Abstract
This concluding paper of the suite and of the whole work integrates the elements developed across the preceding papers into a unified model of how credible authority is established before fair-minded hearers, and argues that legitimacy of this kind is not asserted into existence but accrues from a track record of self-limitation under the same Scripture one teaches. Building on the whole-counsel balance, the typology of tells, the office/person distinction, the diagnostic case of the misused text, the principle of costly authority, and the practice of welcoming scrutiny, this study sets out the credibility stack — the integrated framework in which each layer answers a specific suspicion mapped in the hinge paper, and the absence of any layer reopens the suspicion the layer was designed to disarm. The argument proceeds in five movements. First, it lays out the stack itself: transparent method, whole-counsel balance, the office/person distinction, costly self-binding, and welcomed scrutiny, with each layer’s specific function explained. Second, it maps each priestly abuse from the first suite onto the layer of the stack that answers it, completing the structural symmetry the hinge paper anticipated. Third, it develops the claim that legitimacy is not asserted but accrues, examining the temporal and reputational character of credibility built through sustained practice. Fourth, it draws out the closing distinction between authority that protects itself and authority that protects the people it serves, showing that the stack as a whole expresses the latter while its absence expresses the former. Fifth, it considers how the model bears on practical situations of disputed authority and offers a way forward for both the leader who would be credible and the hearer who must discern. The paper concludes that the model is the affirmative answer the whole work has been building toward — the form authority must take if it is to be both biblically faithful and intelligibly trustworthy — and that its character is, finally, the imitation of Christ.
1. Introduction: Pulling the Threads Together
The work of which this paper is the conclusion began with a thesis stated in the introduction: that the abuses cataloged in Scripture’s record of the priesthood are not merely ancient cautionary material but a precise inventory of the suspicions fair-minded hearers bring to any present-day defense of religious authority, and that a defense of authority becomes credible to the extent that it engages those suspicions rather than ignoring them. The first suite traced the catalog of abuse through eight papers, from the foundational principle that proximity to the holy raises the standard, through the six abuse-classes of liturgical presumption, greed, exploitation, false teaching, usurpation, and self-protection, to the integrative taxonomy of judgment-forms. The hinge paper mapped the abuses onto the contemporary suspicions they generate and posed the question this second suite has answered: how a biblicist interpreter may speak of authority so that honest skeptics can hear it. The six papers of the second suite have constructed the answer piece by piece — through the whole-counsel obligation, the typology of self-serving tells, the office/person distinction, the diagnostic case study of a misused text, the principle of costly authority enacted in material self-binding, and the practice of epistemic self-binding through welcoming scrutiny. The present paper draws these threads together and presents the integrated model toward which the whole work has been building.[^1]
The thesis of this paper is that credibility before fair-minded audiences rests on a stack of layered practices, each of which answers a specific suspicion the hinge paper mapped, and the absence of any layer reopens the suspicion the layer was designed to disarm. The framework is not a list of equivalent items but a stack — a layered structure in which each element does work the others cannot do, and the credibility-generating function depends on the layers being in place together. The leader who has the whole-counsel balance but not the costly self-binding has done one necessary thing but not another, and the partial framework leaves intact the suspicions the missing layers were designed to disarm. The leader who has every layer but one has done six necessary things and left undone the seventh, and the gap is detectable by hearers attentive to the suspicion the missing layer addresses. The stack is therefore cumulative in its credibility-generating power, and the construction of credible authority requires sustained attention to all of its layers rather than excellence in any single layer.[^2]
The further thesis, which the paper will develop at length, is that legitimacy of this kind is not asserted but accrues. The credibility the stack generates is not an attribute the leader can claim and have his audience accept on his word; it is a property of a track record, built through sustained practice over time, that hearers recognize because they have observed the leader’s conduct across enough occasions to read the pattern. This temporal and reputational character of credibility is essential to the model and distinguishes it sharply from accounts that treat credibility as something a defender can produce in a single speech or claim by a single appeal. On the model this paper sets out, credibility is the residue of conduct, and the conduct must accumulate before the residue is visible. The leader who understands this will labor over many years to construct the track record, recognizing that the credibility he hopes for is the long-term consequence of the practice he sustains, not the immediate effect of any defense he offers.[^3]
The paper proceeds by setting out the credibility stack and explaining each layer’s function, mapping the priestly abuses onto the layers that answer them, developing the temporal and reputational character of legitimacy as accrued rather than asserted, drawing out the closing distinction between self-protecting and people-serving authority, and offering some practical applications of the model. A concluding section returns to the work as a whole and to the imitation of Christ that the model finally describes.
