Introduction
The eight papers preceding this one have moved from foundations to method, from method to specific corpora, and from those corpora to the practical chain by which fragmentary evidence reaches the church. The work has been cumulative. Each paper has built on what went before; each has assumed that the reader had followed the argument to that point and was ready to take the next step. The present paper draws the threads of the whole series together and looks forward.
A concluding paper of this kind has, in the nature of things, a triple obligation. It must show how the governing commitments of the series cohere as a single posture toward the work. It must offer recommendations practical enough to be acted on, both for the discipline of fragmentology and for the church that the discipline serves. And it must be honest about what remains undone — about the questions still open, the refinements still needed, and the areas where humility forbids closure even as biblicism forbids despair.
The aim of this paper is to fulfill that triple obligation in keeping with the disciplines commended throughout the series. Confidence where confidence is warranted; modesty where modesty is owed; gratitude to the God who has spoken and preserved His Word, and who has given to His church both the evidence and the equipment to receive that Word with understanding.
I. Bringing the Two Hermeneutics Together
A. Biblicism without arrogance
The biblicist hermeneutic, as set out in Paper Two, holds that Scripture is the supremely authoritative, sufficient, verbally and plenarily inspired Word of God, providentially preserved across the centuries and to be read in its grammatical and historical sense. This is a confident hermeneutic. It does not apologize for what it confesses; it does not hold the doctrine of Scripture tentatively, awaiting permission from the broader academic culture; it does not soften its claims to make them more palatable to those who do not share them.
Biblicism so understood can, however, be held in two different spirits, and the difference matters. Held in one spirit, it tends toward arrogance — toward the assumption that the biblicist’s understanding of Scripture is simply identical with Scripture itself, that disagreement reflects bad faith or bad scholarship in the disagreer, and that the biblicist’s particular conclusions on matters of textual judgment partake of the same authority as the text whose judgment he is rendering. Held in this spirit, biblicism becomes brittle. It defends its conclusions as vigorously as it defends the doctrine of Scripture, and it collapses, when it collapses, by failing to distinguish between the two.
Held in the other spirit, biblicism is firm without being arrogant. It distinguishes between the text and the interpreter, between the Word God has given and the conclusions the biblicist has reached about that Word, between confidence in inspiration and confidence in any particular reconstruction. It holds the doctrine of Scripture without flinching while holding its own work on Scripture with appropriate modesty. This second spirit is the one this series has commended throughout, and it is the only spirit in which biblicism can do its proper work over the long run.
Biblicism without arrogance is not a watered-down biblicism. It is a more theologically consistent biblicism, because it takes seriously the difference between the Creator who speaks and the creature who hears. To collapse that difference, even in the service of defending the text, is to import into the doctrine of Scripture a confusion that the doctrine itself does not require and does not authorize.
B. Humility without drift
The hermeneutics of humility, as set out in Paper Three, recognizes the finitude of the creaturely interpreter, distinguishes itself sharply from skepticism on one side and indecision on the other, and produces in its practitioner a set of working habits suited to fragmentary evidence. This is a modest hermeneutic. It does not claim more than the evidence supports; it reports its confidence levels honestly; it welcomes correction from the broader believing community across time.
Humility so understood can, however, drift. The drift takes a recognizable shape. Modesty about reconstructions becomes modesty about readings; modesty about readings becomes modesty about wording; modesty about wording becomes modesty about meaning; and modesty about meaning becomes a generalized agnosticism that no longer functions as humility at all but has become, by gradual stages, a different posture entirely. The drift is rarely deliberate. It is the natural consequence of failing to distinguish among the several levels at which modesty is appropriate and of allowing a humility that belongs at one level to spread to levels where it does not belong.
Humility without drift is humility that holds its position. It is modest about what is genuinely uncertain and confident about what is not. It does not allow appropriate caution about a particular reconstruction to become inappropriate doubt about whether God has spoken, or about whether what God has spoken can be known. It distinguishes, with care, between the kinds of questions on which the evidence allows a confident answer and the kinds on which it does not, and it offers each kind of answer in the appropriate register.
