Thursday, June 26, 2014

Ultimate Truth: The Results

            Alright, so what’s the big deal? We threw out the Bible’s views and replaced it with the beliefs of scientists. We get “Jesus” AND the respect of the world. We can keep hold on Jesus’ resurrection and throw the rest out. What’s the price of a little compromise?
            The next generation is the price.
            Studies are showing that two-thirds of the next generation of church kids will not be there when they are older. Why? I’ll set a common scenario before you.
            Dave gets to school on Monday. All throughout the week he learns several things:

1. Science is the only source of truth (science class)
2. We all came from animals and are no more important than animals (science class)
3. There is no truth (any class)
4. The Bible is false and filled with fairy tales (any class)
5. Etc.

            Then Dave goes to church on Sunday. He learns that the Old Testament is full of wonderful stories that most likely didn’t really happen. His teachers tell him that the only thing he really has to hold on to is the resurrection of Jesus. Dave also learns to not offend others because we should just love everyone.
            He asks his pastor what the Bible says about the beginning of the world. His pastor responds that the beginning of the world is found in Genesis, but that it is myth. The beginning of Genesis was just meant for poetry, much like the Psalms.
            He asks his pastor if the flood was global. His pastor shrugs and said that the flood possibly didn’t even happen, and that if it did, it was local.
            He then goes back to school, where his growing doubt is bolstered. Some of his school teachers even tell him that his pastor will side with them when it comes to science! He goes to school to learn truth; he goes to church to learn about nice stories that never happened.
            Tell me, through the years, which side will have a greater effect?

The Next Generation

            The next generation asks some practical questions. “Why should I trust the Bible?” “If I can’t trust some of the Bible, which parts do I trust?” “If I can’t trust all of the Bible, why should I trust any of it?”
            We took some of the authority of the Bible and put it behind scientists. The youngest generation takes the next step and  doesn’t see the Bible as authoritative at all.
            The next generation realizes what the older generation did not. You cannot have two ultimate truths. It’s the Word of God or the word of men. When you take one over the other, that is the death knell. There is no going back. The church of the 1800s and 1900s chose science as the bearer of truth; it was only time before the Bible was totally discredited.
            Once the Bible fell, what is Christianity? Not worth waisting a Sunday morning, the next generation will tell you.

Wednesday, June 25, 2014

Ultimate Truth: Which Is Our Standard?

            What I'm getting to is that the Christian's ultimate standard is the Bible. It's what we build our mind and actions around. It's what preserves us and defines us. Without the Bible every doctrine could be challenged as unauthentic or outright heresy.


A Horrible Scenario

            Now imagine a Christian looking at Jesus' life and saying, "You know, I believe the Gospels are no longer correct the way they've been read for almost two thousand years. Yes, they are history... but modern scholarship tells us that those kinds of miracles are impossible. But I don't want to chuck out all of the Gospels, so here's what I'll do.
            "I'll REINTERPRET these previously historical documents and claim they contain general, vague, poetical truths. Never mind that the authors intended them to be taken as historically accurate point by point. They just contain things that science has shown cannot happen naturally. I'll pick and choose what I want to take literally."
            Now, what is immediately apparent? This Christian does not hold the Word of God as his ultimate truth! He hold the opinions of the scientific majority as the higher truth. When the scientific majority disagrees with the Bible, it's the Bible that must be reinterpreted, not the research done by these scientists.
            But Christians wouldn't do this to the Bible, right? Right?


