IIIM Magazine Online, Volume 5, Number 30, August 25 through August 31, 2003 |
A LIE IS AN ABOMINATION UNTO THE LORD,
AND A VERY PRESENT HELP IN TROUBLE
by Ra McLaughlin
When, if ever, may a Christian lie? It is rather difficult to find two theologians or philosophers who agree entirely on the answer. Some argue that God's Word requires truth in all circumstances. Others insist that the Lord permits some dissembling, but often fail to agree on when such deception is permissible. The issue is not an easy one, and great minds stand on all sides of the question. In an attempt to add one more dissenting voice to the cacophony, this paper will briefly examine some of the critical biblical texts that have historically served as the flashpoints of the debate.
The Reformed tradition has generally handled the question of lying under the heading of the ninth commandment: "You shall not bear false witness against your neighbor."
THE NINTH COMMANDMENT
Strictly speaking, the ninth commandment does not forbid lying as such.
That the ninth commandment prohibits more than statements of falsehood can be inferred from the variety of language used in the Old Testament that identifies false witnessing. For example, although many English Bibles translate Exodus 20:16 and Deuteronomy 5:16 identically, the Hebrew is actually somewhat different. Specifically, each verse uses a different word for "false."
TRUTH TELLING IN GENERAL
The Westminster Larger Catechism rightly states that the ninth commandment requires, among other things, the "appearing and standing for the truth; and from the heart, sincerely, freely, clearly, and fully, speaking the truth, and only the truth, in matters of judgment and justice, and in all other things whatsoever."
In support of this notion, Scripture records many statements, absolute in form if not in meaning, that declare God's opposition to lying and falsehood.
As soon as one begins to define such terms as "truth" and "lie," however, the waters muddy — it is much easier to agree on how to state the rule than on what the rules means. For example, consider John Murray'
"‘The true' in the usage of John is not so much the true in contrast with the false, or the real in contrast with the fictitious. It is the absolute as contrasted with the relative, the ultimate as contrasted with the derived, the eternal as contrasted with the temporal, the permanent as contrasted with the temporary, the complete in contrast with the partial, the substantial in contrast with the shadowy... It is to miss the thought entirely to suppose that truth is here contrasted with the false or the untrue."17
It is this definition, that "the true" is not that which is factually precise or accurate,
In a similarly confusion fashion, Murray argues, "We think very superficially and naively if we suppose that no wrong is entailed in misrepresentation of fact."
"Does such a statement ... really articulate the truth, even though the speaker anticipates and desires the listener's mistaken interpretation? This claim makes little sense if a statement represents not just an expression of thought but a means of expressing that thought to others."27
Imagine the following hypothetical case: Mrs. Simeon turns up dead with a knife in her back shortly after she and her husband engage in a rather heated round of fisticuffs. Mr. Simeon stands accused of murdering his wife, but in fact he could not have committed the crime. Immediately after losing the fight with his wife, Mr. Simeon drank himself into a stupor at the local inn, and was there observed by Mr. Levi. In the trial, Mr. Levi is called to testify regarding the violent nature of Mr. Simeon's relationship with his wife, and he does so faithfully, explaining Mr. Simeon's violent tendencies, as well as Mr. Simeon's hatred for his wife. However, when asked about the events of the night in question, he declines to comment. Mr. Levi fails to volunteer the information that could exonerate Mr. Simeon. He has told no untruth; he has only concealed truth. Is he guilty of bearing misleading testimony? Does his testimony tend to serve justice or to pervert it? In point of fact, his testimony tends to sway the judicial findings against Mr. Simeon, thereby perverting justice. His testimony signifies a falsehood, even though all it contains is perfectly faithful to the truth. None of its constituent parts are lies, but taken as a whole this conglomeration of truth functions as a lie by omission.
Augustin as well has offered some rather confusing views of truth and falsehood. For Augustin, John's statement that "no lie is of the truth"
"prophetical speeches and actions, to be referred to the understanding of those things which are true; which are covered as it were with a garb of figure on purpose to exercise the sense of the pious inquirer, and that they may not become cheap by lying bare and on the surface."32
In short, they were parables; Jacob was prophesying, not deceiving. Aside from its total counter-intuitiveness and its violence to the actual literary genre of the text, the hardest part of this argument to swallow is that such a brilliant mind as Augustin actually owned it.
