Sermon for North Hill Adventist Fellowship
9/15/2012
Text; John 6:33. The Spirit alone
gives eternal life. Human effort accomplishes nothing. And the very
words I have spoken to you are spirit and life.
This is a revelation from Jesus Christ,
which God gave him to show his servants the events that must soon
take place. He sent an angel to present this revelation to his
servant John, who faithfully reported everything he saw. This is his
report of the word of God and the testimony of Jesus Christ. God
blesses the one who reads the words of this prophecy to the church,
and he blesses all who listen to its message and obey what it says,
for the time is near. Revelation 1:1-3
Depending on who you talk to the Bible
is the best book in the world or it is the most dangerous book in the
world.
For Christians, it is the Word of God.
It is God's mind made available to humanity. It is a source of life,
hope, and wisdom.
On the other hand, it has also been
seen as the most dangerous of all books. During the last century, the
Bible was one of the greatest threats to Communism. It was outlawed
in China and in the Soviet Union (for my younger readers, that's the
Communist nation that was dominated by Russia.)
Even in so-called Christian Europe, 500
years ago people were executed for translating the Bible into
English. The book was too dangerous to allow ordinary people read it.
In the last 50 years, some Christians again fought to keep the Bible
away from ordinary people. They argued that the King James Version, a
translation into old English published in 1611, was the last,
definitive revelation of God, replacing the original Greek and Hebrew
manuscripts. They vigorously opposed the translation of the Bible
into the language of ordinary people. But they couldn't stop it. And
today we Bible translations of all sorts for every kind of reader.
So how do we get the most benefit out
of a book, parts of which are perhaps 3000 years old, and the most
recent section of which is 2000 years old?
Several of you have asked for sermons
on how to understand the Bible. So that is what we are going to
examine today.
[Note: In this sermon, I will ignore
completely the problem of contradictory interpretations. Sometimes
people using identical formal approaches to interpreting the Bible
espouse mutually exclusive interpretations. I know of no rational
method for resolving these disputes. What I offer here is a guide for
using the Bible for the cultivation of saintliness not the resolution
of ideological/doctrinal disputes.]
Rule number one: Read the book. All the
other rules I mention come in no particular order of importance. They
all have a place in understanding the Bible but the order in which I
list them is unimportant. However, this rule is truly number one. It
is vastly more important than all other rules. None of the other
rules even matter until after you have completed rule number one.
READ THE BOOK.
Brian gave up Christianity in his early
teen years because his father died in spite of his prayers. He became
a Buddhist in college. In his thirties we met and began visiting.
When he said something that agreed with something Jesus said, I would
point it out. “That reminds me . . . ” I'd say, and then I would
quote the passage in the New Testament that Brian's comment reminded
me of.
Some months into our friendship after
one of these conversations, he said, “Maybe I should check out the
New Testament. Maybe I should read it for myself.” When he said
that, I knew what was going to happen. If you read the New Testament
when you are spiritually hungry, the most likely outcome is that you
will find deep satisfaction for your soul. God will talk to you.
Sure enough, Brian became a Christian.
That's the power of reading the Bible. His story is repeated over and
over across cultures and across time. People read the book and
discover God and faith in their reading.
To reiterate: Rule Number One is: Read
the book. No other rules have any meaning until you begin doing
this.
Sunday, I flew back to Maryland to
visit my dad. I got into conversation with the woman sitting next to
me. She mentioned she had grown up Catholic. Her mother was a truly
devout woman, deeply religious, overflowing with compassion and
goodness. My seat mate had gotten away from religion, but she had
some vague notion of reincarnation.
She said her mother thought that
reincarnation had been in the Bible until the Middle Ages, then the
church took it out to increase their ability to control people
through fear. What did I think of that?
I told her the New Testament had not
been tampered with, that we have thousands of manuscripts from way
back before the Middle Ages. If she wanted to know what is in the NT
originally all she had to to was read a modern translation. Our
translations are reliable. Besides, I said the NT was very brief. You
could read it all in two or three hours.