This stability requires conscious discipline. The honest worker in the field will find, if he does not guard against it, that his caution about small matters can quietly become his caution about large ones, simply by the accumulating weight of repeated qualification. The remedy is to revisit, periodically and deliberately, the foundational commitments — the doctrine of Scripture, the doctrine of preservation, the convictions about canon and inspiration that ground the work — and to reaffirm them not as conclusions about which the evidence might still cause him to change his mind but as the framework within which the evidence is examined.
C. The believing scholar as servant of the church
The two hermeneutics, held together, produce a particular vocation. The believing scholar working in fragmentology is, at his best, a servant of the church. He is not a free agent producing conclusions for whatever audience will receive them; he is not a guild member whose first allegiance is to the standards and rewards of his profession; he is not an isolated individual whose work has value only in proportion to his own ambition. He is a member of a body, and the body of which he is a member is the church of Jesus Christ.
This vocation has practical implications. The believing scholar publishes work that is intelligible and useful to those outside the specialist’s circle. He prefers honest reporting to professional positioning. He cooperates with pastors and teachers, sharing what he has learned in forms they can use. He receives correction without defensiveness, including correction from those whose technical training is less than his own but whose discernment of the matters that touch the life of the church may, in particular cases, be greater. He recognizes that his own moment of work is one moment in a long stewardship, and he conducts himself accordingly.
This is not a counsel of self-effacement. The work itself is real work, requiring real expertise, and the scholar should bring his full competence to it. But the work has a purpose beyond itself, and the scholar who loses sight of that purpose has, however accomplished in technique, lost the bearing that gives the work its meaning. The believing scholar serves the church; the church reads the Word of God; God, in His providence, has used the labor of many such scholars across many centuries to bring that Word to the church in the form in which it is now read. The vocation is honorable. It is also, in the deepest sense, a vocation of service.
II. Recommendations for the Discipline
The synthesis of the two hermeneutics has implications for how the discipline of fragmentology is conducted. Three recommendations may be offered, each of which extends, in practical form, principles developed across the earlier papers.
A. Standards of reporting and bracketing
The first recommendation concerns standards of reporting. The discipline already has well-developed conventions for marking what is visible, what is reconstructed, and what is conjectured in transcribed material; these conventions were discussed in Paper Six. What the discipline needs, in addition to the conventions themselves, is a more consistent practice in their use across the spectrum of publications, from the most technical editions to the most popular treatments.
Editors of critical editions and specialized publications generally use the conventions well, though variation among houses is not negligible. Where the recommendation has more practical bite is in the broader range of writing in which fragmentary evidence is reported — academic articles aimed at non-specialists, textbooks, reference works, popular treatments by responsible scholars. In all of these settings, the same disciplines apply: triple distinction among visible, reconstructed, and conjectured readings; honest calibration of confidence levels; clear marking of the status of identifications and dates; and willingness to revise published claims when revision is warranted.
This recommendation is not a call for a new bureaucratic apparatus. It is a call for the disciplines that the field already knows to be applied with greater consistency, and for those who write at the more accessible levels to bring the same care to their reporting that the best technical editors bring to theirs. The cost of inconsistency at the more accessible levels is not simply scholarly imprecision; it is, in many cases, the slow propagation of misleading impressions among readers who have no means of evaluating the reports for themselves.
A second aspect of this recommendation is the discipline of conspicuous correction. When a published claim turns out to have been mistaken — an identification revised, a date adjusted, a reconstruction set aside in the light of new evidence — the correction should be published as conspicuously as the original claim was made. This is not how things have always worked. Initial claims, with their dramatic appeal, often receive much wider circulation than the corrections that later qualify or replace them, and the result is a scholarly literature in which superseded claims continue to circulate alongside their successors. The honest worker, and the honest publisher, will resist this pattern.
B. Cooperation between specialists and pastors
The second recommendation concerns the relationship between specialists and pastors. These two callings are different, and the difference should not be obscured. The specialist works at a level of technical detail that the pastor cannot, in the ordinary course of his ministry, sustain. The pastor works at a level of pastoral care for actual congregations that the specialist cannot, in the ordinary course of his research, deliver. Each calling has its own integrity, and neither should attempt to substitute for the other.
