24. Enjoying a measure of recent popularity, the topic of sufficiency of Scripture has received much attention in print. The following few titles are recommended for those interested in further research in the area of sufficiency: Yarnell, The Formation of Christian Doctrine, 25–28; Weeks, Sufficiency of Scripture; Murray, Claims of Truth, ch. 3; Pipa and Wortman, Written for Our Instruction.
25. Grudem, Systematic Theology, 127.
26. Congar, Tradition and Traditions, 381. While his definition may sound similar to Grudem’s, Congar’s true meaning is something entirely different, for only a few pages later Congar espouses, “There is no one who holds that the letter of the Text alone is sufficient,” (ibid., 409).
27. Oxford English Dictionary, 3rd ed., s.v. “Polity.”
28. Erickson, “Polity,” 155.
29. Dargan, Ecclesiology, 11.
30. Brand and Norman, Perspectives on Church Government, 5.
31. Unless otherwise noted, quotations have been transliterated from the original Greek.
32. Zuck, “Why of Bible Interpretation,” 22.
33. Ibid.
34. Ibid.
35. Ibid.
36. Ibid., 23.
37. Ibid.
38. Ibid., 24.
39. Ibid., 25.
40. Fee, Gospel and Spirit, 142.
41. Pre-understanding is to be differentiated from a definitive understanding. The latter is the final understanding of the text which is produced through eisegesis rather than exegesis, while the former is the theological “baggage” that the interpreter brings to the text and which will influence how he sees the text (Bultmann, “Is Exegesis without Presuppositions Possible?” 294).
42. Craik, New Testament Church Order, 3–4.
43. This is the Greek term that is used in the New Testament to designate an “overseer.” Presently, those denominations that practice the episcopal model of church government translate episkopos as “bishop.”
44. One of the major distinctions of Methodism is that, in adopting an episcopal polity, it lessened the power of the bishop. For an introduction of the Methodist concept of this office, see Moede, Office of Bishop in Methodism and Erickson, Christian Theology, 1081. For a more in-depth overview of the Methodist polity, consult Kern, Christianity as Organized, 493–520.
45. For a helpful overview of the Lutheran polity, see Kern, Christianity as Organized, 463–69.
46. Such as the Church of God (Anderson, IN) and the Church of God (Cleveland, TN).
47. Peter Toon prefers to call this form of church government synodical rather than episcopal. Anglican polity is considered to be somewhat of a “mid-range” on an episcopal scale, with Methodist churches being the simplest, authorizing only one level of bishops, and Catholic churches the most complex, with multiple layers of bishops. For an additional source on Anglican polity, see Toon, “Episcopalianism.”
48. Toon, “Episcopalianism,” 28.
49. Ibid., 24.
50. Potter, Church Government, 3, 24. By “Jewish church,” Potter, a nineteenth-century Archbishop of Canterbury, means Israel’s Old Testament covenant relationship with YHWH. Incidentally, having claimed that the Bible contains no blueprint for church organization, Toon resorts to following in the footsteps of earlier theologians from whom he had previously distanced himself by using the Old Testament in support of the episcopal ecclesiastical hierarchy. See Toon, “Episcopalian’s Response,” 102.
51. Potter, Church Government, 95, 101. Thus, inherent in the episcopal structure is the idea of different levels of ministry or different degrees of ordination (Erickson, Christian Theology, 1070).
52. Erickson, Christian Theology, 1070. Bishops are a quasi-independent body of teachers/overseers. There are differences among the denominations that practice some type of episcopal polity. In the Eastern Orthodox churches, the patriarch of Constantinople is primus inter pares (first among equals) and together with four other patriarchs, forms a pentarchy. Scandinavian Lutheranism has retained the title and office of “bishop,” but with less than clear claims to apostolic succession. In Methodism, the bishop is consecrated but not ordained, without apostolic succession, and functions with and through the annual conference. Garrett, Systematic Theology, 585.
53. A notion that can be traced back as far as the late second to early third centuries a.d. when Irenaeus of Lyons and Tertullian argued in their respective writings that apostolic succession was verifiable since there existed lists of bishops. See Irenaeus, “Irenaeus: Against Heresies,” 5.20.2;