Reverend Gregory Crofford – “Jesus and the argument from silence”
The headline caught my eye: "Here's what Jesus had to say
about (topic x)." Underneath was an
open book, with blank pages.
Clever, right? But is it a valid argument?
Let's take the issue of cutting down trees. I might say:
Here's what Jesus said about deforestation: " "
If felling trees and planting nothing in their place were wrong,
once might assume that the Son of God would have uttered words against such an
evil practice. In fact, we search Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John in vain for a
single word from Jesus on the subject. Accordingly, are we justified in clear-cutting
the Amazon forest?
Another "hot-button" topic is abortion. Did Jesus have
anything precise to say about it? No. Some might ask: "If it were so
wrong, wouldn't Jesus have spoken against it?"
The argument from silence makes conclusions based not on what
Jesus said, but on what he didn't say. But is it right to isolate Jesus'
teachings from the larger message of God's revelation as contained in the 66
books of the Old and New Testaments? The Lord responded to the pressing issues
of his day, not all the pressing issues of our day. Still, we can find principles about caring for the
earth in the same Old Testament that Jesus recognized as God's revelation.
Psalm 104 praises the Creator and the beauty and splendor of creation. To mar
that creation through deforestation is like taking a masterpiece by Rembrandt
and slicing the canvas with scissors. In the same way, human beings - born and
unborn - are God's masterpiece. David affirms that we are "fearfully and
wonderfully made" (Psalm 139:14, NIV). Deforestation and abortion alike
are sins against both creation and Creator.
Apart from the Old Testament kings and prophets - the giants on
whose shoulders Jesus stood - the Apostle Paul and other New Testament writers fill
in some of the gaps. A good example is slavery. Jesus is mute about it, yet
Paul radically affirmed:
"There is neither Jew nor Gentile, neither slave nor free,
nor is there male and female, for you are all one in Christ Jesus."(Galatians
3:28, NIV)
So, if one was intent on only accepting Jesus' words (or lack
thereof) as our guide, one could say:
Here's what Jesus had to say about slavery: " ".
Yet we don't accept that argument, because we understand that
God's view of the issue must be more broadly considered, taking into account
not just the words of Christ in the Gospels, but all of the Bible. And when we
do that, we see that God had lots to say about it. Yes, we can argue over the
meaning of verses addressing slavery - and slave owners and abolitionists in
19th century America did so in spades! -
but at least we'd be debating the significance of words and not the
verbal vacuum of the argumentum ex silencio.
The next time someone references Jesus' silence on an issue, don't
let it be the close of the discussion. Instead, let it spur you to dig deeper
in the broader mine of Scripture, to unearth closely related principles from
God that can guide us. The Church and our world deserve nothing less.
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