What the two callings need is honest cooperation. Specialists have a responsibility to produce work that pastors can use. This includes, but is not limited to, the production of accessible summaries of the state of evidence on questions of pastoral relevance, the answering of questions that pastors actually ask, and a willingness to engage with the practical situations in which textual matters arise in the life of the congregation. Pastors, on their side, have a responsibility to consult the work that specialists produce, to bring real questions to those better equipped to answer them, and to teach their congregations from the substance of what they have learned rather than from impressions.
This cooperation has historically been uneven. Specialists have sometimes written as though pastors did not exist, or as though the pastoral implications of their work were someone else’s problem. Pastors have sometimes treated specialist work with suspicion, or have ignored it altogether, on the assumption that scholarly study of the Bible is intrinsically corrosive of pastoral confidence in it. Both of these patterns are unhelpful, and both can be corrected. The biblicist commitments of this series suggest that they should be.
A practical form this cooperation might take is the inclusion, in pastoral training programs, of substantive instruction in the textual transmission of Scripture, taught by those with technical competence but oriented toward pastoral application. A pastor who has had such instruction is better equipped to read footnotes, to teach his congregation about variants, and to meet popular skeptical claims with accurate fragmentology. The specialists who teach in such programs, in turn, are kept in regular contact with the pastoral situations to which their work eventually applies, and their own work tends to gain in pastoral wisdom as a result.
C. Catalogs, digital tools, and access to primary materials
The third recommendation concerns the broader infrastructure of the discipline. Fragmentology, as observed in Paper One, has been transformed in recent decades by digital tools — high-resolution imaging, multispectral imaging, online publication, collaborative platforms for the comparison and virtual rejoining of dispersed fragments. These tools are an enormous gift, and they have made possible work that could not have been done in earlier generations. They also raise questions that deserve attention.
Catalogs of surviving fragments need to be kept current, comprehensive, and accessible. New finds need to be added in a timely way, and the relationships among fragments that have been dispersed across multiple holding institutions need to be tracked. The catalogs that exist do much of this work well; the recommendation is for continued and expanded support of this kind of infrastructure work, which is often less glamorous than the initial publication of new evidence but is, in the long run, more consequential for the discipline.
Access to primary materials, whether in physical or in digital form, should be as broad as the responsible stewardship of the materials allows. Holding institutions have legitimate concerns about preservation, and these concerns may set real limits on physical access. Digital access, however, can often be much broader than physical access, and the trend toward open publication of high-resolution images of biblical and biblical-related manuscripts is one to be encouraged. The believer who can examine, on his own screen, an image of an early papyrus is in a different and better position than the believer who must rely entirely on the reports of others. This is true of specialists and non-specialists alike.
Digital tools for the comparison, transcription, and analysis of fragmentary material are improving rapidly, and the discipline benefits from their development. The recommendation here is that this development be guided by the disciplines commended in earlier papers — the disciplines of triple distinction, of honest calibration of confidence, of conspicuous marking of the status of claims. A digital tool that allows reconstructions to circulate without their conjectural status being clearly indicated is a tool that will, in practice, contribute to the same patterns of overreach that the discipline has long had to resist. A digital tool that makes the status of every claim visible to every user is a tool that supports the kind of work the discipline ought to be doing.
III. Recommendations for the Church
The discipline of fragmentology serves the church, and the church, in its turn, has a part to play in receiving what the discipline produces. Three recommendations for the church may be offered.
A. Catechesis on the transmission of Scripture
The first recommendation is for substantive catechesis on the transmission of Scripture. By “catechesis” is meant not a single lecture given once but an ongoing discipline of teaching, woven into the regular life of the congregation, by which believers come to understand how the Bible they read has reached them.