2. The Credibility Stack
The integrated model takes the form of a stack: five layered practices, each addressing a distinct dimension of the credibility problem and each indispensable to the whole. The layers are presented from foundation to surface, with each upper layer presupposing the layers beneath it, so that the structure is genuinely layered rather than merely listed. The five layers are transparent method, whole-counsel balance, the office/person distinction, costly self-binding, and welcomed scrutiny.[^4]
The first and foundational layer is transparent method. Before any specific teaching or claim, the credible leader must operate by interpretive practices that are visible to his hearers and consistent with the biblicist commitments he professes — reading texts in context, attending to genre, distinguishing between explicit teaching and inferred application, declining to extract from texts more than they support. This layer is foundational because every higher layer presupposes it; a leader whose method is opaque or untrustworthy cannot generate credibility by any subsequent practice, for the hearer cannot evaluate the practices without knowing the methodological framework within which they operate. The fourth paper of this suite, on the misuse of “touch not mine anointed,” developed the requirements of transparent method at length, and the integrated model treats those requirements as the floor on which the rest of the structure rests.[^5]
The second layer is whole-counsel balance. Resting on transparent method, the credible leader must present the biblical teaching on any topic in its full canonical context, including the texts that qualify and complicate the topic, rather than the selection of texts that serve his immediate purpose. The first paper of this suite developed this requirement under the heading of fidelity to the whole counsel of God, and the integrated model treats it as the second necessary layer: the leader who handles texts transparently but selects them partially has practiced sound method on the wrong materials, and the partiality undoes what the method established. Whole-counsel balance is the practice of letting transparent method operate on the whole text rather than on a curated subset.[^6]
The third layer is the office/person distinction. The credible leader must maintain, in his own person and in his teaching about authority generally, the distinction between offices instituted by God and the fallible persons who hold them, so that the honor owed the office never transfers to the person as immunity and the correction of the person’s conduct never dishonors the office. The third paper of this suite developed this distinction at length, and the integrated model treats it as the third layer: the leader who has transparent method and whole-counsel balance but collapses office into person in his defense of his own conduct has undone the work of the lower layers by adopting at this level the very move the lower layers should have made impossible. The distinction is the conceptual instrument by which the credibility built at the lower layers can be applied to the question of the leader’s own authority without that authority becoming the leader’s shield.[^7]
The fourth layer is costly self-binding. The credible leader must accept visible constraints on his own advantage — the refusal of privilege, the embodied service, the material costs that mark his authority as service rather than as advantage — so that fair-minded hearers can observe the cost and update their belief accordingly. The fifth paper of this suite developed the principle of costly signaling and the New Testament cases that exhibit it. The integrated model treats this as the fourth layer because it cannot fully operate without the layers beneath it: a leader who attempts costly self-binding without transparent method and whole-counsel balance has performed isolated acts of self-limitation that hearers cannot evaluate against any consistent framework, and the costs may not register as the credibility-generating signals they should be. The lower layers establish the framework within which the costly signals are legible; the costly signals fill the framework with the specific costs that distinguish the leader from those who would assert the same things without paying.[^8]
The fifth and uppermost layer is welcomed scrutiny. The credible leader must extend his self-binding into the epistemic realm by welcoming testing, funding it, acknowledging error, and surfacing the strongest counter-texts and arguments against his own position. The sixth paper of this suite developed this practice. The integrated model treats it as the fifth layer because it is the application of the costly-signaling principle to the realm of belief and argument, and it requires the lower layers for its proper functioning. A leader who welcomes scrutiny but lacks transparent method offers his hearers an examination they cannot conduct fairly; a leader who welcomes scrutiny but lacks whole-counsel balance invites testing of an artificially restricted teaching; a leader who welcomes scrutiny but collapses office into person extends the invitation in a frame that immunizes his conduct from what the scrutiny would reveal. Only when the lower layers are in place does the welcomed scrutiny generate the full credibility the practice is capable of producing.[^9]
These five layers together constitute the credibility stack. Their cumulative character is the heart of the model: each layer answers a specific dimension of the credibility problem, and the absence of any layer leaves a corresponding dimension unaddressed. The stack is not a checklist of features but a structured framework in which the layers depend on one another for their full effect, and the leader who would construct credible authority must labor over each layer in its proper relation to the others.
