Actually,
that's not in the Bible – by John Blake, CNN
(CNN) – NFL legend Mike Ditka was giving a news
conference one day after being fired as the coach of the Chicago Bears when he
decided to quote the Bible.
“Scripture tells you that all things shall
pass,” a choked-up Ditka said after leading his team to only five wins during
the previous season. “This, too, shall pass.”
Ditka fumbled his biblical citation, though. The
phrase “This, too, shall pass” doesn’t appear in the Bible. Ditka was quoting a
phantom scripture that sounds like it belongs in the Bible, but look closer and
it’s not there.
Ditka’s biblical blunder is as common as
preachers delivering long-winded public prayers. The Bible may be the most
revered book in America, but it’s also one of the most misquoted. Politicians,
motivational speakers, coaches - all types of people - quote passages that
actually have no place in the Bible, religious scholars say.
These phantom passages include:
“God helps those who help themselves.”
“Spare the rod, spoil the child.”
And there is this often-cited paraphrase: Satan
tempted Eve to eat the forbidden apple in the Garden of Eden.
None of those passages appear in the Bible, and
one is actually anti-biblical, scholars say.
But people rarely challenge them because
biblical ignorance is so pervasive that it even reaches groups of people who
should know better, says Steve Bouma-Prediger, a religion professor at Hope
College in Holland, Michigan.
“In my college religion classes, I sometimes
quote 2 Hesitations 4:3 (‘there are no internal combustion engines in
heaven’),” Bouma-Prediger says. “I wait to see if anyone realizes that there is
no such book in the Bible and therefore no such verse.
“Only a few catch on.”
Few catch on because they don’t want to - people
prefer knowing biblical passages that reinforce their pre-existing beliefs, a
Bible professor says.
“Most people who profess a deep love of the
Bible have never actually read the book,” says Rabbi Rami Shapiro, who once had
to persuade a student in his Bible class at Middle Tennessee State University
that the saying “this dog won’t hunt” doesn’t appear in the Book of Proverbs.
“They have memorized parts of texts that they
can string together to prove the biblical basis for whatever it is they believe
in,” he says, “but they ignore the vast majority of the text."
Phantom biblical passages work in mysterious
ways. Ignorance isn’t the only cause for phantom Bible verses. Confusion is
another.
Some of the most popular faux verses are pithy
paraphrases of biblical concepts or bits of folk wisdom.
Consider these two:
“God works in mysterious ways.”
“Cleanliness is next to Godliness.”
Both sound as if they are taken from the Bible,
but they’re not. The first is a paraphrase of a 19th century hymn by the
English poet William Cowper (“God moves in a mysterious way, His wonders to
perform).
The “cleanliness” passage was coined by John
Wesley, the 18th century evangelist who founded Methodism, says Thomas Kidd, a
history professor at Baylor University in Texas.
“No matter if John Wesley or someone else came
up with a wise saying - if it sounds proverbish, people figure it must come
from the Bible,” Kidd says.
Our fondness for the short and tweet-worthy may
also explain our fondness for phantom biblical phrases. The pseudo-verses
function like theological tweets: They’re pithy summarizations of biblical
concepts.
“Spare the rod, spoil the child” falls into that
category. It’s a popular verse - and painful for many kids. Could some
enterprising kid avoid the rod by pointing out to his mother that it's not in
the Bible?
It’s doubtful. Her possible retort: The popular
saying is a distillation of Proverbs 13:24: “The one who withholds [or spares]
the rod is one who hates his son.”
Another saying that sounds Bible-worthy: “Pride
goes before a fall.” But its approximation, Proverbs 16:18, is actually
written: “Pride goeth before destruction and a haughty spirit before a fall.”
There are some phantom biblical verses for which
no excuse can be offered. The speaker goofed.
That’s what Bruce Wells, a theology professor,
thinks happened to Ditka, the former NFL coach, when he strayed from the
gridiron to biblical commentary during his 1993 press conference in Chicago.
Wells watched Ditka’s biblical blunder on local
television when he lived in Chicago. After Ditka cited the mysterious passage,
reporters scrambled unsuccessfully the next day to find the biblical source.
They should have consulted Wells, who is now
director of the ancient studies program at Saint Joseph’s University in
Pennsylvania. Wells says Ditka’s error probably came from a peculiar feature of
the King James Bible.