These examples from Murray and Augustin demonstrate that pinning down definitions for such important terms as "lie" and "truth" is not an easy task. In this author's opinion, many who wish to maintain an unbreakable prohibition on lying have so diluted the applicability of that prohibition that their stance against lying is more permissive than the stance of those who define lying broadly and admit to exceptions. By using such strained hermeneutics and equivocation, Murray and Augustin fling open the door to deconstructive tactics that can ultimately justify far too many lies.
LYING IN LIMITED CIRCUMSTANCES
The problem with the broader definition of lying is that so many biblical examples seem to indicate that God occasionally favors lying. Indeed, God actually does it himself once in a while. This would seem to throw Scripture into a state of self-contradiction. "After all," it is argued, "God cannot lie."
God's Actions and Commands
Perhaps the most troublesome texts in this debate are those that indicate that God himself is willing to lie. If God is willing to lie, how can he be trusted? In this regard the words of Nietzsche have new meaning: "I am affected, not because you have deceived me, but because I can no longer believe in you."
Complicating matters is the fact that the Bible declares God's inability to lie. Murray takes this to mean that "all untruth or falsehood ... is a contradiction of that which God is."
"God, desiring even more to show to the heirs of the promise the unchangeableness of His purpose, interposed with an oath, so that by two unchangeable things in which it is impossible for God to lie, we who have taken refuge would have strong encouragement to take hold of the hope set before us."41
Other texts that state God's inability to lie, however, mention no explicit promise, such as: "God is not a man, that He should lie, Nor a son of man, that He should repent";
More importantly, Scripture contains examples of times when God has lied or dealt deceivingly. Two examples should suffice. First, 1 Kings 22:19-23
"Micaiah said, ‘Therefore, hear the word of the LORD. I saw the LORD sitting on His throne, and all the host of heaven standing by Him on His right and on His left. ‘The Lord said, "Who will entice Ahab to go up and fall at Ramoth-gilead?" And one said this while another said that. Then a spirit came forward and stood before the Lord and said, "I will entice him." The Lord said to him, "How?" And he said, "I will go out and be a deceiving spirit in the mouth of all his prophets." Then He said, "You are to entice him and also prevail. Go and do so." Now therefore, behold, the Lord has put a deceiving spirit in the mouth of all these your prophets; and the Lord has proclaimed disaster against you.'"47
Many explanations of this passage have been offered that remove from it any idea that God commanded the spirit to deceive the people, despite the fact that this is the plain reading of the text. A sampling follows:
"It is true that ... God seems to do more than simply permit the deception... What else, however, does this mean than that, as God's eternal plan contemplates both the existence and the development of evil, so it provides for its accomplishment by the foreordained permission of evil on the occasions when and in the ways in which evil can by its own working serve the divine purpose? ... He takes evil already there, evil actually in manifestation ... and then so overrules the tendency of this evil that of itself, though contrary to its own intention, it advances truth."48
"‘Go and do it' (i.e. deceive Ahab's false prophets) signifies only permission, not a command or sponsorship."49
"The prophets were self-deceived, but this would be expressed by saying that Jehovah deceived them."50
"It must not be understood as declaring what really took place in heaven, but as a vision ... as in a parable."51
The first of these explanations is far from adequate. In the first place, it locates God's foreordination of the means of evil rightly in his eternal counsel, but then suggests that such eternal counsel "takes evil that is already there." This is a theological impossibility. Before God has ordained the evil, the evil is not "already there." God's eternal counsel is not reactive to foreseen history.
The second explanation, that God's gives only his permission, denies that God commissions the lie. Really, it is rather amazing to construe this account in such a way that God does not "sponsor" the lie. The actual picture here is that God himself appeals to his military counsel for ways in which Ahab might be deceived into taking the field; God surveys the suggested options; God chooses the option he finds most appropriate; and God commissions his heavenly officer to carry out the mission.