3. Mapping the Abuses to the Layers
The integrated model finds its deepest justification in the symmetry between the abuses cataloged in the first suite and the layers of the stack that answer them. The hinge paper anticipated this symmetry by mapping each abuse onto the suspicion it generates in fair-minded hearers; the present section completes the structural argument by showing how each layer of the stack answers the corresponding suspicion. The symmetry is not approximate but exact: the six abuse-classes generate six suspicions, and the layers of the stack are calibrated to disarm them. The model is therefore not an arbitrary collection of good practices but a structured response to the structured problem the catalog of abuse poses.[^10]
Liturgical presumption — the offering of worship God did not command — generates the suspicion that the leader is requiring of his hearers things God has not required, dressing his own innovation in the language of divine command. The layer of the stack that answers this suspicion is the combination of transparent method and whole-counsel balance: the leader who reads texts in context and presents the whole counsel of God on the relevant matters cannot disguise his innovations as divine commands, for the framework within which he teaches makes the warrant for each requirement visible. The hearer who observes the leader operating within transparent method and whole-counsel balance can trace each requirement to its textual warrant, and any requirement lacking such warrant is exposed by the same framework that legitimates the others. Liturgical presumption is thus disarmed by the structure of the lower layers: it cannot survive in a methodological framework that asks of each requirement, “where does the text command this?” and accepts only the requirements the text actually commands.[^11]
Greed — the monetization of sacred office — generates the conflict-of-interest suspicion, that the leader’s teaching is shaped by his material advantage rather than by the text. The layer of the stack that answers this suspicion is costly self-binding, specifically in the material domain. The leader who has visibly refused material advantage, declined the benefits his office could yield, and made his ministry costly to himself rather than profitable has produced exactly the signal that disarms the conflict-of-interest discount. The hearer who observes the costly refusal cannot reasonably continue to discount the leader’s teaching as self-interested, for the underlying interest has been visibly surrendered. Paul’s apostolic example examined in the fifth paper of this suite is the model: the deliberate removal of the structural condition that would warrant the hearer’s discount, accomplished by visible cost.[^12]
Exploitation of the vulnerable — the abuse of sacred access — generates the suspicion that the institution shelters predators and prefers its own reputation to the protection of the vulnerable. The layer of the stack that answers this suspicion is, again, costly self-binding, but in the institutional domain: the willingness to expose the institution’s own conduct to examination, to discipline its corrupt members even at cost to the institution’s standing, and to prioritize the protection of the vulnerable over the preservation of reputation. This is the institutional form of the costly authority the fifth paper developed: the institution that visibly bears the cost of correcting its own abuses sends a signal that institutions captured by self-protection will not send. The hearer who observes an institution actually disciplining a corrupt member, even when the discipline damages the institution’s reputation, has been given the evidence the discount required, while an institution that protects abusers leaves the discount in full effect.[^13]
Corrupt teaching — partiality, flattery, and selective citation — generates the suspicion that the leader bends Scripture to serve his hearers’ preferences or his own advantage rather than transmitting it faithfully. The layer that answers this suspicion is whole-counsel balance, with welcomed scrutiny as its reinforcement. The leader who presents the whole counsel cannot be partial, for the partiality the suspicion fears requires the suppression of complicating texts, and the practice of whole-counsel balance forbids that suppression. The welcomed scrutiny adds the further check: even where the leader misjudges what whole-counsel balance requires, the welcomed scrutiny ensures that hearers can identify and address the imbalance. Together the two layers disarm the corrupt-teaching suspicion by making the partiality the suspicion fears practically impossible to maintain.[^14]
Usurpation — the false claim to standing not conferred — generates the suspicion that the leader’s authority is self-asserted rather than divinely conferred, manufactured rather than received. The layer that answers this suspicion is the office/person distinction, combined with the costly self-binding that demonstrates the leader’s subordination to the office’s standard. The leader who maintains the distinction does not claim for his person the authority that belongs to the office; he submits his person to the standard the office serves and bears the costs the office requires. The hearer who observes the maintained distinction and the borne costs sees a leader who is not grasping at standing but exercising a function he holds in service, and the usurpation suspicion is correspondingly disarmed. The combination of layers shows that the leader holds the office, but does not own it, and is held to its standard rather than placed above it.[^15]