Such catechesis need not be technical. It need not require the congregation to learn Greek and Hebrew, to memorize the names of the great codices, or to follow the details of textual debates. It does require the congregation to learn certain things plainly: that the Bible was given over many centuries, in three languages, through human authors superintended by the Holy Spirit; that it has been transmitted by hand for many more centuries through scribes of varying skill but, on the whole, of remarkable care; that the surviving manuscript evidence is abundant, early, and substantially uniform; that the variation among manuscripts is overwhelmingly trivial and, where substantive, does not threaten any doctrine of the faith; that the translations they read are the work of careful committees who have weighed the evidence in good faith; and that the footnotes they encounter are acts of editorial honesty rather than admissions of fundamental uncertainty.
A congregation that has been taught these things, calmly and accurately, over a period of years, is a congregation that holds its Bible with confidence and that meets popular skeptical claims with steadiness rather than alarm. The investment of teaching time required for such catechesis is not large; the return, over the life of a congregation, is considerable.
B. Patience with what is uncertain; firmness with what is not
The second recommendation is for a particular discipline of disposition: patience with what is uncertain and firmness with what is not. These are not two different dispositions but two aspects of a single rightly ordered posture, and a congregation that learns to hold them together is a congregation well equipped for life under the Word.
Patience with what is uncertain means the willingness to live with unresolved questions. Some questions in fragmentology are genuinely open at the present moment. Some passages have textual situations that are not fully settled. Some fragments remain unidentified. Some methodological refinements are still in progress. The believer need not pretend that these matters are settled when they are not; he can acknowledge their open status without thereby concluding that everything is open. Patience, in this sense, is the willingness to accept that not every question has yet been answered and that the Christian life does not require it to have been.
Firmness with what is not uncertain means the corresponding willingness to hold settled matters as settled. The substance of Scripture, the doctrines of the faith, the truths the church has long confessed — these are not on the table because some recent fragment has been published or some popular book has made dramatic claims. The believer who has learned to be patient about the genuinely open questions has not, on that account, learned to be patient about everything. He can be firm about what is firm precisely because he has learned to distinguish what is firm from what is not.
This double discipline is not natural. The natural human tendency is to be firm about everything or patient about everything — to defend even small reconstructions as though the faith depended on them, or to hold even central doctrines tentatively as though new evidence might overturn them. The believer learns, by the practice of his faith and by the patient teaching of the church, to be patient where patience is owed and firm where firmness is owed, and not to confuse the two.
C. The text we have is the Word God has given us, and it is enough
The third recommendation may be stated as a settled conviction. The text the church has received is the Word God has given to the church, and it is enough.
This conviction has been implicit throughout the series, but it deserves to be stated plainly here. The believer does not read a hypothetical reconstruction of an unrecoverable original; he does not read a text whose substance is in serious doubt; he does not read a text that some future discovery might invalidate. He reads the Word of God, transmitted to the present generation by the providence of God across the long centuries of the church’s reception, and rendered in the languages of the modern world by the careful labor of translators who have weighed the surviving evidence in good faith.
That this Word is enough is a claim the doctrine of Scripture itself makes. Scripture is sufficient for salvation, for the knowledge of God, for the ordering of the Christian life and the church. It does not need to be supplemented by additional revelation, nor does it await some final determination of textual scholarship before the believer may rely on it. It is, in the form in which the church has received it, enough — enough for faith, enough for obedience, enough for the long pilgrimage of the believing life.
This is not to say that ongoing work in fragmentology is unnecessary or unimportant. The previous papers have argued at length that the work is necessary and important. It is to say that the believer’s confidence does not wait on the completion of that work and does not depend on its being completed. The work refines, illumines, and confirms; it does not constitute. The text the church has is the Word God has given, and the work of fragmentology is one of the means by which the church grows in understanding of how that Word has been entrusted to it. The Word itself, in its received form, is what the church reads, preaches, and lives by; and it is, by the gift of the God who gave it, enough.
IV. Open Questions and a Research Agenda
Honest synthesis requires honest acknowledgment of what remains undone. Three areas of ongoing work deserve mention as the series concludes.
A. Fragments awaiting publication or identification
The first area concerns the body of fragments that have not yet entered the published record. Holding institutions across the world contain materials that have not been fully cataloged, transcribed, or studied. The pace of publication, while substantial, has not kept up with the volume of recovered evidence, and many fragments remain known only to those with direct access to the holding collections.