The third explanation is also lacking. At worst, it does not correspond to any other prophetic vision, nor does it appropriately recognize God's sovereignty: it effectively denies that Micaiah was present in the heavenly court and that God had anything to do with the false prophecy of the false prophets. At best, it may suggest the means the spirit used to cause the prophets to prophesy falsely: the spirit may have caused the prophets to deceive themselves. Even if this were true, however, it would not disprove that God's actions caused this self-deception, or that God sanctioned the utterance of the false prophecies.
The fourth explanation, that Micaiah relates a parable and not a factual vision, is a literary possibility if only the vision itself is considered. However, even as a literary possibility it stands against the weight of all other such visions of prophets entering the heavenly court which were not parabolic. In any event, this explanation makes no sense in light of the immediately preceding context:
"Micaiah said, ‘As the Lord lives, what the Lord says to me, that I shall speak.' When he came to the king, the king said to him, ‘Micaiah, shall we go to Ramoth-gilead to battle, or shall we refrain?' And he answered him, ‘Go up and succeed, and the Lord will give it into the hand of the king.'"56
Regardless of what happened in the heavenly court, Micaiah swore "as the Lord lives" that he would speak what the Lord told him to speak. When Micaiah spoke, he lied. So then, the Lord commissioned not only the lies of the false prophets, but Micaiah's lie as well. Micaiah's lie cannot be explained by any of the other suggested options. It makes sense only if it draws its cue from God's instructions in the heavenly court.
The reasonable conclusion to draw from this text is that God himself commissioned both Micaiah and the spirit to engage in lying and deceptive practices in order to accomplish his will regarding Ahab. God's providential prerogatives include initiating and commanding statements that the Bible classifies as lies.
As a second example, consider that Jesus also engaged in deceptive language when he spoke in parables for the express purpose of withholding a saving knowledge of the gospel from those to whom understanding had not been granted.
It is also difficult to get around Jesus' assertion that these hardened people were essentially blind and deaf. The implication seems to be that even though the parable could otherwise have been understandable, their hardness of heart had rendered them incapable of comprehension. Jesus could have spoken in such as way as to reveal the mysteries of heaven to these individuals, but he chose not to do so. He knew the words that would soften their hearts and pierce the veil they had placed over their minds, but he chose instead to speak to them in ways he knew they would not understand. To the disciples, he spoke differently.
As in 1 Kings 22, God orchestrated Jesus' veiled speech. But unlike in 1 Kings 22 where others executed the lie, here God's perfect and holy Son Jesus was the active agent — no passing the blame to a "spirit" or "false prophets." Other examples of this principle can be found in such texts as 1 Samuel 16 (mentioned above) and 2 Thessalonians 2:11, and perhaps John 7:8-10.
In summary of this point, the fact that God himself engages in and sanctions lies and deception indicates that not all falsehood is contrary to God's character. If not all lies and falsehood are contrary to God's character, and the Law is the expression of God's character, then not all lies and falsehood are prohibited by scriptural command. To demonstrate this principle in further action, some few mentions of God's reactions to lies told by biblical characters are in order.
God's Reactions to Lies Told by Biblical Heroes and Heroines
Another way to perceive God's attitude toward lying is to survey his reactions to those people who lie. It needs be said at the outset of this investigation that all biblical Characters save the members of the godhead are flawed, and are to be expected to sin. It is also admitted that God often blesses his people despite their sin. Nevertheless, it is literarily apparent that in some instances God approves of lies and deceptions carried out by his people. One of the most infamous instances of a liar blessed by God is Rahab, who was blessed and praised for her protection of Joshua's spies.