Self-protection — the capture of the office by its own self-interest — generates the deepest suspicion, that the defense of authority is itself an act of institutional self-preservation rather than a defense of God’s truth. The layer that answers this suspicion is the integration of all the preceding layers, with welcomed scrutiny as its capstone. The leader who has labored over transparent method, whole-counsel balance, the office/person distinction, and costly self-binding, and who tops these with welcomed scrutiny, has constructed exactly the form of authority that the self-protection suspicion does not fit. A self-protecting authority does not welcome scrutiny, refuse privilege, distinguish office from person, balance whole-counsel, or operate by transparent method; its incentives run against each of these practices. A leader who exhibits all of them is, by the very pattern, a leader the self-protection suspicion fails to describe. The hearer who has observed the cumulative pattern has been given the most decisive evidence against the deepest suspicion the catalog generates, and the catalog itself supplies the standard by which the evidence is recognized as decisive.[^16]
The mapping completes the structural argument of the whole work. The catalog of abuse generates the suspicions; the stack of layers answers them; and each layer is calibrated to the specific abuse it disarms. The framework is therefore not arbitrary but structured by the very problem it solves, and its claim to be the affirmative answer to the credibility gap rests on this calibrated structural symmetry.
4. Legitimacy Accrues Rather Than Is Asserted
The integrated model presents the layers of the credibility stack as practices, and this temporal and behavioral character is essential to the model’s claim about how legitimacy is established. Credibility of the kind the model produces is not an attribute that can be asserted into existence by any speech act or claimed by any appeal; it is a property of a track record, built through sustained practice over time, that hearers recognize because they have observed enough instances of the leader’s conduct to read the pattern. This section develops this claim and draws out its implications for how a credible authority is actually constructed.[^17]
The reasoning behind the claim is grounded in the costly-signaling logic developed across the fifth and sixth papers. A single act of self-binding generates some credibility, because it provides one instance of the costly signal the model treats as discriminating. But a single act can be staged, and sophisticated audiences know this; a one-time refusal of advantage, performed for the sake of being seen, may be a strategic investment by a leader who otherwise operates in entirely self-serving ways. The hearer who sees only one such act cannot reliably distinguish the genuine self-binder from the strategist who has performed one well-placed act of apparent self-limitation. What distinguishes the two is the pattern, observable only over time and across many occasions: the genuine self-binder accepts costs consistently, in situations where staging would be implausible, on matters where the cost cuts against any plausible long-term advantage. The strategist cannot sustain such a pattern, because the costs accumulate beyond what strategic investment would warrant, and the genuine pattern emerges only from genuine motivation. The hearer who has observed a long pattern of consistent costly behavior has therefore observed something that the strategist would not produce, and the cumulative credibility of the pattern is what no single act can match.[^18]
This temporal character of credibility has direct implications for the leader who would construct it. He cannot construct it quickly. He cannot achieve it by writing a particularly good defense of authority, delivering a particularly humble sermon, or making a particularly public refusal of one privilege. He can only construct it by doing the practices over a long period, in many situations, with consistency that hearers can observe and remember. The credibility he hopes for is the long-term consequence of the practice he sustains, and the practice must be sustained beyond the point where it generates immediate visible effect. The leader who treats the model as a strategy — who adopts the practices in order to generate credibility — has misunderstood the model, for the practices generate credibility only when they are not adopted as a strategy but pursued for their own sake. The hearer who detects the strategic adoption discounts the practice accordingly, and the credibility does not materialize. Only the practice pursued for its own reasons, sustained whether or not credibility follows, eventually generates the credibility that the practice deserves.[^19]