“My hunch on the Ditka quote is that it comes
from a quirk of the King James translation,” Wells says. “Ancient Hebrew had a
particular way of saying things like, ‘and the next thing that happened was…’
The King James translators of the Old Testament consistently rendered this as
‘and it came to pass.’ ’’
When phantom Bible passages turn dangerous
People may get verses wrong, but they also
mangle plenty of well-known biblical stories as well.
Two examples: The scripture never says a whale
swallowed Jonah, the Old Testament prophet, nor did any New Testament passages
say that three wise men visited baby Jesus, scholars say.
Those details may seem minor, but scholars say
one popular phantom Bible story stands above the rest: The Genesis story about
the fall of humanity.
Most people know the popular version - Satan in
the guise of a serpent tempts Eve to pick the forbidden apple from the Tree of
Life. It’s been downhill ever since.
But the story in the book of Genesis never
places Satan in the Garden of Eden.
“Genesis mentions nothing but a serpent,” says
Kevin Dunn, chair of the department of religion at Tufts University in
Massachusetts.
“Not only does the text not mention Satan, the
very idea of Satan as a devilish tempter postdates the composition of the
Garden of Eden story by at least 500 years,” Dunn says.
Getting biblical scriptures and stories wrong
may not seem significant, but it can become dangerous, one scholar says.
Most people have heard this one: “God helps
those that help themselves.” It’s another phantom scripture that appears
nowhere in the Bible, but many people think it does. It's actually attributed
to Benjamin Franklin, one of the nation's founding fathers.
The passage is popular in part because it is a
reflection of cherished American values: individual liberty and self-reliance,
says Sidnie White Crawford, a religious studies scholar at the University of
Nebraska.
Yet that passage contradicts the biblical
definition of goodness: defining one’s worth by what one does for others, like
the poor and the outcast, Crawford says.
Crawford cites a scripture from Leviticus that
tells people that when they harvest the land, they should leave some “for the
poor and the alien” (Leviticus 19:9-10), and another passage from Deuteronomy
that declares that people should not be “tight-fisted toward your needy
neighbor.”
“We often infect the Bible with our own values
and morals, not asking what the Bible’s values and morals really are,” Crawford
says.
Where do these phantom passages come from?
It’s easy to blame the spread of phantom
biblical passages on pervasive biblical illiteracy. But the causes are varied
and go back centuries.
Some of the guilty parties are anonymous, lost
to history. They are artists and storytellers who over the years embellished
biblical stories and passages with their own twists.
If, say, you were an anonymous artist painting
the Garden of Eden during the Renaissance, why not portray the serpent as the
devil to give some punch to your creation? And if you’re a preacher telling a
story about Jonah, doesn’t it just sound better to say that Jonah was swallowed
by a whale, not a “great fish”?
Others blame the spread of phantom Bible
passages on King James, or more specifically the declining popularity of the
King James translation of the Bible.
That translation, which marks 400 years of
existence this year, had a near monopoly on the Bible market as recently as 50 years
ago, says Douglas Jacobsen, a professor of church history and theology at
Messiah College in Pennsylvania.
“If you quoted the Bible and got it wrong then,
people were more likely to notice because there was only one text,” he says.
“Today, so many different translations are used that almost no one can tell for
sure if something supposedly from the Bible is being quoted accurately or not.”
Others blame the spread of phantom biblical
verses on Martin Luther, the German monk who ignited the Protestant Reformation,
the massive “protest” against the excesses of the Roman Catholic Church that
led to the formation of Protestant church denominations.
“It is a great Protestant tradition for anyone -
milkmaid, cobbler, or innkeeper - to be able to pick up the Bible and read for
herself. No need for a highly trained scholar or cleric to walk a lay person
through the text,” says Craig Hazen, director of the Christian Apologetics
program at Biola University in Southern California.
But often the milkmaid, the cobbler - and the
NFL coach - start creating biblical passages without the guidance of biblical
experts, he says.
“You can see this manifest today in living room
Bible studies across North America where lovely Christian people, with no
training whatsoever, drink decaf, eat brownies and ask each other, ‘What does
this text mean to you?’’’ Hazen says.
“Not only do they get the interpretation wrong,
but very often end up quoting verses that really aren’t there.”
TJA
No comments:
Post a Comment