Not So Fast

            This is exactly what's happened to the way we treat Genesis. In Genesis chapters 1-11, the Bible is crystal clear that the world was created in six literal days. Moses is also clear that animals reproduced after their own kinds ("kind" meaning the modern genus or family, not species). He is also clear that the flood was global.
            This interpretation (Young Earth Creationism, or YEC) has been THE interpretation for thousands of years. Granted, the occasional person –Augustine comes to mind– liked to play around with the Creation week. However, the flood was global, the animals didn't change kinds, the earth was young, and so on and so forth.
             Then in the 1700s and 1800s, non-Christian naturalist scientists started seriously coming up with ways of looking at the world apart from God. Now, they weren't the first academics that didn't believe in God, it's just that their previous theories never gained very much traction in the pro-Christian Western world.
            The first thing they tried to do was to make the world old. "With time, anything is possible" has been the naturalist's cry. Geologists looked at rock layers and chucked catastrophism (the worldwide flood), replacing it with uniformitarianism (the slow-moving processes we see today have been going on since the earth formed).
            With geology having been done in, the focus went to the animal world (zoology, biology, etc.). With Darwin's theory becoming popular, it was pretty apparent that God wasn't necessary to explain the life we see. With Evolution, all you need is time. Billions of years of it, if you believe today's scientists.
            Now what was the Christian to do? Could these non-Christian scientists really be wrong? Of course not! This is science, the ultimate standard of truth! The Bible must be reinterpreted to accommodate naturalism, obviously.
            So we panicked. In came Old Earth Creationism (OEC, also known as theistic evolution), which was the Bible with the first eleven chapters being thrown out. Six days? Preposterous! They must've been six undefined ages. Animals reproducing after their own kinds? Never! We obviously came from an ancient one-celled organism. A global flood? Ha! Moses was obviously being poetical, or the flood was local.
            We held the opinions of the scientific majority as our ultimate truth. Never mind that the people behind these theories were not Christians (and therefore looking to explain the world naturally). Never mind that Genesis is pretty clear about how everything came to be (otherwise it wouldn't have taken until the 1800s for a seriously contradictory interpretation to come out). The clear teaching of the Word of God bowed to the majority of finite scientists.
            We are no better than the man who reinterpreted the Gospels.

Ultimate Truth: The Foundation

Stay with Me

            This next series of posts will be about the Bible, science, and evolution. But you wouldn't know it by most of this post. Stay with me as I lead to my conclusions on the issue.

The Premise

            You know those really annoying kids that always ask "why?" to everything? Yeah, those kids. It eventually gets to the point where you either tell the brat to beat it (if he's yours), or you kindly say, "I don't know, let's change the subject."
            You eventually hit rock bottom with your answers. Your reasonings, knowledge, wisdom, and everything else has all been stripped to their irreducible components... and you just accept it. Why are you getting this surgery? Because the doctor said so. Why did you go to the grocery store? To get food.  Everything has it's basic answer.
            You are left with "I believe this because I think I have good reason to." Which can actually be further reduced to "I believe this because I want to."
            In philosophy/theology, I call this rock-bottom position your ultimate truth (or ultimate standard). It's what you appeal to when someone challenges your core beliefs.
            I believe Jesus rose from the dead. Why? Because the Word of God says so. 
            Now, that ignores all the evidence for believing in the reliability of the Bible. That also ignores all the failed explanations at naturally explaining Jesus' empty tomb. But in the end, the Bible is my ultimate truth. I believe that the Bible is true, and that is that.
            The atheist's ultimate standard contains a couple of world-views, namely naturalism (all things are the result of natural processes) and materialism (the material world is all there is). He will say that Jesus did not rise from the dead.
            Why? Because that is naturally impossible.
            Now, that bare-bones answer ignores all the evidence that people can't come back from the dead. It also ignores the fact that the first disciples of worldwide movements don't claim their mutilated, flayed criminal savior appeared to them and inspired them to then go on and die horrible deaths at the hands of psychos who hate their guts.
            But the simple answer is that the atheist doesn't believe in the resurrection because it contradicts his ultimate standard: naturalism/materialism. He believes atheism to be true, and that is that.
            My next couple of posts will be on why it is so important for Christians to have the correct ultimate standard.

Friday, June 20, 2014

You Whining? Me Too

            You know, Americans complain a lot. We whine about the weather, jobs, and everything else. It really gets on my nerves. People are so annoying.
            Anyhoo, I listened to an amazing sermon by John Macarthur recently on the beatitudes. It personally was providential because I’ve been complaining about SEVERAL things in my life recently.
            The beatitudes are simply people Jesus says are blessed in Matthew chapter 5. The particular blessing that kicked me in the rear was the first one found in verse 3:

            “Blessed are the poor in spirit: for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.”