This temporal character also has implications for the hearer’s discernment. The hearer cannot evaluate a leader’s credibility on the basis of a single encounter or a brief observation; he must observe across enough time and enough occasions to see whether the pattern of conduct is consistent. The hearer who declares a leader credible after one impressive interaction has updated his belief too quickly; the hearer who declares a leader untrustworthy after one disappointing interaction has likewise updated too quickly. The model warrants strong belief only after sustained observation, and the hearer who applies the model should hold his judgments tentatively until the pattern has had time to emerge. This is a counsel of patience that applies to both directions of judgment: the patience to recognize a leader as credible only when the pattern justifies it, and the patience to recognize a leader as untrustworthy only when the pattern justifies that. The model is not a quick discernment tool; it is a framework for sustained judgment over time.[^20]
A practical implication of this account is that the model favors stability in leadership relationships, for credibility built over time is destroyed quickly when leadership changes, and the new leader must construct his own track record from the beginning. This is not a counsel against the proper change of leadership, but a recognition that credibility is not transferable: the credibility a previous leader earned by his sustained practice does not transfer to his successor by office, but must be earned by the successor’s own sustained practice. A new leader inherits the office; he does not inherit the credibility. He must build his own, and the building takes time. This implication is humbling for new leaders who imagine they can step into established credibility, and it should temper expectations on both sides of the leadership transition.[^21]
A second practical implication concerns the recovery of damaged credibility. The model implies that lost credibility cannot be quickly recovered: a leader whose pattern has been broken — by a public failure, by a discovered violation of the stack’s practices, by a serious misjudgment that the practices should have prevented — cannot recover credibility by any quick action, but only by a new track record built over time. The natural impulse after credibility damage is to attempt some grand gesture of recovery: a public apology, a dramatic act of restitution, a particularly insightful sermon. The model warns against expecting too much from such gestures. The damage was done across enough occasions for hearers to register the pattern; the recovery requires enough occasions in the new direction for hearers to register the new pattern, and this takes time and consistent practice. Credibility, once damaged, can be rebuilt, but only as it was originally built — by sustained conduct over time, with the gestures of recovery counting as elements of the new pattern rather than as sufficient substitutes for it.[^22]
5. The Closing Distinction: Authority That Protects Itself Versus Authority That Protects the People
The integrated model expresses, finally, a single underlying distinction that has run beneath the entire work and that this section makes explicit as the closing organizing principle. The distinction is between authority that protects itself and authority that protects the people it serves, and the integrated model is the form authority takes when it is oriented toward the latter rather than the former. Every element of the model expresses this orientation; every absence in the model expresses the opposite. The model as a whole is therefore the structural form of people-serving authority, and the catalog of abuse as a whole is the structural form of self-protecting authority. The two are not gradations on a single spectrum but distinct orientations, each producing its own characteristic structure of practice, and the recognition of which orientation a particular authority embodies is, finally, what the integrated model enables.[^23]
The point can be developed through each layer of the stack. Transparent method serves the people by making the leader’s interpretive practices examinable; opaque method serves the leader by shielding his interpretation from challenge. Whole-counsel balance serves the people by giving them the full biblical witness on which to make their judgments; selective citation serves the leader by giving them only the witness that supports his conclusions. The office/person distinction serves the people by separating the honor due to the office from immunity for the person, so that the person’s conduct can be corrected without the office being damaged; the collapse of office into person serves the leader by shielding his conduct behind the office. Costly self-binding serves the people by removing the structural conditions of the conflict of interest that would distort the leader’s service to them; the refusal of costly self-binding serves the leader by preserving the advantages his office could yield. Welcomed scrutiny serves the people by making the leader’s teaching and conduct accountable to their examination; resisted scrutiny serves the leader by preventing the examination that might expose what he prefers to conceal. In every layer, the practice serves the people at cost to the leader, and the absence of the practice serves the leader at cost to the people.[^24]
