent the Son, Who sent the Spirit, Who imparted the Holy Word.
The Revelation (some of whose scenes are here depicted) was delivered from Father to Son to angel to man to Church (Rv 1:1–4; Alberegno 1360).
1 “Among christians, oracles, in the plural, denotes the communications, revelations or messages delivered by God to prophets…We say, the oracles of God, divine oracles, meaning the Scriptures” (Webster 1821). The Greek NT word sometimes translated as oracle is logion (λόγιον), a diminutive of logos (λόγος), word. Logion means a small word, a brief utterance, presumably because oracles among the Greeks were generally brief (Thayer 1887).
2 Jn 19:37; Rom 4:3, 9:17, 10:11, 11:2; Gal 4:30; 1 Tm 5:18; Jas 4:5.
3 Indeed, spirit and breath are represented by the one word in Hebrew—ruah—and by the one word in Greek—pneuma, πνεuμα.
4 ῥῆμα is used in such verses as Mt 4:4; Lk 1:38, 2:29, 3:2, 24:8; Jn 3:34, 6:63, 8:47, 12:47, 15:7, 17:8; Acts 5:20; Rom 10:8; 2 Cor 12:4; Heb 1:3, 11:3; 1 Pt 1:25; 2 Pt 3:2; and Jude 1:17.
5 Christ seems to have designated all three sections of the Tanach, or Hebrew Bible, in Luke 24:44, where He mentions the law of Moses, the prophets and the psalms. Psalms, as its chief book, may have referred to all of the Holy Writings. Elsewhere, Christ uses the term book of Psalms (Lk 20:42).
1360-90 Polyptych of the Apocalypse. Tempera on panel. Gallerie dell’Accademia, Venice. Web Gallery of Art. 1996-2006. http://www.wga.hu/index1.html (accessed November 30, 2009).
1640-1650 St. John the Evangelist. Bronze. Chiesa di SS. Vittore e Carlo, Genoa. Web Gallery of Art. 1996-2006. http://www.wga.hu/index1.html (accessed November 26, 2009).
1602 The Inspiration of Saint Matthew. Oil on canvas. Contarelli Chapel, San Luigi dei Francesi, Rome. Web Gallery of Art. 1996-2006. http://www.wga.hu/index1.html (accessed November 30, 2009).
1526 The Four Holy Men (John, Peter, Mark, Paul). Oil on panel. Alte Pinakothek, Munich. Web Gallery of Art. 1996-2006. http://www.wga.hu/index1.html (accessed November 30, 2009).
1973 Book of Enoch the Prophet (Ethiopian Enoch). Trans. Richard Laurence, from Ethiopic. Minneapolis: Wizards. 2009. The Reluctant Messenger. www.reluctant-messenger.com/1enoch01-60.htm (accessed November 26, 2009).
1503–04 St. Paul. Marble. Duomo, Siena. Web Gallery of Art. 1996-2006. http://www.wga.hu/index1.html (accessed November 27, 2009).
1515 Moses. Marble. San Pietro in Vincoli, Rome. Web Gallery of Art. 1996-2006. http://www.wga.hu/index1.html (accessed November 27, 2009).
1518 The Vision of Ezekiel. Oil on wood. Galleria Palatina (Palazzo Pitti), Florence. Web Gallery of Art. 1996-2006. http://www.wga.hu/index1.html (accessed November 26, 2009).
1776 The Infant Samuel. Oil on canvas. Musée Fabre, Montpellier. Web Gallery of Art. 1996-2006. http://www.wga.hu/index1.html (accessed November 30, 2009).
1887 Greek-English Lexicon of the New Testament. New York: Harper. 2003. e-sword. Rick Meyers. http://www.e-sword.net (accessed December 20).
c. 1545 The Descent of the Holy Ghost. Oil on canvas. Santa Maria della Salute, Venice. Web Gallery of Art. 1996-2006. http://www.wga.hu/index1.html (accessed November 30, 2009).
1828 American Dictionary of the English Language. New York: S. Converse. 1989. 6th facsimile ed. San Francisco: Foundation for American Christian Education.
Erich D. Schwartz is a high school humanities teacher at Dayspring Christian Academy, Lancaster PA, where his courses include New Testament Greek, Biblical Hermeneutics and Worldviews. He has a BA in Ancient Languages and Music Composition from Wheaton College, IL. He serves as an elder at New Hope Bible Fellowship in Lancaster PA.
Reading this article felt like an act of worship. It helped me understand the process of how we received the scripture in a profound way. This article was edifying to my soul.

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