The story of Rahab and the spies is well known: Joshua sent spies into the Promised Land, and especially Jericho. When their presence was discovered, the spies sought refuge with Rahab. In exchange for the safety of herself and her family, Rahab hid the spies and sent those hunting them on a false path, allowing the spies to escape. Leaving aside the fact that spying is itself an act of deception, the verses in contention are those in which Rahab misled the king's men:
"The king of Jericho sent word to Rahab, saying, ‘Bring out the men who have come to you, who have entered your house, for they have come to search out all the land.' But the woman had taken the two men and hidden them, and she said, ‘Yes, the men came to me, but I did not know where they were from. It came about when it was time to shut the gate at dark, that the men went out; I do not know where the men went. Pursue them quickly, for you will overtake them.'"64
All agree that Rahab lied and that the Lord subsequently blessed her; the issue is the precise correlation between her lie on the one hand, and her blessing and praise on the other hand. Rahab herself was saved from destruction, along with her family, and allowed to become part of the nation of Israel
"It should not go unnoticed that the New Testament Scriptures which commend Rahab for her faith and works make allusion solely to the fact that she received the spies and sent them out another way... It is a strange theology that will insist that the approval of her faith and works in receiving the spies and helping them to escape must embrace the approval of all the actions associated with her praiseworthy conduct."70
He offers three refutations for those who argue that Rahab's lie was integral to the escape of the spies: 1) Rahab's lie was not indispensable; 2) Rahab's lie is not justified simply because it worked; and 3) justifying Rahab's lie would result in justifying Jacob's deception of Isaac. None of these refutations rules out the possibility that Rahab's lie was acceptable to God (or that Jacob's lie
Appealing to Jacob's lie begs the question of the acceptability of lying, and is largely irrelevant to the text at hand. On the other hand, it should be admitted that Rahab's lie was not justified simply because it worked. Nevertheless, it is true that her lie was included in the means by which Rahab saved the spies, and it may well have been indispensable. If, when the king of Jericho demanded that she turn over the spies, Rahab had simply refused to comply, is one to imagine that the king would have allowed her to harbor them? If Rahab had not persuaded the king's men that the spies were no longer on the premises, it is hard to conceive of any means by which she could have prevented the king's men from searching her house and discovering the spies. It is reasonable to think that Rahab considered the lie to be indispensable, and not to find fault with her evaluation of the matter.
Further, that Scripture's references to Rahab's actions do not mention the lie when praising her is not compelling proof that her lie was not praiseworthy. Is one to assume that Joshua 6:17 and 6:25 do not praise Rahab for receiving the spies or for sending them out another way simply because these verses do not mention these acts? Does Hebrews 11:31 permit the condemnation of Rahab for sending the spies out another way because it does not praise this act? Of course not. An act is not condemned simply because it is not explicitly praised. The fact that none of the biblical passages praising Rahab's actions lists all the things for which the Bible praises her indicates that there is an important literary dynamic at work that Murray fails to recognize: each passage employs a form of synecdoche. The authors of Joshua, Hebrews and James all respected and praised Rahab for receiving the spies, hiding them, and sending them out another way, but each one did so by mentioning only part of Rahab's actions. The part stood for the whole; the item(s) mentioned represented the whole collage of actions and speech that were instrumental in Rahab's protection of the spies, and Rahab's lie was a tile in this collage.
Now, it is true that God's ability to bring good from evil
Moreover, Rahab was explicitly praised for hiding the spies,
Examples of such biblical praise and blessing on people in reward for things they accomplish through lies and deceit are quite numerous. For example, Jael received praise for deceiving and killing Sisera,
Guidelines for Praiseworthy Christian Lies
The satirical title of this paper is a quote from Adlai E. Stevenson,
For Douma, "A lie of necessity may be used only in dire circumstances, that is to say, only in situations where a life is at stake, either our neighbor's or ours."
It seems only appropriate that since this investigation of the obligation to tell the truth began with the ninth commandment, it return there for guidance on when to lie. The principle effected by that statute is that in a court of law a witness must say and do what is necessary to secure justice for his neighbor. That application may legitimately be extended to require all men to pursue justice for each other, and to speak truth with one another, always with the goal of pursuing justice. As Douma himself admits, a "lie of necessity" involves:
"lying for my neighbor's benefit. This kind of lying intends no harm against my neighbor ... but the opposite — to help him. This is not a lie against my neighbor, but for his benefit. How could this possibly violate the ninth commandment?"86
The ninth commandment, however, does not only have authority in capital cases; it has authority in all cases. Conversely, it would seem that a lie which serves justice better than the truth serves justice ought to be acceptable in all cases. It is not altogether clear why a "dire circumstance" would be necessary in order to make justice more important than factual testimony.