            The Greek word for poor in this case (“ptochoi)” means something more than just a lack of finances.
            “Ptochoi” is a heartfelt, genuine acknowledgement that we are destitute of anything of value apart from God. Jesus is our everything because we know we are rebels that deserve the full punishment of the law.
            So what does this have to do with complaining? Everything, really.
            When we realize that we deserve nothing, we won’t gripe because we don’t even deserve what is annoying us! We’ll look around and thank God because our life isn’t Hell like it should be. The wages of sin is death (Romans 6:23), and we are alive and well (especially in America).



*The problem of monasticism and asceticism is that it stems from a “what can I do to repay/earn ––––?” mentality. Monks looked at “poor” and thought “physical destitution”, when it is about our heart.
            Now, when our heart is humbled, we’ll devote our life to God in obedience. But the heart must change; our actions do not matter until that happens.

            

Monday, June 16, 2014

Getting More Bang for Your Buck: Post 2

            Here are three other tips to keep in mind when reading the Bible:

3) Interpret the New Testament in Light of the Old Testament

            I sometimes cringe when I hear well-meaning people tell new believers/seekers to “start with the Gospels” when going through the Bible. I understand the premise behind the suggestion… I used to say the same thing! The Gospels contain Jesus’ life, and Jesus is the whole point of Christianity, so what better place is there*?
            Genesis, namely.
            The problem is that without understanding what is in the Old Testament (OT), you can’t understand why Jesus is even necessary. A reader can’t understand WHY we need a savior, WHY the savior had to meet certain requirements, and WHY/HOW Jesus took mankind from under the law of God to the grace of God without the Old Testament.
            For example, here is an example of a NT passages that can’t be properly understood/appreciated without understanding the OT.
            Jesus liked to refer to Himself as the “Son of Man” (Luke 9:22, Mark 14:62, etc.). People often mistakenly assume He was referencing His humanity with the title. Actually, it’s the opposite. In Israelite culture it would’ve been understood as a claim to the divine figure in Daniel 7:13-14:

            "In my vision at night I looked, and there before me was one like a son of man, coming with the clouds of heaven. He approached the Ancient of Days and was led into his presence.
            He was given authority, glory and sovereign power; all peoples, nations and men of every language worshiped him. His dominion is an everlasting dominion that will not pass away, and his kingdom is one that will never be destroyed.”

            If you didn’t know the reference, the correct meaning of Jesus’ favorite name for Himself would go out the window. The Son of Man referred to Jesus' divinity and messianic fulfillment.
            In short, the significance of a lot of Jesus’ life goes unnoticed without the OT. Also, in Paul’s letters he establishes doctrine and mindsets that can only be comprehended if a reader is familiar about the way things used to be before Jesus.
            A lot of the New Testament simply doesn’t make sense by itself. Now, you can always glean SOMETHING by just reading the New Testament, but we want maximum results, right? Well, for that you have to read the New Testament in light of its predecessor.

4) Use Your Imagination!

            Okay, so in my last post I said that the Bible shouldn’t be read like a fiction novel (“movie in a book”). While true, the Bible certainly comes to life when you use your mind to recreate images. Let’s go through one examples. Psalms 137:1-4:

          “By the rivers of Babylon we sat and wept when we remembered Zion.
            There on the poplars we hung our harps,
            Or there our captors asked us for songs, our tormentors demanded songs of joy; they said, "Sing us one of the songs of Zion!"
            How can we sing the songs of the LORD while in a foreign land?”