I asked a few more questions and was
amused. She had opinions about the NT—she thought it used to teach
reincarnation—but she had never read it. In fact, she didn't even
know it was only a small part of the total Bible. She did not know
that Matthew, Mark, Luke and John were stories about Jesus. She had
never read any of it.
If you're going to get a blessing out
of the Bible, the first step is to read it. The Bible is not a
talisman, a holy relic, a magic spiritual object you can benefit from
just by owning it or touching it.
I am critical of Muslims who make a big
deal about the holiness of the Quran but who do not actually read it.
I am equally critical of Christians who make a big deal out of the
Bible, but don't actually read it. Occasionally someone will strongly
disagree with something I say because “That's not what I learned in
academy.” Or “That's not what I was taught.” Often when I then
ask these people what Bible passage they would quote to either
support their view point or to correct mine, they give me a blank
stare. They don't know the Bible verses, but they know what they were
taught. In the context of Adventism, if you're going to offer an
opinion about a theological issue, you really ought to have some idea
of how what you are saying connects with what the Bible actually
says.
More importantly, if you're going to
get a blessing out of the Bible, it's crucial to actually read it.
This is so obvious. It is also the most
difficult challenge. You could learn Greek so you could study the
Bible in the original language. You could read an entire library of
commentaries. You could memorize the content of Bible dictionaries
and read all about the culture and religion of first century
Palestine. All this would be valuable. Still, unless you have sat
down and read the New Testament itself, you are an outsider. Your
opinions regarding the NT don't count.
AFTER you have read the New Testament,
there are a number of ways to enhance your understanding. But let me
say it again: AFTER you have read it. Sermons here at church. Radio
and TV programs. Books. Magazines. None of these are acceptable
substitutes for reading the actual book.
AFTER you have read the book, here are
some things that can contribute to a richer, truer, wiser
understanding.
Rule Number Two: For most of us,
rule number two is, read it again. Some people remember everything
they read. They read something once and get it, all of it. If that's
you, you can skip the second reading. But for most people reading the
NT more than once is an essential preparation for understanding.
Rule Number Three:
Pay attention to the contradictions.
The people who wrote the NT were smart people. They knew what they
were doing. When they include contradictions they intend to grab your
attention. They want you to think. So when you encounter
contradictions slow down. Ask yourself, “What is being said here?”
A couple of examples:
In Matthew 6:34, Jesus tells his
disciples. “Take no thought for the morrow.” KJV. Or in modern
translations: “Don't worry about tomorrow.”
At the end of Matthew 7, Jesus tells
his disciples, the person who puts my actions into practice will have
a good future. The one who merely listens but does not implement my
teachings will face catastrophe in the future. In this passage Jesus
is clearly thinking about tomorrow and is teaching his disciples to
think about tomorrow.
In the gospel of John, we discover
Jesus had a treasurer who kept the group's money in a bag. They did
not empty their accounts every day. They kept money for tomorrow!
Not that he cared
for the poor—he was a thief, and since he was in charge of the
disciples' money, he often stole some for himself. John 12:6
So what did Jesus mean when he said,
“Take no thought for the morrow?” He did say those words. He also
said the other statements which clearly teach us to think about
tomorrow. A wise student will not ignore either statement. Instead
he/she will give attention to both and learn wisdom from the
different perspectives offered in these passages.
Another striking statement by Jesus:
"If anyone
comes to me and does not hate his father and mother, his wife and
children, his brothers and sisters—yes, even his own life—he
cannot be my disciple. Luke 14:26
How does this passage related to Jesus
declaration that our highest duty is to love God and people? Matthew
22:36ff, Mark 12:30ff, Luke 10:25ff.
And what about Jesus' endorsement of
the commandment to honor our parents, even if caring for our parents
required us to violate some religious rule? Matthew 15; Mark 7.
These contradictions are deliberate.
They are in the Bible for a reason.
This brings us back to the first rule:
read it. Read it again. Read it again. The NT is not designed as a
compendium of religious trivia. It's not like a cook book or a book
on weight lifting exercises or yoga postures. You flip through these
kinds of books, grab an idea use it to suit yourself.