Of course, there are huge caveats that must be issued after making such a bold statement in favor of lying in all types of cases. First, it is often not up to the individual to determine what justice is. For example, in many cases the authority to interpret the law belongs to the state, not to the individual. This implies that when the authority for determining the issue resides with the state, individuals are not free to determine when they may and may not lie. Many individuals feel that justice will not be served if they tell the truth, and this may in fact be the case from God's perspective. Nevertheless, when God has delegated authority to the state to make such determinations, it is the Christian's responsibility to submit to the state.
In some matters in which God has not delegated authority to the state, he has delegated it to another body or figure. For example, God gives parents authority over their children in "all things,"
Second, a Christian's motive in lying is terribly important. The Bible regularly condemns lying on the basis that it flows from malice, evil and hypocrisy.
Third, a Christian ought not to violate his conscience. If a Christian believes that lying would be wrong in a particular instance, he is not to lie in that instance. It may be that the lie itself would have been appropriate apart from the Christian's conscience, but his decision to lie against his conscience is an act of rebellion against God. Otherwise, the lie cannot be praiseworthy, for all acts pleasing to God must be done in faithfulness to him.
Fourth, it takes great wisdom to know when a lie actually will serve justice better than the truth will. Such wisdom can and ought to be gained by diligent study of Scripture,
Fifth, there may be times when justice is not the highest good. For example, the death of Christ was not just, but it was the highest good. Christ set his face toward Jerusalem
These guidelines are all quite general — there may be circumstances that require Christians to act in ways that these guidelines might not predict. Hopefully, they are biblical, submissive to Scripture, designed to further justice and to honor God. Whatever standards and guidelines one adopts, it should be clear that Scripture allows Christians to lie in certain circumstances, and even, dare it be said, requires the occasional lie.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Bok, Sissela. Secrets. New York: Pantheon Books, 1982.
Boling, Robert G. Joshua. Garden City: Doubleday & Co., 1982.
Bonhoeffer, Dietrich. Ethics. New York: The Macmillan Co., 1949.
Bovati, Pietro. Re-Establishing Justice. Sheffield: JSOT Press, 1994.
Butler, Trent C. Joshua. Waco: Word Books, 1983.
Calvin, John. Commentaries on the Book of Joshua. Grand Rapids: Baker Book House, 1993.
________. Commentary on a Harmony of the Evangelists, Matthew, Mark, and Luke, Volume 1. Grand Rapids: Baker Book House, 1993.
Carson, D.A. "Matthew." The Expositor's Bible Commentary. Grand Rapids: Zondervan Publishing House, 1984, 3-599.
Childs, Brevard S. The Book of Exodus. Philadelphia: The Westminster Press, 1974.
Christensen, Duane L. Deuteronomy 1-11. Dallas: Word Books, 1991.
Conzelmann, Hans. yeu/doj ktl. in Theological Dictionary of the New Testament, vol. 9. Gerhard Friedrich, ed. Grand Rapids: William B. Eerdmans Publishing Co., 1974.
Craigie, Peter C. The Book of Deuteronomy. Grand Rapids: William B. Eerdmans Publishing Co., 1976.
Douma, J. The Ten Commandments. Phillipsburg: P&R Publishing, 1996.
Durham, John I. Exodus. Waco: Word Books, 1987.
Fitzgerald, John T. "Let Your Yes Be Yes." Christian Century, July 28-August 4, 1999, 732-733.
Fleming, Julia. "Deception by Means of Incomplete Truth: An Ethical Evaluation." Josephinum Journal of Theology, Vol. 6, No. 1, Winter/Spring, 1999, 21-30.
Freund, Richard A. "Lying and Deception in the Biblical and Post-Biblical Judaic Tradition." Scandinavian Journal of the Old Testament. Jan, 1991, 45-61.
Jordan, James B. Primeval Saints [draft]. Niceville: Biblical Horizons, 1988.