This is why the integrated model, despite its complexity, can be summarized in a single orientation: the people-serving authority structurally answers each of the suspicions the catalog of abuse generates, because each suspicion is a suspicion of self-protection, and the model is the form authority takes when self-protection is not its operating principle. The leader who is genuinely oriented toward serving the people will, with appropriate guidance and practice, find his way to the layers of the model, because the layers are the natural expressions of that orientation. The leader whose orientation is otherwise will struggle to maintain the layers consistently, because they cut against the interest that motivates him, and his cumulative pattern will eventually reveal the underlying orientation. The model is therefore not, in the end, a set of techniques but the structural form of a particular kind of authority, and the techniques are intelligible only as expressions of that form.[^25]
The closing distinction has deep theological roots that the whole work has been approaching. The captured priesthood of the seventh paper of the first suite, the institution that gave the people’s Mediator to death for the sake of its own survival, is the consummate form of self-protecting authority — the form in which an office has so completely subordinated its purpose to its survival that it sacrifices the innocent to preserve itself. The Mediator who was given to death, who having all things in His hands took up the towel and washed His disciples’ feet, is the consummate form of people-serving authority — the form in which authority is exercised by giving itself for the people rather than receiving the people’s service. The structural opposition between these two forms is the deepest organizing principle of the whole work, and the integrated model is, finally, the structural description of authority that imitates the Mediator rather than the establishment that destroyed Him. The catalog of abuse describes one orientation in its many manifestations; the integrated model describes the other. Both orientations are real, both reproduce themselves wherever authority exists, and the choice between them is the choice every authority finally makes, by what it serves and what it sacrifices.[^26]
6. Practical Applications
Before concluding, the paper offers a brief consideration of how the integrated model bears on practical situations of disputed authority, both for the leader who would be credible and for the hearer who must discern. The model is not a magic formula that resolves every difficult case, but it does provide a framework within which difficult cases can be approached with greater clarity.
For the leader, the model implies a particular kind of long-term project. The leader who would be credible before fair-minded hearers should treat his ministry as the sustained construction of the layered stack, attending in turn and continuously to transparent method, whole-counsel balance, the office/person distinction, costly self-binding, and welcomed scrutiny. He should expect this construction to take years rather than months, to require consistent practice rather than dramatic gestures, and to generate its credibility cumulatively rather than immediately. He should resist the temptation to treat credibility as a goal to be optimized for, recognizing that the practices generate credibility only when they are pursued for the right reasons. And he should expect setbacks: failures of practice that damage the credibility being built, requiring renewed application and patience to repair. The project is demanding, and the leader who undertakes it should not be surprised by the demands; they are the demands of the form of authority that the model describes.[^27]
For the hearer, the model provides a framework for discerning the kind of authority he is encountering. The hearer should look for the layers of the stack, observed over time and across occasions, rather than evaluating leaders on the basis of immediate impressions. He should attend especially to the costly elements — the visible self-binding, the welcomed scrutiny — because these are the costly signals the model treats as discriminating, and their presence or absence is the most reliable evidence of the leader’s underlying orientation. He should be patient in his judgments, neither declaring credibility too quickly on the basis of impressive performances nor dismissing it too quickly on the basis of disappointing ones. And he should distinguish between the absence of a layer and the violation of a layer: a leader who lacks one practice but exhibits the others is in a different position from a leader who exhibits the opposite of one of the practices, and the latter is more severely diagnostic than the former.[^28]