The NT is better thought of as an
invitation to encounter God. One classic definition of good preaching
is this: A preacher is to afflict the comfortable and to comfort the
afflicted. The purpose of the Bible is not to preserve the status
quo. The status quo is usually doing quite well, thank you. The
purpose of the Bible is to open us to the coaching of God. As a good
coach, God offers us what we do not already have in ourselves.
Are you quite content? The Bible allows God to ask, could you do
better? Are you discouraged, feeling hopeless and helpless? The Bible
allows God to reassure you that he is pleased with you. That he takes
delight in the mere fact of your existence. When the Bible agrees
with you all the time, you might want to double check and make sure
you are listening to the Bible.
Rule Number Four
Another way, another PROCESS for
gaining wisdom from the Bible—AFTER you have read the whole
thing—is to read a section, a story, a paragraph, a chapter, then
sit with it prayerfully. Ask God, “What are you saying to me here?
What special insight, what challenge, what reassurance are you
voicing in this passage?” Then turn your attention to the words, to
the characters in the story. Take time. Spend five minutes just
letting your mind live with the story, paragraph or chapter.
Rule Number Five
Another PROCESS is reading
commentaries. You can buy books. You can find them online. Focus on
one book, say Romans or John or Matthew or James. Read the book
several times. If it's a short one like James or Philippians, read
the whole book every day for a week or month. Then go back through
the book, reading a verse at a time and reading commentaries on that
verse. You may find it useful to read several different commentaries
on each verse to get different perspectives.
Rule Number Six
The ultimate development of this
commentary approach is to write your own translation/paraphrase.
After you have read several commentaries, put the verse into your own
words. Write your own Bible. The process will plant God's words deep
in your mind.
At any point in your process of
interacting with the Bible, you can test what you're doing by asking
questions like: How is what I learning affecting my relationships
with people. Are other telling me that I am being kinder, more
patient, more thoughtful, more compassionate? Or are people
complaining about my self-centeredness, my rudeness, my
thoughtlessness? If what you are doing with the Bible enhances life
and relationships, great. If it diminishes relationships and life
quality—change course. Change understanding. Investigate further.
If you engage deeply with the New
Testament in the ways I've outlined, God's words will take up
residence in your mind. Your instincts will begin molding themselves
around the skeleton of holy words that you building. You will begin
to encounter Jesus, not just in words on a page, not just in ideas
and opinions but in the events and people and actions of your
ordinary life. God will take up residence inside you. Goodness will
no longer be alien. It will be your friend and will flow from you to
others.
1 comment:
There is one thing about reading the Bible that you didn't address. How are you to interpret what you read?
Historically, it seems that we have read the Bible to learn what is true and what is false, what is real and what is not real, what is good, and what is bad, how to behave,and not misbehave. But sometimes, actually as I get older it seems like most of the time, I feel like Neal in the Matrix when he complains that the Oracle doesn't tell him the truth, and she responds by saying, "I told you what you needed to hear."
Does the Bible really tell us the literal "truth", or does it tell us what we need to hear? Was there really an Eden, will there really be a second coming, is there really life after death, or is that just what we need to hear? Like Paul says, "We grieve not as others grieve". Maybe the Bible isn't really telling "the truth" about death, or what will happen in the future. Maybe it is telling us what we need to hear to minimize our grief and improve our function. If that is true, then I don't think it is necessarily bad, helping us to function better is a good thing, but it is different, and I think it takes us to a different place when it comes to being tolerant and understanding of others.
If it is in fact, telling us what we need to hear, rather than what we want to hear, i.e. the literal "truth", and we take it literally, as a fundamentalist would, then it seems like that could explain some of the dysfunctions we see in fundamentalist Christianity today.
Christ said, "Ye shall know them by their fruits". If the literal interpretation of Scripture leads to such bad dysfunction, then it seems logical, and Biblical according to Christ's own criteria, that the Bible is NOT to be taken literally.
If it is not to be taken literally, then the criteria for interpretation changes. It isn't so much, what does it say about any given fact, but rather, how can I use what it says about any given fact to help me and my friends function better?
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