________. The Law of the Covenant. Tyler: Institute for Christian Economics, 1984.
Kaiser, Walter C., Jr. Toward Old Testament Ethics. Grand Rapids: Zondervan Publishing House, 1983.
Kaufman, Stephen A. "The Second Table of the Decalogue and the Implicity Categories of Ancient Near Eastern Law." Love & Death in the Ancient Near East. Guilford: Four Quarters Publishing Co., 1987, 111-116.
Machiavelli, Niccolo. The Prince. Toronto: Bantam Books, 1966.
Mansfield, Ken. "Rahab and the Spies," parts 1 & 2. IIIM Magazine Online, Vol. 2, No. 24, June 12 to June 18, 2000, and Vol. 2, No. 26, June 26 to July 2, 2000. https://thirdmill.org/files/english/html/ot/OT.h.Mansfield.Josh.2.1.html; https://thirdmill.org/files/english/html/ot/OT.h.Mansfield.Josh.2.2.html.
Marshall, Ronald F. "Bonhoeffer's Schoolboy." Lutheran Forum, Vol. 33, No. 2, 61-62.
Mayhue, Richard L. "False Prophets and the Deceiving Spirit." The Master's Seminary Journal, Vol. 3, No. 1, Spring, 1992, 135-163.
The Merriam-Webster Dictionary of Quotations. Springfield: Merriam-Webster, Inc., 1992.
Miller, Patrick D. Deuteronomy. Louisville: John Knox Press, 1990.
Murray, John. Principles of Conduct. Grand Rapids: William B. Eerdmans Publishing Co., 1957.
Nietzsche, Friedrich. Beyond Good and Evil. New York: The Modern Library.
Pines, Shlomo. "Truth and Falsehood Versus Good and Evil." Studies in Maimonides. Harvard University Press, 1990, 95-157.
Pratt, Richard L., Jr. 1 and 2 Chronicles. Ross-shire: Christian Focus Publications, 1998.
Sarna, Nahum M. Exodus. Philadelphia: The Jewish Publication Society, 1991.
Schaff, Philip, ed. Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers, First Series, vol. 3. Peabody: Hendrickson Publishers, Inc., 1994.
Tigay, Jeffrey H. Deuteronomy. Philadelphia: The Jewish Publication Society, 1996.
Verhey, Allen. "Is Lying Always Wrong?" Christianity Today, May 24, 1999, 68.
Weinfeld, Moshe. Deuteronomy 1-11. New York: Doubleday, 1991.
The Witness: Is It Ever Okay To Lie? Vol. 79, No. 4, April, 1996.
1 .Exod. 20:16; Deut. 5:20. All biblical quotes are from the NASB, 1995 edition.
2. Murder, adultery, theft, lying frequently appear together in Ancient Near-Easter legal codes pertaining to testimony and evidence gathering, and to lying in general, as in Hammurapi 1-5 and Ur-Nammu 25-27 (cf. Jer. 7:9; Hos. 4:2). The ninth commandment appearing with the sixth through eighth commandments may thus corroborate the assertion that its primary referent is juridical. Kaufman, 111-114; Childs, 424.
3. Durham, 295-296; Sarna, 114; Douma, 313; Miller, 93.
4. Tigay, 71; Bovati, 266.
5. Craigie, 162.
6. shqr in Exod. 20:16; shw' in Deut. 5:20.
7. rkyl and rgl appear in contexts which demonstrate that the offense is particularly related to jurisprudence, or in contexts which indicate that the Ten Commandments may be particularly in mind. For example, in Ezek. 22:1-12 the Lord rebukes Israel for violations of nearly every one of the Ten Commandments, suggesting that the reference to slander pertains to the ninth commandment rather than to a more general form of slander. The language of crimes of the slanderers in Ezek. 22:9 parallels that of the crimes of the rulers in Ezek. 22:6, also implying a legal or juridical force to the slander. The same is true in Ps. 15:3, where slander is compared to doing evil to one's neighbor and on par with taking a bribe (Ps. 15:5). Cf. Bovati, 303-304.
8. It is beyond the scope of this paper to demonstrate every such word, but the typical word groups include kzb (e.g. Prov. 6:19; 14:5,25; 19:5,9) and kchsh (e.g. Lev. 6:2-3; Hos. 4:2).
