Speech Act Revelation Bible and Quran

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    Divine Revelation as Personal Speech Act

    By Ng Kam Weng, Kairos Research Centre, Malaysia Aug 2012

    ThesisBy definition, an agreement involves at least two parties. It would be a very odd

    covenant in which one party knows what the other party desires, but does not know who theother party really is. Just imagine entering a covenant with someone via faxed messages or the

    InternetPut in religious language, divine revelation is deficient if it is only given as a textualmessage. It remains deficient even if the message claims divine authorization as the descent

    of holy scripture from the heavens as in the case of Quranic revelation. By the same token,the God of the Biblical covenant does not put himself out to be a remote God. The God of the

    Bible not only reveals his will (often envisaged divine law) but also who he is and what he is

    like, that is, his personality. In other words, God not only sends messages through

    intermediaries like prophets, he also comes in the form of Jesus Christ, a personal revelation

    of God in human history.

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    Christians are commonly described as the people of the Book. The term rightly

    recognizes the centrality of the Bible in the faith and practice of Christians.

    Nevertheless, the term fails to spell out how the Bible provides Christians with a way

    of life that is centred around love for and obedience to God. For this reason, I prefer

    the term the people of the Covenant. We have in the Bible the Old Covenant and the

    New Covenant. The New Covenant is anticipated in the Old Covenant and the Old

    Covenant is fulfilled in the New Covenant.

    What is a covenant? Sometimes it is understood as a treaty or an alliance between twoparties ratified by treaty documents. The Bible indicates that the all-sufficient God

    took the initiative to establish a covenant which includes special favors and protection

    to the people of the covenant. The covenant that the Bible describes goes beyond legal

    requirements since the two parties enter into a special relationship, pledging a mutual

    commitment of an intensely personal kind. Hence, loyalty and faithfulness are the

    central qualities of the Biblical Covenant. As 1 Peter 2: 9-10 says, You are a chosen

    people, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, a people belonging to God that you may

    declare the praises of him who called you out of darkness into his marvelous light.

    Once you were not a people, but now you are the people of God; once you had not

    received mercy, but now you have received the mercy of God.

    It is evident that divine revelation goes beyond transmission of information. It has a

    more inclusive role of establishing a covenant relationship. The relationship is ratified

    by the ritual of atoning sacrifice which emphasizes that sinful men can enjoy the

    benefits of this covenant only because God has provided the means to overcome/cover

    sin which has earlier caused estrangement between God and man. Finally, the

    covenant includes a deposition of authoritative Scriptures that spell out in detail the

    obligations entailed in keeping this relationship which is a way of life characterized by

    utmost loyalty, trust and obedience to God.

    By definition, an agreement involves at least two parties. It would be a very odd

    covenant in which one party knows what the other party desires, but does not knowwho the other party really is. Just imagine entering a covenant with someone via faxed

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    messages or the Internet. The other party may offer me the sweetest deal along with

    wonderful promises, but I would not dream of entering into a covenant with this

    person until I know who he really is personally.

    Put in religious language, divine revelation is deficient if it is only given as a textual

    message. It remains deficient even if the message claims divine authorization as thedescent of holy scripture from the heavens as in the case of Quranic revelation. By

    the same token, the God of the Biblical covenant does not put himself out to be a

    remote God. The God of the Bible not only reveals his will (often envisaged divine

    law) but also who he is and what he is like, that is, his personality. In other words,

    God not only sends messages through intermediaries like prophets, he also comes in

    the form of Jesus Christ, a personal revelation of God in human history. As the book

    of Hebrews testifies, God, after he spoke to the fathers in the prophets in many

    portions and in many ways, in these last days has spoken to us in his Son, whom he

    appointed heir of all things, through whom also he made the world (Hebrews 1:1-2).

    The goal of Revelation is not abstract knowledge but restoration of a (lost)relationship with God. Revelation creates a genuine (ontic) relationship in which the

    recipient is affirmed in a dialogical relationship with God. Ray Anderson writes, In

    concrete social situations, only relationships which have the character of placing

    person into the truth of relation with God are considered normative, and is the

    standard by which all other concepts of personality are measured. The Christian then

    sees a person as affirmed in the context of community. A person is only totally a

    person in community. The Christian rejects any atomistic concept of the person that

    isolates him from a larger community. Revelation is appropriated in the context of

    involvement, response, integration, that is to say, in the context of relationships.

    Excursus: Speech-Act philosophy and the Nature of Language

    J. L. Austin through his speech-act theory demonstrated that language is multi-

    dimensional. Vincent Brummer notes that in speaking we go beyond proposing a

    picture of reality (constatives). We also express convictions and attitudes

    (expressives), we commit ourselves before our hearers to some specific future act(s)

    (commisives) and we finally accept an obligation before our hearers (prescriptives).

    In the light of this speech-act philosophy, restricting Revelation to mean sending of

    divine commands presupposes a view of language that postulates a duality that

    separates the speaker from reality and from the persons he wishes to communicatewith. In contrast, speech-act theory emphasizes that when a person uses language, he

    projects himself into reality with the intention to change it. Speech also creates a

    relationship between the speaker and the hearer. There is therefore no dichotomy

    between language (thought) and action (reality and relationship). Speech, then, is

    more than a cognitive intent, it involves the whole person. Jerry Gill emphasizes that

    the speaker gives his personal backing to his speech. Thus truth is a function of

    personal commitment. There is a sense in which every statement must necessarily

    participate in both the factual and valuational dimensions simultaneously. Technically

    speaking, each statement should be prefaced by the phrase, I say, thereby indicating

    the speakers responsibility for making it.

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    In the light of these recently philosophical insights into the nature of language we see

    the cogency of the Christian understanding of revelation which makes the primarily

    purpose of divine revelation as aiming towards establishing fellowship and eliciting a

    human response in the form of worship of a personal God. That is to say, Divine

    Revelation is Gods speech act enacting his covenant with man.