In addition, fragments that have been published but not identified continue to invite further work. As noted in Paper Seven, an unidentified fragment is a pending case; its identification may come tomorrow, next year, or in a generation, but the case is not closed. The continued work of identification — patient, careful, properly humble about the provisional status of proposed identifications — is part of the ongoing agenda of the discipline.
Believers who have means may wish to consider the support of this kind of work. It is rarely glamorous; it does not produce the kind of publishable results that attract popular attention; it is, in the main, the steady infrastructure work on which the more visible products of the discipline depend. It is, however, work that genuinely serves the church and the broader scholarly community over the long run.
B. Methodological refinements still needed
The second area concerns method. The disciplines commended in Paper Six are sound, in the judgment of this series, but their consistent application across the field is uneven, and refinements remain possible.
Among the areas where refinement would be welcome are: clearer and more consistently applied conventions for marking the status of claims in non-technical publications; more developed protocols for the publication of paleographic estimates with their proper ranges of uncertainty; more honest practices around the handling of conjectural reconstructions, especially in popular and semi-popular venues; better integration of the evidence of versions and patristic citations into the working judgment of textual decisions; and greater attention to the patterns of accumulation by which tentative claims acquire, over time, the appearance of established knowledge.
None of these is a revolutionary item. All of them are matters on which the field already has good practices in some quarters and in which broader and more consistent application would yield real gains. The discipline does not need a methodological revolution; it needs the steady reinforcement of the good practices it already knows.
C. Areas where humility forbids closure and biblicism forbids despair
The third area is the area of genuinely unresolved questions, where the present evidence does not yet allow a confident verdict and where honest work requires the discipline of saying so. Such questions exist; they have been alluded to throughout the series; they are part of the actual state of the field.
The right posture toward such questions is the double posture commended throughout. Humility forbids closure: the worker who declares such questions settled when they are not is not merely overreaching but misleading the church. Biblicism forbids despair: the worker who treats such questions as evidence that the larger task is hopeless is allowing local uncertainty to become global despair, which the actual state of the evidence does not warrant.
Between premature closure and unwarranted despair lies the patient work of the discipline as it actually proceeds. New evidence is recovered; existing evidence is re-examined; methods are refined; conclusions are tested and, where appropriate, revised. The work goes forward. It will go forward, in some form, until the day when faith gives way to sight and the disciplines suited to the present age give way to the unmediated communion of the believer with his Lord. Until that day, faithful work in fragmentology is one form of the church’s grateful service to the God who has spoken and preserved His Word.
Conclusion to the Series
The nine papers of this series have argued, by stages, that fragmentology is a discipline worth the believing scholar’s attention, that biblicism and humility are the two governing commitments under which it is rightly conducted, that the surviving evidence — Hebrew, Greek, canonical, non-canonical, identified, unidentified — supports rather than undermines the church’s confidence in the Word of God, and that the work of reading, reconstructing, and reporting fragmentary material is part of the church’s stewardship of the Scriptures it has received.
The conclusion of the whole, stated plainly, is that the Word the church reads is the Word God gave; that the surviving evidence by which it has reached the church is, on honest examination, abundant, early, and substantially uniform; that the work of careful study, conducted under the disciplines commended throughout this series, deepens rather than disturbs the believer’s confidence; and that the believing scholar, the faithful pastor, and the ordinary saint together stand in a long tradition of those who have received the Scriptures, lived by them, and passed them on. The text we have is the Word God has given us, and it is enough.
It is fitting to close with the acknowledgment that this confidence rests, finally, not on the labor of any scholar or the conclusions of any series of papers, but on the faithfulness of the One who spoke. He has spoken; He has preserved what He spoke; He continues, by His Spirit and through His Word, to speak to His church. The disciplines of fragmentology, rightly conducted, are one means by which the church receives and understands what He has given. They serve the Word; they do not constitute it. And the Word they serve is, by the grace of the God whose Word it is, more than sufficient for the salvation, sanctification, and final glorification of those who hear and believe.
To Him, the God who speaks and preserves, be glory, both now and forever.
