Wednesday, August 14, 2019

Particular Quotes from Presuppositional Apologetics: Stated and Defended by Greg Bahnsen with Some Analysis

I purchased Presuppositional Apologetics: Stated and Defended by the late Greg Bahnsen for my kindle, and have been reading it in bed at night a little at a time.  I haven't read anything yet with which I disagree.  However, he writes things in the book I haven't read anywhere else.  Below I want to include just a few quotes with analytical comments.  These are not in order, except in the order I found them when I looked back to record them in this post.  Bahnsen wrote:
Thinking to maintain neutrality with respect to Scripture, any natural theology that reasons autonomously from logical an/or empirical grounds to God results in an exclusion of revelational necessity and authority, endorsing some other imperious philosophy.  Knowledge of God must be rooted in his own self-disclosure.  Because the clear revelation of God in nature's and man's constitution is suppressed in unrighteousness, it is impossible for theology or apologetics to base their efforts in a rebellious understanding of the world of history, independently working up to a verification of God's written revelation.  Faith must necessarily start with the clear, authoritative, self-attesting, special revelation of God in Scripture coordinated with the Holy Spirit's inner testimony to the regenerated heart. 
Historically, when David Hume and Immanuel Kant exposed the invalidity of the theistic proofs, apologists generally balked at returning to revelation as the basis for their certainty of God's existence.  They elected, rather, to maintain status in the blinded eyes of the "worldly wise" by attempting to prove Christianity's credibility by means of arguments that hopefully pointed toward the probability of God's existence and Scripture's truth.  They settled for a mere presumption (plus pragmatic assurance) in favor of a few salvaged items (i.e., "fundamentals") from the Christian system.
Read both paragraphs (the second a half of a paragraph in the book), but especially consider the last line of the second paragraph above.  Bahnsen says that using the "worldly wise" to prove Christianity through means other than scripture, settle for a few salvaged items, "fundamentals," from the Christian system.  I've written on this a lot.  The reduction of doctrine to fundamentals or essentials proceeds from a wrong apologetic.  He calls them "salvaged items."  It is as though Christians are sifting through the rubble, when God didn't lose anything.

Here's another:
Resting upon the authority of the living God rather than that of independent human reasoning, the apologist must presuppose the truth of Scripture and lay siege to all apostate presuppositions.   This must be his method because the Word of God in the Bible has a unique epistemological status for the Christian:  it requires no corroboration and carries its own evidence inherently or self-attestingly.
Whatever Bahnsen may have said about his view of the preservation of scripture, this quote undoes the reliance on textual criticism to come to a point.  The teaching of preservation of scripture "requires no corroboration and carries its own evidence inherently or self-attestingly."  This should and will result in the textus receptus.

1 comment:

Kent Brandenburg said...

Just as an aside, because of the first quote by Bahnsen, I don't think that Hume and Kant don't undo theistic evidential arguments, especially as they stand today. I think theistic arguments devastate today atheistic ones. Absolutely devastate them. What I know historically was that early pushes against theism were met very often by a run from scripture. Bahnsen wasn't looking at the whole chess board on this one.