“You do not have His word abiding in you, for
you do not believe Him whom He sent. You
search the Scriptures because you think in them you have eternal life…” -Jesus
There’s a lot of people who think
that salvation is found in the Scriptures.
I’m here to tell you, it isn’t true.
That’s a pretty shocking thing to
hear from a guy who’s still pretty much evangelical. I mean, aren’t we supposed to be all about
Sola Scriptura—salvation by Scripture alone?
As an Anabaptist, aren’t I supposed to believe that anyone can find
salvation, the truth and hope of God, by just picking up a Bible and reading
it?
Well, if you’re looking for me to
believe something just because its “evangelical” or “Anabaptist” I think you
will be pretty much disappointed in me.
Mind you, I certainly believe that the Bible holds the truth and that
this truth can lead you to salvation.
But the Bible isn’t salvation in and of itself. And clear-thinking people can get the
Scripture wrong. Really, really wrong.
Look at the Jewish leaders Jesus
was speaking to. They knew the
Scriptures quite well. Better than you
or I do, that’s for sure. But here is
Jesus, in John 5, telling them that all their Bible studies and memorization
and analyses were wrong. They were doing
all they could with the Bible, and they were dead wrong. Dead, as in God’s judgment dead. That’s pretty dead.
There’s a right and wrong way to
read the Bible. Let’s talk about the
right way, and we’ll look at some wrong ways.
How to read
the Bible:
You're Reading it Wrong |
1. Look for
God’s care
Whatever was written in earlier times was written for our instruction, so
that through perseverance and the encouragement of the Scriptures we might have
hope. (Rom 15:4 NAU)
People often look at the Scriptures and they find a
horrible God in the Old Testament and a loving, kind God in the New
Testament. But Scripture was not written
to terrify us, but to give us hope. God
is and always has been a God of love.
Yes, in the NT it says that God is love, that God so loved the world. But in the OT the foundational statement about
God is: “Yahweh, Yahweh God is gracious and compassionate, slow to anger,
abounding in lovingkindness…” (Exodus 34:6).
If we are looking for God’s hatred, then we are reading the Bible
wrong. Certainly the Bible says that God
hates sin, but he loves all people, no matter who they are, what they’ve done
or how much they personally irritate you.
We need to look for God’s deliverance, God’s compassion, God’s mercy and
God’s acts of salvation. If we look for
destruction or hatred, we are reading it wrong.
Throughout the Bible God is the Father, not the Destroyer.
Pastor Edwards, you're doing it wrong |
2. Look for
Jesus
And the Father who sent Me, He has testified of Me...You search the
Scriptures because you think that in them you have eternal life; it is these
that testify about Me. John 5:37-38
When we read
the Bible, we should be looking for Jesus, if we are reading it right. Some want to see Jesus’ death in every verse,
or look for Jesus’ presence behind each bush.
I think this is the wrong approach.
I think Jesus lead us to play the game “Where’s Jesus”in a couple
different ways:
a.
See Jesus as fulfillment
Jesus said that he came to fulfill the Scriptures. This means that he came to live out prophecies, but also to fix all that was wrong about the Bible. The Bible contains a lot of failures (one of the best things about Scripture), but for every failure, Jesus is there to be the success. David sinned, big time, Jesus was without sin. Israel didn’t trust in the Father, Jesus completely trusted. For every prophecy, for every failure, we should see Jesus as the answer.
Jesus said that he came to fulfill the Scriptures. This means that he came to live out prophecies, but also to fix all that was wrong about the Bible. The Bible contains a lot of failures (one of the best things about Scripture), but for every failure, Jesus is there to be the success. David sinned, big time, Jesus was without sin. Israel didn’t trust in the Father, Jesus completely trusted. For every prophecy, for every failure, we should see Jesus as the answer.
b. See Jesus’
principles
Jesus taught the Scriptures himself, and He
taught how the Scriptures should be used as a guidebook to life. Jesus taught us to look for mercy, for grace,
for love. We should re-interpret the
Bible as a way to understand what Jesus taught us.
Calvin, you're doing it wrong |
3. Look for
what we should do
Prove yourselves doers of the word, and not merely hearers who delude
themselves. (James 1:22)
Many people
see the Bible as a book of doctrines, of a list of things to believe. They want to find precisely what the Bible
teaches so that we can have our teachings in line, believe the right things,
and so be saved. However, the Bible
tells us that we should see the Scriptures as a way to live, a guide to a
particular lifestyle. If we are only
looking for things to believe, we are reading the Bible wrong. Rather, the Bible should change how we live,
point at what we should do in order to be pleasing to God, and to live in
harmony with each other.
Guess who's reading it wrong? |
4. Look for
love
If you had known what this means, 'I desire compassion and not sacrifice,'
you would not have condemned the innocent. (Matthew 12:7)
You search the Scriptures because in them you think you have eternal life... I know that you do not have the love of God in you. (John 5:39, 42)
And now we come back to the beginning. Even as we should be searching the Bible for
God’s compassion, so we should be seeking out our own. If we use the Bible as an excuse to hate or
to reject someone, we are reading it wrong.
The Bible is there, according to Jesus, to teach us to live in
compassion, grace, mercy and encouragement.
If we use the Bible to enact our prejudices, our oppressions, our greed
or our ambition, we are using it wrong.
According to Jesus, the context
of the Bible, the whole Bible, is love.
If we read hate in it, then we are reading wrong. Yes, there are acts of hatred, vengeance,
prejudice in the Bible. I won’t deny
it. But these acts should be even more
startling when we learn “God is love” and we are to love all people, even those
who do us wrong. Jesus is the
fulfillment of Scripture, and all scripture should point to God’s Gdeliverance
of the needy, and the hope that God gives to all of us.
Please, don’t read the Bible
wrong.
When I first started reading this I was thinking "Oh God not another attack on inerrancy". But after reading this I really enjoyed it and I think it is much needed.
ReplyDeleteSo after years of me telling you this stuff, you read one post and the coin drops in the slot?!?! [sigh] Wow.
DeleteWell, thank you, Theo :)
ReplyDeleteGood thoughts on the Jesus hermeneutic!
ReplyDeleteThere are very very few today who discern Christ's esoteric message concerning the quantum distinction between living by the Spirit of the Law and practicing the Letter of the Law. I think it would be best for all concerned that once the sacred scripture has done it's job of pointing us to God,that we then lay it down and allow the Holy Spirit to do His job. (mike)
ReplyDelete