A critical look at how the greek (charis) has been translated into GRACE

by Terry 14 Replies latest watchtower beliefs

  • Terry
    Terry

    From The Source (Ann Nyland expert Lexigrapher, Greek scholar)

    In the late 1880s and again in the mid 1970s, large amounts of papyri and inscriptions were discovered. These impacted our knowledge of word meaning in the New Testament dramatically. Why? Well, the papyri and inscriptions were written at the time of the New Testament. They were non-literary sources, that is, they touched upon all aspects of life - everyday private letters from ordinary people, contracts of marriage and divorce, tax papers, official decrees, birth and death notices, tombstones, and business documents.

    Why is this important? Prior to these discoveries, people who made up New Testament dictionaries didn’t have a clue what many of the words meant, as I said. But now, these rare words appeared commonly in different contexts, and everyday contexts too. We would use formal language in a letter to a politician, but we use everyday language in letters to friends. It is this everyday language that appears in the New Testament, and up popped hundreds of examples of these words. Large numbers of previously uncommon words found in the New Testament now appeared commonly in everyday documents as well as on inscriptions. Many mysteries of word meaning were thus solved.

    15 volumes of new papyri were published in 1976. This meant that the meanings of a large number of words previously unattested were discovered. In the last 20 yrs, 4,000 inscriptions have been found at Ephesus alone. These discoveries have been largely overlooked by Bible translators. The problem is that laypersons and a significant number of Bible translators alike are unaware of all this as it is tucked away in technical journals. Available Bible dictionaries do not have this scholarship to any useful degree. BDAG has a little of it, but not much at all. In other words, Bible translators rely on dictionaries. The dictionaries are wrong, for many words.

    ______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________-

    The word charis , often translated 'grace' is quite heavily used in the New Testament. For many Christians and denominations, particular

    understandings of 'grace' shape their understanding of Christianity. Even though it means different things to different Christians, 'grace' ( charis ) is

    commonly heavily used and an important theological and emotional term.

    "The Reciprocity system" operated according to time-delay exchanges where goods were given and then at a later time goods of relatively equal value

    were returned to the giver. These goods could be tangible (money, material goods) or intangible (public acclaim, authority). An obligation existed to

    repay favors owed, they were not 'free' in the sense we would understand it - it is just like when a bank gives you a loan the money is not 'free'. (It

    is due to this reciprocal nature of the transactions that scholars label it the Reciprocity System.)

    Essentially the system was an informal system of economics.

    The word charis itself is best translated with the English "favor" in the sense of talking about favors given and favors repaid. Greek makes

    no linguistic distinction between the first favor given and the second favor to repay it, calling each a charis . Greek also uses charis to refer to a

    positive attitude toward someone - we would speak in English of this as "regarding them favorably" or "having their favor".

    People interpreting charis in the Bible made use of the information they had at the time and tried to make some sense of it.

    Reformation Christianity is famous for seeing charis as being "free" of obligation and as no part of any reciprical transaction!

    Such concepts have heavily influenced many Christians' understandings of 'grace' today, but have nothing to do with the actual meaning of charis in Greek.

    The translation 'grace' is not an infallibly authentic one, it is not 'free', and it isn't the opposite of human effort.

    These historical misinterpretations of 'grace' have led to correspondingly incorrect interpretations of passages that use charis . Romans 4, for example,

    contrasts the Reciprocity System to a Contractual system (a rather subtle contrast) which has historically been exegeted as the difference between

    human effort and reliance on 'grace'. Similarly Ephesians 2:8, due to the ambiguity in Greek about givers and receivers of favors clarifies that God is

    the giver of the favor and we the receiver, and yet this has historically been exegeted as speaking about lack of human effort.

    Unfortunately, nothing endures and propagates quite like bad theology. At certain points in history, theologians have constructed theologies based on

    certain incorrect understandings of 'grace' and these theologies remain influential today and taught as biblical even when scholarship regarding the

    meaning of these words has long moved on. Mistaken ideas about charis continue to influence many Christians who are convinced that 'grace' means

    salvation is in no way by human effort.