In situations of disputed authority — where the question is whether a particular leader is to be trusted, supported, criticized, or opposed — the model provides a structured way of approaching the question. The hearer can ask, for each layer of the stack, what the leader’s pattern of conduct has been, and the cumulative answer will reveal what kind of authority he is. The leader can ask the same questions of himself, and the cumulative honest answer will reveal what kind of authority he has become. These questions do not yield easy answers, but they yield answers grounded in the model’s structural framework, and the answers they yield are answers that fair-minded hearers can recognize and corrupt authorities cannot easily fake. The model thus serves both sides of the discernment problem: it equips the leader to construct credible authority and the hearer to recognize it, and the equipping rests on the same structural framework for both.[^29]
7. Conclusion: The Whole Work and the Imitation of Christ
This paper has integrated the elements developed across the suite into a unified model: the credibility stack of transparent method, whole-counsel balance, the office/person distinction, costly self-binding, and welcomed scrutiny, with each layer answering a specific suspicion from the catalog of abuse, and the absence of any layer reopening the corresponding suspicion. The model is structured by the very problem it solves, mapping point-for-point onto the abuses the first suite traced, and its credibility-generating function rests on the cumulative character of layered practice rather than on any single feature. Legitimacy of this kind is not asserted but accrues, built through sustained practice over time, recognized by hearers because they have observed the pattern long enough to read it, lost quickly when violated and rebuilt slowly when repaired. The closing distinction that unifies the model is the distinction between authority that protects itself and authority that protects the people it serves, and the model is, finally, the structural form of the latter while the catalog of abuse is the structural form of the former.
The whole work is now complete. The first suite cataloged the priestly abuses and their judgments, the hinge paper mapped the abuses onto the suspicions of fair-minded audiences, and the second suite has constructed the integrated model that answers the suspicions and provides the affirmative form of credible authority. The structure has been driven throughout by the central insight that the credibility problem facing religious authority is downstream of the abuse catalog, and that the same Scripture which generates the suspicions by its unsparing record of priestly failure supplies the resources for disarming them by its equally clear models of legitimate authority. The work has tried to honor this double character of the text: its honesty about how authority fails and its clarity about how authority succeeds, refusing to soften either side in favor of the other.
The deepest conclusion of the whole work, however, lies beyond its analytical structure, in the figure whose conduct grounds the model from beginning to end. The form of authority the integrated model describes is, at every point, the form Jesus Christ Himself exhibited. He read the Scriptures in their plain sense and rebuked those who set them aside for the traditions of men; He taught the whole counsel of God, withholding nothing profitable; He distinguished His own person from the office He held, submitting Himself to the standard He came to fulfill; He bore the costliest self-binding, refusing the privileges that were His by right and giving His own life as a ransom; He welcomed the testing of His teaching, sent His disciples to the Scriptures, and submitted His claims to examination by the texts that spoke of Him. The integrated model is therefore not a sociological proposal about how to build credibility in a skeptical age but the structural description of authority conducted in imitation of Christ — and the credibility it generates is the credibility that imitating Him produces. The leader who would be credible before fair-minded audiences must, at the end, become the kind of leader the Lord he claims to serve was, and the imitation must be substantive rather than ornamental, the form of his authority rather than the decoration of it. To this imitation the whole work has been pointing, and in this imitation the credibility the work has analyzed finds its source and its end. The catalog of abuse is the record of what authority looks like when it does not imitate Him; the integrated model is the structural description of what authority looks like when it does; and the difference between them is the difference between the priesthood that gave the Mediator to death for its own preservation and the Mediator who gave Himself to death for the people’s salvation. The choice between these two forms is the choice that every authority makes, and the work has tried to make that choice as visible as possible, that those who would be credible might know what credibility requires, and those who must discern might know what to look for in the leaders they follow.
Notes
[^1]: On the integration of the work’s threads and the structure of the argument as it has developed across the two suites, see the introduction of the work and the cumulative argument of the preceding papers.
[^2]: On the cumulative and layered character of the credibility stack and the indispensability of each layer, developed here as the paper’s central organizing claim.
