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People think we're so blessed to live in an age when there are so many amazing resources available, yet it's precisely this mistaken attitude about technological resources 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.
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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'm no different from the rest.
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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.
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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?
1 comment:
This seems to be the tendency since the advent of television, cassette tapes, VHS tapes, and DVDs. I am not against instruction or testimony--I think we bloggers do the same thing, except (speaking for myself) we also blog as a forn of journaling, as a way to work through our own struggles and to record our own thoughts. But, to get back to my main point: Christianity has taken on the forms of entertainment and business profits through TV evangelism and book/DVD publishing. It has been a gradual deterioration of the old revival tent, of the traveling preacher in agriculatural America, of the prayer book, of literacy and academic endeavor.
I remember you wrote a post about the celebrity status of some religious personalities. A few of them say some good things some times; but there seems to be very little humility among some of them--so different from what St. Francis of Assisi would have said and done, or St. Seraphim of Sarov, or the Apostles. I am not judging them--because I think some people benefit from them and think they are doing the right thing--but I wonder what Christianity would be like without TV or DVDs? Or, without the massive sales of books and DVDs? I own a few of these kinds of books myself--but I am very selective and I bought them years ago before religion became such a big business; and there are some books nowadays which I would not read even if someone gave me the book for free.
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