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Reading the Bible Like a Grown-Up Child OK, I said. So Patsy Bylsma and I met every week for about an hour to read the Bible together. I think we started with Isaiah 40. We would read a chapter or so out loud to one another. Then wed stop and comment on what was written:
We would let our imaginations follow the narrative. Wed ask questions and not worry too much about conclusions. It started to be fun. We never knew what to expect next. And slowly we began to listen intently, to reread earlier passages, and to remember things. Wed hear this amazing covenant Lord with whom the poetic Isaiah was interacting speak things that were intriguing. We felt we could just take hold of God and pull for blessings. Read It for What It Is Thats because we often read the Bible for what its not and seldom read it for what it is. Heres what it is not: It is not a book you use to prove a point. Neither is it a book written to solve your personal problems. Heres what it is: It is the true story of what God has really done in history. It is a true account of how God works and what God wants done on earth. To read the Bible the way it is written, you have to give up your own agenda. You have to dwell in the text and see the whole woven tapestry of the Bible from Genesis to Revelation. When you do, you will find that God speaks to you and with you. Shaken by the Word At about day 8, I had worked myself through the text up to the powerful conclusion in chapter 8. Thats Pauls impassioned argument that we are saved from evil and sin only through faith in Jesus Christ. Paul says Christs Spirit indwells in us, causing us to cry out "Daddy!" to the living God. Suddenly I became afraid of the book in my hand as if it throbbed with the very presence of the holy Lord God Almighty. It was like a burning bush that has just spoken directly to me. So I put the Bible on a chair, got down on my knees and prayed, shaken and awed by the power of what was written there. That sense of the Bible has never left me. A Mistaken
Way of Reading the Bible Whatever the point is, if you read Scripture in order to prove it to your neighbor or opponent, you are treating the Bible like a lawyers codebook. Thats the way scribes, the Pharisees and Sadducees, and the trained lawyers and leaders of Gods people misread Gods book in Jesus day. They could twist texts to prove that dishonoring parents was obedience to the Lord (Matt. 15:1-9). They could argue immaturely about things like the laying on of hands while the church went apostate (Heb. 5:11-6:8). Jesus told them, in effect, "You search the Scriptures all rightto line up your insurance for eternal life. But you miss letting these booked writings convict you of my gracious, all-encompassing rule. If you did hear these words for what they are, they would instill selfless love of neighbor and exuberant praise of God in you as a body of saved sinners" (John 5:31-47). Dont get me wrong. You can base doctrines and lifestyle on Bible study. But to read the Bible like a prosecuting attorney, marshaling evidence and scoring points, is to squeeze the juice of compelling mystery out of Gods living Word. It is to leave it behind like a dried-out shell, as exhibit A or exhibit B. Whenever a do-it-yourself theology or even an official partisan theology calls on biblical texts as evidence to set somebody else straight, someone has lost the key to Bible reading. And that can lovelessly bind burdens on other peoples backs (Luke 11:37-54). Whats crucial is not to treat the Bible like a block of wood that you cut and shape and customize for your project. When you do that, you read the Bible with an obscuring veil over your eyes (2 Cor. 3:12-18). Reading the Bible argumentatively also ruins the fun and scariness of hearing Gods voice, which can caress your cheek lightly or suddenly hit you in the solar plexus. The Bible is Not for Solving
Problems And God often stoops to our weakness. Even if the Bible is not a collection of "Dear Abby" answers straight from Gods mouth, the Scriptures do dispense specific comfort or wisdom. It is also true that once a Scripture passage has seared your consciousness, you can recall its treasured message the way lovers remember special times of past embraces or track runners relive moments of memorable tension, success, or failure. Ill never forget Psalm 146:3 because in 1939, after a week of poor swimming lessons, the instructor threw me off the end of the pier. Then, as I went under the water for the third time, he had to jump in and rescue me. I stumbled home, crying under my breath, "Put no confidence in princes, nor for help on man depend." So special portions of Scripture become dear to a person. This is the way Christ remembered Scripture, in contrast to the devils prooftexting misuse of the Bible (Luke 4:1-13). But it is an error to reduce the Bible to recipes for ones needs. The Gideon hotel Bible lists places where strangers can find one-sentence answers to pinpointed questions. Because we are often in a hurry, the Family Altar devotional booklet offers a brief homily on a couple of verses to focus our attention for a few minutes. But the Bible is not a fast read. The Bible is not a pacifier, and it is not an inspired almanac of Gods solutions for what ails you. It is not the mother of all self-help books. And it was not written, I believe, to make us feel good. The Bible is, instead, a true account of what God has done in history and the way the Lord does things and wants things done on earth. So to read the Bible aright, you have to set aside your own agenda and hurried pace. You must delve into the book, dwell in the text, become acquainted with the whole woven tapestry of the Bible from Genesis to Revelation. You cant just pull on a single thread and be fair to Gods booked Word. Reading the Bible Rightly Id wager that if you read a book of the Bible for 10 days and nights straight, something extraordinary will happen to you too. It would help if you took along certain good notesMartin Luther on Galatians, John Calvin on Psalms, Cornelis Van Gelderen on the Older Testament prophets, Herman Ridderbos on the Gospels, Klaas Schilder on Revelation. Once you catch the spoken-word character of the Bible, Gods Word is a red-hot goad and a tender hug. The point is to actually hear Gods voicenot just scan the scripted wordsand meet the Lords ongoing, connected, and promising deeds happening now. If you dont have 10 days to spare, then sit down regularly with somebody who knows better than you do how to read the Bible. Begin discovering with them what is written there. This is what preaching used to be all about: understanding specific scriptural passages in their redemptive-historical context, focused on Jesus Christ. The Holy Spirit would then work out the Word flexibly in daily lives. I assume your Bible-reading teacher would have earphones tuned by Augustinian monks, by Luther and Calvin, by Abraham Kuyper and Schilder. This Bible-reading tradition of the Reformation breathes the vision of Jesus Christs rule over all of life. It knows in its bones the Melchizedekian calling of women, men, and children to be faithful, joyful stewards. I also assume your teacher will follow the Spirit in hearing Gods voice. That way, submissive to what is written (1 Cor. 4:6), you will be gentle with others. After all, once you confess that you "believe without doubt all things contained in the Scriptures" (Belgic Confession, Art. 5), you are free to relax in the communion of saints and let your imagination follow the text as a grown-up secure in someones love. And so you become a wide-eyed child again, hanging on the Gods words, so full of surprises for sinners. Reading the Bible, like swimming, is not easy until
you know how. And you cannot read the Bible rightly if you are in a hurry.
But once you take the time to learn how, no matter how evil you have been
and are, God will speak to you and with you. It is so exciting and
it can change your lifeto hear Gods voice intimately whispering
through the tones of Moses, Job, Deborah, Hannah, David, Asaph, Isaiah,
Mary and the apostles, Peter, Paul, and John. The Bible is an amazing
book of life and forgiveness when you read it like a grown-up-turned-child,
believing expectantly on your knees. |