[^3]: On the temporal and reputational character of credibility as accrued rather than asserted, developed here as a major thesis of the paper; compare the discussion of reputation and signaling in Bird & Smith (2005, pp. 221–248) and Hardin (2002, pp. 113–142).
[^4]: On the five-layer structure and its character as a stack rather than a list, developed here as the section’s organizing framework.
[^5]: On transparent method as the foundational layer, see the fourth paper of this suite and compare the treatment of interpretive transparency in Klein, Blomberg, & Hubbard (2017, pp. 243–268).
[^6]: On whole-counsel balance as the second layer, see the first paper of this suite and the discussion of Acts 20:27 in Peterson (2009, pp. 565–570).
[^7]: On the office/person distinction as the third layer, see the third paper of this suite.
[^8]: On costly self-binding as the fourth layer and its dependence on the lower layers, see the fifth paper of this suite and the costly-signaling literature cited there.
[^9]: On welcomed scrutiny as the fifth and uppermost layer, see the sixth paper of this suite.
[^10]: On the structural symmetry between the abuses cataloged in the first suite and the layers of the stack that answer them, anticipated in the hinge paper and completed here.
[^11]: On the mapping of liturgical presumption to transparent method and whole-counsel balance, developed here from the second paper of the first suite and the first and fourth papers of this suite.
[^12]: On the mapping of greed to costly self-binding in the material domain, developed here from the third paper of the first suite and the fifth paper of this suite.
[^13]: On the mapping of exploitation to costly self-binding in the institutional domain, developed here from the fourth paper of the first suite and the fifth paper of this suite.
[^14]: On the mapping of corrupt teaching to whole-counsel balance reinforced by welcomed scrutiny, developed here from the fifth paper of the first suite and the first and sixth papers of this suite.
[^15]: On the mapping of usurpation to the office/person distinction combined with costly self-binding, developed here from the sixth paper of the first suite and the third and fifth papers of this suite.
[^16]: On the mapping of self-protection to the integration of all layers with welcomed scrutiny as capstone, developed here from the seventh paper of the first suite and the cumulative argument of this suite.
[^17]: On the central claim that legitimacy is accrued rather than asserted, developed here as a major thesis of the paper.
[^18]: On the discriminating character of sustained patterns of costly behavior over single acts, see Bird & Smith (2005, pp. 221–248) on signaling and Hardin (2002, pp. 113–142) on trust formation.
[^19]: On the implication that the practices generate credibility only when not adopted as a strategy, developed here as a key practical implication of the temporal character of credibility.
[^20]: On the implication for the hearer’s discernment of holding judgments tentatively until patterns emerge, developed here.
[^21]: On the non-transferability of credibility across leadership transitions, developed here as a practical implication.
[^22]: On the slow recovery of damaged credibility through new sustained practice, developed here as a further practical implication.
[^23]: On the closing distinction between self-protecting and people-serving authority as the underlying organizing principle, developed here.
[^24]: On the development of the distinction through each layer of the stack, showing that each practice serves the people at cost to the leader, developed here as the section’s structural argument.
[^25]: On the integrated model as the structural form of people-serving authority rather than a set of techniques, developed here as the conclusion of the section.
[^26]: On the theological grounding of the distinction in the contrast between the captured priesthood and the self-giving Mediator, developed here from the seventh paper of the first suite and connecting to the conclusion.
[^27]: On the practical implications of the model for the leader, developed here as guidance for ministerial practice.
[^28]: On the practical implications for the hearer’s discernment, developed here as guidance for evaluating leadership.
[^29]: On the application of the model to situations of disputed authority, developed here as the conclusion of the practical section.
References
Bird, R. B., & Smith, E. A. (2005). Signaling theory, strategic interaction, and symbolic capital. Current Anthropology, 46(2), 221–248.
Hardin, R. (2002). Trust and trustworthiness. Russell Sage Foundation.
Klein, W. W., Blomberg, C. L., & Hubbard, R. L. (2017). Introduction to biblical interpretation (3rd ed.). Zondervan.
Peterson, D. G. (2009). The Acts of the Apostles (Pillar New Testament Commentary). Eerdmans.
