10 Things I Wish Everyone Knew About the Bible
http://www.faithstreet.com/onfaith/2014/10/06/10-things-i-wish-everyone-knew-about-the-bible/34414
Pete Enns
Pete Enns
1. The Bible
doesn’t answer all — or even most — of our questions.
Many of
our questions, even some of the more pressing questions we face daily, aren’t
answered in the Bible. The Christian Bible isn’t an answer book but a story of
how Jesus answers for us the biggest question of all: what God is like.
2. The Bible isn’t like
God’s version of Apple’s “Terms and Conditions” agreement.
The
Bible doesn’t lay out before us God’s terms and conditions, where failure to
adhere to one clause in the middle of page 87 will cause a breach of contract
and banishment from God’s graces. The Bible is more like a grand narrative that
reorders our imaginations and holds out for us an alternate way of seeing
reality — with God at the heart of it rather than ourselves.
3. The Bible isn’t
a sourcebook for fighting culture wars.
The
Bible isn’t a club we use to gain political power or a way of forcing secular
culture to obey our rules. America is not God’s country and the Bible isn’t its
constitution. Stop it.
4. The Bible
doesn’t guarantee “success in life.”
Don’t
listen to those T.V. preachers. The Bible isn’t a step-by-step guide to
success, as if buried there are deep secrets for being happy, healthy, and
rich. It is a book that shows what dying to self and surrendering to God are
about. The Bible crushes our egos.
5. The Bible is
open to multiple interpretations, not just one meaning.
The
Bible is ancient and obscure, and its stories are “gapped” and flexible, which
allows—even demands—readers to interpret the Bible legitimately in various
ways. This is exactly what has been happening among Jews and Christians for
over 2,000 years.
6. The Bible
invites debate.
An
extremely important lesson for Christians to learn from Judaism is that the
Bible invites debate. In fact, it can’t avoid it, given how open it is to
multiple interpretations. Winning Bible feuds with others, getting to the right
answer, isn’t the end goal. The back-and forth with the Bible, and with God, is
where deeper faith is found.
7. The Bible
doesn’t “record” history objectively but interprets it.
The
biblical writers didn’t try to get history “right” in the same sense an author
of an academic textbook does. Instead, they interpreted the past in their place
and time, for their own communities, to answer their own questions of faith.
That’s why the Bible contains two very different “histories” of Israel and the
four Gospels that recount Jesus’ life differently.
8. The Bible
was written by Jews (and at least one Gentile in the New Testament) in ancient
times.
This
may sound too obvious to say, but it’s not. The biblical writers were ancient
writers expressing their faith in God using the vocabulary and concepts of
their ancient cultures. When we transpose our language and concepts onto
biblical writers, even if we are trying to understand the Bible, we will
actually distort it.
9. The Bible isn’t
the center of the Christian faith.
Some
form of the Bible has always been a part of the life of the church, but the
Bible isn’t the center of our faith. God is — or, for Christians, what God has
done in and through Jesus. The Bible doesn’t draw attention to itself, but to
God.
10. The Bible
doesn’t give us permission to speak for God.
At least not without a
lot of wisdom and humility behind it. Knowing the Bible is vital for Christian
growth, but it can also become intoxicating. We don’t always see as clearly as
we might think, and what we learn of God in the Bible should always be first
and foremost directed inward rather than aimed at others.
Comments
Post a Comment