A Christian brother wrote,
I’m not saying we should stop new believers from reading the bible itself. But we’re so blessed to live in age when there are so many amazing resources available. We should certainly be discerning in what we choose. But it seems like we want people to use a microscope to analyze God’s word in tiny details when it’s equally important to give them a telescope to see the grand, vast, picture.
It's certainly wrong to study the bible as one studies a specimen under the microscope, except perhaps for bible scholars (if there really is such a thing). It's equally wrong to pretend to give people "the big picture" by not making them study at all but instead by entertaining them. Both these approaches to the written Word of God are ways to escape the main function of scripture, and that is, to bring us face to face with our sin, and with our Saviour.
We say we study the bible, but actually the bible is studying us. We may think we are rightly dividing the Word of God, but actually the Word of God is rightly dividing us. That is, if we let Him. (Jesus is the Word of God. The bible is His icon.) Rightly dividing us from our sin, from the world and all its pomp, and from the power of the evil one.
Back to the brother's statement that "we’re so blessed to live in age when there are so many amazing resources available," it's precisely this mistaken attitude about the technological "resources" available to us that has changed Christianity from a living faith and close walk with the Lord to a kind of dinner theatre about such a faith and walk.
We have become detached from the Word of God like a doomed fetus becomes detached from the uterus and then dies, which the mother may not discover for days, but which can kill her as well if it is not discovered in time. That mother is the Church, that fetus is the believers who do not live in the Word but only "watch a movie" about it and think they've "got it."
To live in the Word of God is to make the holy and God-breathed scriptures, the bible, our daily bread, our constant companion, our very home.
This means never being without it, physically, when possible, even if it's only a slim New Testament and Psalms tucked into a pocket.
This means rising in the morning with the Word on our lips, praying and thanking the Lord in the words of psalms and prophecies, not just five times a day as Muslims do, but all through the day (and night).
This means turning not to vain and sometimes vile entertainments (making excuses for the profanity in them), but turning to the bible for refreshment, for relaxation, for recreation.
No, you can play sports, go on hikes, collect stamps, read novels, write poetry, play the guitar, have an electric train set, or even a speedboat… but what’s on your mind, really?
I am not different from the rest. I often have to yank my attention back to where it belongs, visit the mansion that Christ my Lord and Saviour has prepared for me in His Father’s house. What? You thought He was talking about the heavenly mansion? Well, yes, of course, that one too. But the study of and meditation on the inspired words of the divine and holy scriptures, that is like a foyer leading into the heavenly mansion, and a foyer is part of the house, isn't it?
Paradox upon paradox, that the churches that claim most strongly to be centered on the bible have the most trouble cleaving to it, but find ever more numerous by-paths and supposed short-cuts to keep them off the One True Highway to Heaven—the Word of God.
Who is Max Lucado? A better question is, why is Max Lucado? And why all these dozens of “Christian” authors and their books? Isn’t the Word of God in the form of the bible enough for us? Isn’t the Holy Spirit here with us to help us understand it? But how can we hope to be disciples of the Lord, if we do not stay constantly at His side?
And how do we do this?
By “never letting the sacred volume out of our hand” as Jerome says.
Instead of expanding your facilities and upgrading your film stash and other technological enhancements, get back to the bible, teaching it, studying it, learning it by heart, worshipping with it, praying it, prophesying with it, evangelizing with it, healing with it, feeding on it and living in it.
There is no other divine scripture on earth, no other literature whose sum is greater than the total of its parts, no other book so alive that it doesn’t need to be enhanced with movies and computer games.
And we think that we can do better than the living God who provided this crown for us?
Thursday, June 4, 2009
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1 comment:
Amen and this is a poignant thought, worthy!
Actually I also deal with this kind of mindsets here in campus. Instead of living and loving the icon of The Word, there is a tendency to pretend that this precious crown is simply to be an object of analysis or 'specimen' under microscope, and the very thing said here.
Indeed, this post is excellent!
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