    The above is distilled from a blog on proper bible translation:

    http://theogeek.blogspot.com/2008/02/proper-bible-translation.html

  • Terry
    Terry

    Well, Ithought it was interesting.

  • james_woods
    james_woods
    Well, Ithought it was interesting.

    I once knew a very pretty lady named Grace.

  • PSacramento
    PSacramento

    It is interesting Terry, the difference is that God's grace is theological and not the same as the common grace man would apply to each other.

    God's grace is given as a gift so that our salvation is based on IT and the receiving of it INSTEAD of what we try to do to attain salvation.

    Why? because if our intent on doing soemthing to attain salvation is to attain salavation, then our intent of doing "good works" is tainted.

    To God, the End does NOT justify the means, in short, our INTENTIONS are everything.

  • PSacramento
    PSacramento

    Taking "everyday" words and putting a theological spin on them was not uncommon in the ANE.

  • Terry
    Terry

    PSacremento said: Why? because if our intent on doing soemthing to attain salvation is to attain salavation, then our intent of doing "good works" is tainted.

    Wouldn't it be the noblest of all ambitions to strive to DO SOMETHING to attain salvation if it included "good works" and righteous standards?

    I don't get why it is inferior to have such intentions. If I give money to charity and that benefits people in need is my good deed tainted because I get a Tax Deduction? The Tax Deduction may be the only reason I am ABLE to give to charity in the first place.

    Could you explain it to me?

  • Londo111
    Londo111

    I'd be interesting hearing Leolaia's thoughts on this.

  • Christ Alone
    Christ Alone

    I'd be interesting hearing Leolaia's thoughts on this.

    She's been MIA for a while.

    Wouldn't it be the noblest of all ambitions to strive to DO SOMETHING to attain salvation if it included "good works" and righteous standards?

    Works ARE noble. And they are important. But in Christian theology works are evidence of salvation, not what CAUSE salvation. Salvation is a free gift. While we can quibble over the definition of the word, the idea is very clear in NT texts. We are saved through grace and not of works. However, without works, faith is dead. Works are the outward sign that we have faith and have been saved. If we don't have works, then the evidence of our own salvation is not there.

    An understanding of the NT shows that because of our sinful condition, we cannot earn salvation. A criminal standing before the court cannot list all the GOOD things that he has done and expect that any amount of good will remove his guilt of a crime. We could be one of the greatest givers of all time. But we are still under sin before a Holy God.

  • soft+gentle
    soft+gentle

    charis has a range of meanings and I question the author's taking what charis means in an economic context and applying it to a theological context. Economic context smacks too much of exchange value and use value and would seem to be a rather reductive way of looking at the word. In contrast christians here on JWN tend to use charis alongside ideas of being free from those sorts of values and seem to capture what I find the most enchanting about charis - the idea of delight, or being delighted. Similar to when we say "the pleasure is all mine"or "I am delighted to help/offer my services".

  • PSacramento
    PSacramento
    Wouldn't it be the noblest of all ambitions to strive to DO SOMETHING to attain salvation if it included "good works" and righteous standards?

    What is noble about doing good orks with ulterior selfish motives?

    I don't get why it is inferior to have such intentions. If I give money to charity and that benefits people in need is my good deed tainted because I get a Tax Deduction? The Tax Deduction may be the only reason I am ABLE to give to charity in the first place.
    Could you explain it to me?

    Sure, from MY understanding on this, if salvation is based on what we do and not WHY we do it, then WHY we do it is irelevant and salvation becomes a "game of numbers": Who gave the most, who collected the most "good points" or to hit closer to home: Who did the most service hours.

    The parable of the pharisee that was well off and gave more and did more "good works" than the poor woman that give less BUT gave all she had not because she HAD to but because she did it out of love.

    Humans tend to be very giving and loving and asking for nothing in return under circumstances of great distress and chaos, natural disaters are a prime example. When compassion ( suffering with others) drives Us we truly do give with no notion of what we can get back.

    That is, however, the excpetion and not the rule.

    God grace is best summed up like this:

    There is nothing that Man can do to "get up there" with God, his intentions are tained because he is doing it TO "get up there" with God, so God comes down to Us in the form of His Only begotten son and shares our joys and sorrows with US (compassion).

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