9. WLC, Answer 144.
10. E.g. Lev. 19:2; Matt. 5:44-48.
11. The primary responsibility of God's people is to deal in truth with each other. "Neighbor" is first and foremost the one with whom exists a reciprocal relationship of covenant community obligation. Craigie, 124; Childs, 424. Cf. Zech. 8:16; Eph. 4:25.
12. Cf. Durham, 298-299. It also a reasonable application of Jesus' corrective definition of "neighbor" in the Parable of the Good Samaritan (Luke 10:29-37) to extend this obligation to all mankind.
13. E.g. Prov. 6:16-19; 12:22; John 8:44; Rev. 21:8.
14. Machiavelli, 63.
15. Murray is a primary apologist for the position that Christians must never lie.
16. John 14:6; Murray also appeals in this context to John 1:14,17. Murray, 123.
17. Murray, 123.
18. Cf. Verhey, 68: "When the Bible uses this image it does not refer simply to some correspondence between word and thought. It refers, rather, to something like troth, as in the trustworthiness and faithfulness that come with betrothal." See also Kittel, 602, on John 8:44; 1 John 1:6 and 1 John 2:21-22 where lying is unbelief, the denial of the confession of Christ; and Bonhoeffer, 369.
19. Murray, 123-125.
20. Murray, 125.
21. Murray, 133.
22. Murray, 134.
23. Murray, 133.
24 .In this chapter, the Lord instructs Samuel to anoint one of Jesse's sons as king, with the explicit counsel that Samuel is to conceal the real meaning for his visit. Samuel is to let it be known to Saul that Samuel is visiting Jesse in order to sacrifice to the Lord. The sacrifice is real, but is not the reason for the visit.
25 .Murray, 139.
26 .Murray, 140.
27 .Fleming, 25-26; cf. Douma, 328.
28 .Cf. Bonhoeffer, 369.
29 .1 John 2:21.
30 .Contra Mendacium 31; NPNF, 495. Even here Augustin's hermeneutic is inconsistent with his understanding of other verses in absolute form which he understands to carry implicit conditions and exceptions; see Douma, 326.
31 .Gen. 27 contains the account in which Jacob disguised himself as Esau, and told Isaac that he was Esau, in order to steal or usurp the blessing Isaac intended to bestow in Esau.
32 .Contra Mendacium 24; NPNF, 491-492.
33 ."What served Augustine only as an exegetical tool became the basis for a later distinction between lying per se and various techniques for concealing the truth. This concealment played upon ambiguities, either of the words themselves or of the phrase within a given context. The most famous of these techniques was the broad mental reservation, ‘the use of a form of words which express the interior thought and could be known to express it, if the hearer were sensible, prudent, reasonable and knew the circumstances,'" Fleming, 23.
34 .I.e. that all forms of deception, misleading and concealment are effective lies.
35 .E.g. Murray, 125.
36 .Nietzsche, 92.
37 .Cf. Heb. 11:6.
38 .Murray, 125.
39 .This is the very thing affirmed in the doctrine of God's immutability.
40 .Tit. 1:2.
41 .Heb. 6:17-18.
42 .Num. 23:19.
43 .1 Sam. 15:29.
44 .Num. 23:19 refers to God's covenant oaths with Israel; 1 Sam. 15:29 follows God's sign of the tearing of Samuel's robe.
45 .nchm is the Hebrew verb in question here. Although its semantic range includes meanings such as "comfort," "have compassion" and "sorrow," God is the subject of this verb in many instances where it clearly refers to "change of mind" or "regret," e.g. Gen. 6:6,7; Exod. 32:14; 1 Sam. 15:11.
46 .Paralleled in 2 Chr. 18:18-22.
47 .Both Murray and Augustin are curiously silent with regard to this text.
48 .Greene, Classical Evangelical Essays, 210-211; quoted in Kaiser, 257; Kaiser concurs.
49 .Kaiser, 256.
50 .Farrar, F.W., The First Book of Kings, New York: A.C. Armstrong and Son, 1903, 492-493; quoted in Mayhue, 141.
