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	<title>Bible BackgroundEpistemology and historical arguments—a few thoughts &#8211; Bible Background</title>
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	<description>Research and commentary by Dr. Craig Keener</description>
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		<title>Epistemology and historical arguments—a few thoughts</title>
		<link>https://craigkeener.org/epistemology-and-historical-arguments-a-few-thoughts/</link>
		<comments>https://craigkeener.org/epistemology-and-historical-arguments-a-few-thoughts/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 23 Sep 2019 03:28:22 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Craig Keener</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Historical reliability questions]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Holy Spirit]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[epistemology]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[historical evidence]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[history and faith]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.craigkeener.com/?p=4507</guid>

				<description><![CDATA[No one believes only what they can prove historically. For example, most of us can remember experiences from years ago that we surely believe happened but that we cannot “prove” to others’ satisfaction without finding corroborating witnesses or documentary evidence. Unless, of course, our very testimony counts as evidence—which, if we are reasonably reliable persons, [&#8230;]]]></description>
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<p>No one believes only what they can prove historically. For
example, most of us can remember experiences from years ago that we surely
believe happened but that we cannot “prove” to others’ satisfaction without
finding corroborating witnesses or documentary evidence. Unless, of course, our
very testimony counts as evidence—which, if we are reasonably reliable persons,
it normally should, except where counterevidence argues otherwise.</p>



<p>In many disciplines, people of different convictions work
together. A Christian herpetologist who attributes life to divine design on any
level has a markedly different perspective on life than does an atheist herpetologist.
Yet when it comes to details of reptile anatomy, they share mostly common
ground.</p>



<p>The humanities tend to be more complicated on a number of
levels, but there are some parallels. For example, an atheist and a Christian have
vastly different personal approaches to the Bible, but both may use historical
methods. Their beliefs will inevitably color the ways they approach the
evidence, and even what data they admit as evidence, but there will still be a
shared body of common ground or at least common data to work from. </p>



<p>Simply because they work from some common ground, however,
does not mean that neither of them has beliefs outside that common ground. Valuable
as experimentation is in the scientific sphere, virtually no one actually <em>lives</em>
like that is the only method of ascertaining truth personally (taking no one
else’s word for anything without testing it empirically). (Admittedly, as a toddler
I likely did want to test electrical outlets personally regardless of parental
warnings to the contrary.) </p>



<p>Still less does anyone live like only what is verifiable by
historical means actually happened. When those within the guild of New
Testament scholarship speak of historical probabilities, they speak in terms of
what is probable by normal historiographic criteria. But since probabilities
are not invariably correct, and because estimates of probabilities are subject
to the limited information and criteria considered, it is <em>also </em>probable
that they will sometimes be mistaken. Many who use these methods have
sufficient epistemic humility to recognize that these methods give us only a
basic picture. </p>



<p>On the basis of historiographic methods, scholars often come
to very diverse conclusions. This diversity reflects not only the methods but
the data that we take into consideration. As in computer language: garbage in,
garbage out. I believe that a wider range of data, which I have tried to bring
to bear in my recent <em>Christobiography</em> and some other works, suggests
that on average most passages in, say, Mark’s Gospel, reflect reliable
information about events. Some scholars will disagree, but hopefully they will
at least expand their perspective to include the new data I seek to bring to
bear on the subject.</p>



<p>I believe that historiography can give us general estimates,
but it cannot tell us everything that ever happened. This does not mean that I <em>believe</em>
that only what I can demonstrate historically happened. This just means that
this is all that I have evidence available to demonstrate. Sometimes those
unaccustomed to the way scholars in a discipline talk to one another misunderstand
the point.</p>



<p>There is also the question of epistemology. None of us do
live like only what we can prove historically happened. In the case of the
Gospels, I can argue historically that they tell us a lot about Jesus. I cannot
provide historical evidence for every point. But I <em>personally</em> believe
that they offer more than enough information about Jesus to invite us to place
our trust in him—and therefore accept his verdict on the Scriptures already
accepted among his people, and the authorization of his commissioned agents
whose message appears in the New Testament. </p>



<p>I also <em>personally</em> believe, as a Christian, that the
Spirit attests Scripture. (That was Calvin’s view; it’s also my experience as a
charismatic.) To someone who does not experience the Spirit, that sounds
utterly subjective; but that is because in that sphere Christians and their
detractors have different epistemologies. </p>



<p>Thus I can make a limited historical argument in a scholarly
setting that permits only historical arguments, but personally believe more
because of what I regard as a complementary epistemology. Skeptics are apt to
jump on that observation, but I distinguish between my historical arguments,
and consequently what I expect my hearers to accept on the basis of such
arguments, from my personal beliefs and experience. I am happy to share the
latter, but it is normally persuasive only to those who share my epistemological
convictions in those areas.</p>



<p>Not making this distinction can produce problems. For example,
someone may assume that what they cannot demonstrate, based on historical
grounds <em>apart from the testimony of the text</em>, did not happen. But not
demonstrating that something happened is <em>not the same</em> as demonstrating
that it did not happen. Likewise, people do not always understand what scholars
working within a discipline mean by their language. When a scholar offers a
narrower historical argument that suggests that “X probably happened, but evidence
for Y is tenuous,” this does not necessarily mean that they do not believe that
X and Y happened. It simply means that they do not have much evidence for Y. </p>



<p>The genre of certain kinds of academic work simply takes for
granted that scholars are making judgments based on the historical data
available. In this genre of writing, one does not intrude with other epistemological
approaches such as, “The Holy Spirit tells me this is true!” Usually writers do
not even stop to explain that the basis of their considerations suffers from methodological
limitations. For example, the testimony in front of us is <em>itself</em> evidence,
if it proves generally consistent with the data where we can test it.</p>



<p>If anyone has followed my attempt to make the distinctions
thus far, my points are: the genre of academic works related to historiography
limits arguments to historiographic grounds. If one has other epistemic reasons
to believe something happened (e.g., personal experience of its happening), one
has reason to believe more than one has argued for in the academic work. My own
experience of the Spirit and what I see as divine activity makes this seem a no-brainer
for me. But that does not make it ethical for me to claim <em>historical</em>
evidence where I lack that. </p>



<p>Some skeptics complain that my experience of the Spirit and
Christian commitments will bias me; of course, I would argue that skeptical
approaches can bias skeptics. When we discuss together, we have to do so based
on the data in front of us. It is not ethical to <em>make up</em> historical
data. At the same time, some other people complain that I should, but do not, defend
every detail of Scripture in my academic works. Historical method does not <em>allow</em>
us to defend (or dispute) every detail. But I am a Jesus-follower, who does
accept the Scripture he accepted and the message and agents that he
commissioned. I do trust the Spirit, the Spirit that I experience. So I do believe
far more than what I defend historically (and seek to defend historically less
than I personally believe). It is a question of appropriate genre and the
epistemologies accepted in those genres. </p>
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