51 .Edersheim, Alfred, The History of Israel and Judah, 69; quoted in Mayhue, 144.
52 .Cf. WSC 7; WLC 12; WCF 3.1.
53 .Cf. Pratt, 326: "Prophets viewed and participated in the activities of the court of God. They later reported the deliberations of the divine assembly to people on earth."
54 .pth is part of the Old Testament's vocabulary of lying; Bovati, 304.
55 .Cf. Pratt, 326. Many dispute that God's heavenly officer is the spirit in question (Cf. Mayhue, 148), but the identity of the spirit is not material to this argument.
56 .1 Kings 22:14-15.
57 .Matt. 13:11-15.
58 .Matt. 13:18ff.
59 .Matt. 13:19.
60 .Matt. 13:19.
61 .Carson, 307. Cf. Calvin, Harmony..., 102-103.
62 .This is to say nothing of the many military deceptions commissioned by God, which are material to the case of establishing the acceptability of some lies.
63 .Josh. 2.
64 .Josh. 2:3-5.
65 .Josh. 6:23-25.
66 .Josh. 6:17,25; Heb. 11:31; Jam. 2:25.
67 .Josh. 6:17,25.
68 .Heb. 11:31; Jam. 2:25.
69 .Jan. 2:25.
70 .Murray, 138. Cf. Calvin, Joshua, 47. Contrast Douma, 327: "To us it seems impossible to claim (as many have claimed) that the midwives and Rahab were praised for their faith, but not for their lies. For their faith was expressed precisely in their works. It is an abstraction to disconnect the effect of their acts from the path they took to achieve that effect."
71 .Gen. 27.
72 .Jordan argues well that Jacob's lie was acceptable as an act of lex talionis; Jordan, Primeval..., 55-60. Other arguments might be advanced to defend Jacob, as well, not the least of which is the literary perspective that Jacob was the hero and patriarch of the nation to whom Genesis was written — his actions secured for Israel the very Promised Land they were leaving Egypt to possess, and likely would have been heralded as a praiseworthy victory. This is quite similar to the way Americans' laud the actions of such men as George Washington, who was no doubt thought quite a sinful rebel by the English at the time of the American Revolution.
73 .E.g., Gen. 50:20; Rom. 8:28.
74 .Josh. 6:17.
75 ."Whether the misleading occurs through words, deeds, or gestures makes no difference in principle," Douma, 328.
76 .Judg. 4:17ff.; 5:24ff. Note that the sixth commandment has exceptions too, indicating that statements in absolute form are not necessarily absolute in meaning, even in the Ten Commandments.
77 .Gen. 25:31ff.
78 .Gen. 27.
79 .Exod. 1:15-21.
80 .The Merriam-Webster Dictionary of Quotations. Springfield: Merriam-Webster, Inc., 1992, 225.
81 .Prov. 12:22.
82 .Ps. 46:1, loosely applied.
83 .Douma, 330.
84 .Bonhoeffer, 372.
85 .Bonhoeffer, 367-368.
86 .Douma, 325-326.
87 .Rom. 13:1ff.; 1 Pet. 2:18ff.
88 .Col. 3:20.
89 .1 Cor. 5:4-5; Eph. 5:20; 1 Tim. 5:17.
90 .1 Cor. 7:4.
91 .Ps. 78:36-37; Prov. 6:16-19; 10:18; 12:22; 17:4; 26:28; 1 Tim. 4:2.
92 .Heb. 11:31.
93 .Matt. 13:11-12.
94 .Matt. 13:14-15.
95 .1 Kings 21:19; 22:38.
96 .Rom. 14:23; Heb. 11:6.
97 .2 Tim. 2:15; 3:16-17.
98 .Jam. 1:5.
99 .Prov. 1:5; 12:15; 19:20.
100 .1 Kings 22:20.
101 .Matt. 13:11.
102 .Luke 9:51.
103 .Acts 2:23.
104 .E.g. mercy, Jam. 2:13, though again it is often not within the Christian's authority to determine when mercy ought to be preferred over justice.