             Now, use your imagination! I personally can imagine the Israelites hanging beside a river and remembering all that they had before they were captured. They are silent or weeping, too despondent for mirth. I can see the musicians being too depressed to pick up their instruments. But then their bored captors laugh and mockingly demand a tune. Then I imagine the hatred burning through these proud Israelites as they glare back. They slowly comply and sing a defiant psalm.
             As you can tell, I’m a terrible fiction writer. But you get the point I’m trying to make. Use your mind to recreate the scene. All of sudden the Bible goes from “long ago and far away” to “wow, these were actual people with hopes and dreams like me!” I could give tons of examples – from Ezekiel having his crazy visions to Jesus’ agonizing flogging and crucifixion – but you get the gist of what I’m saying.
             The Bible comes alive.

Summary

             As a teenage Christian, I’m in this “Bible reading” business for the rest of my life. I have so much to learn, but God is using people in my life to show me how to unlock the riches in His Word. These are just four tips on an amazingly deep subject (hermeneutics and exegesis**).
             We speak to God through prayer, and we hear Him through the Bible (among many other ways). This series was on reading because I am nowhere near ready to write anything on prayer. Haha, I have a lot of work to do in that area as well.



*Now, I’m fine with a compromise. Reading Genesis AND one of the Gospels works, too.
**Hermeneutics is the principles (guidelines) for interpreting scripture, while exegesis is actually interpreting scripture. Sometimes I just use the word "exegesis" for both, which isn’t the best thing to do.

Friday, June 13, 2014

Getting Some Bang for Your Buck: Post 1

Here are some “quick” tips to getting something out of reading the Bible:

1. Read Books of the Bible According to Their Genres

            This is the most violated principle of Bible reading. Proverbs, for instance, is poetry that is meant to convey GENERAL truths. “General” meaning “most of the time”. It’s not meant to be taken as rock-solid 100% truth. Take Proverbs 22:6, for instance:
            “Train a child in the way he should go, and when he is old he will not turn from it.” (NIV)
            This has comforted parents greatly through the centuries… that is, until you see some godly pastor’s kid jumping off the deep end (permanently). What happened? God PROMISED in Proverbs that, with godly parenting, a kid will come back to the faith! God is a liar!
            Unless, of course, you understand the genre of that particular passage of scripture. This tip helps you properly exegete (interpret) the Bible.
            Another problem people run into has to deal with parables. Christians love to take every minute detail of a parable and try to match it to some truth. For instance, in Luke 16:19-31, Jesus talks about the beggar Lazarus and a rich man.
            The purpose of this parable is to tell Jesus’ audience that if Israel wouldn’t listen to the prophets and Moses, they wouldn’t listen to Jesus now. They also wouldn’t listen to Jesus after He rose from the tomb. And that is exactly what happened.
            Now some like to take every incidental detail of a parable and like to establish doctrine. For instance, in this parable Jesus describes the inhabitants of Heaven and Hell as being able to converse with each other. These Christians then turn around and claim that Jesus was saying we will be able to do that when we die.
            Now, I’m not ruling that possibility out, but “being able to have conversations with people from the other side” was NOT the purpose of the parable. It was a detail added to the story to set up the main point, which was “if Israel didn’t listen to Moses or the prophets, they wouldn’t listen to Jesus”.
            We shouldn’t try to take every detail of a parable and try to proclaim it as a literal truth. Don’t miss the forest (the point of the parable) for the trees (the details used to get to that point).
            I could go on and on with why we miss out on the great truths. Here are some more mistakes we (me included) often make: reading the Old Testament prophets just to look for prophecies about Jesus/end times, reading the words in red and think Jesus was being quoted word-for-word*, thinking God wrote the Bible directly instead of inspiring men to write it in their own personal style**, etc.

2. Read the Bible with Three Things in Mind

            There are three tiers of truths we can gather when reading a passage of scripture: 1) what truth does God want me to apply to my life? 2) How was God working in that particular situation of scripture? 3) How was God using that particular situation to accomplish His greater kingdom purpose?
            I know I often stop at that first one. I look for some way to apply a passage of scripture. When I find it, I stop and say, “Okay, that was a good study.” But there is so much more to the Bible.
            Take the story of Joseph’s temptation in Genesis, for instance. If you stopped at the first question, you would get some amazing truths. You would come away with the cost of obedience, the blessings of obedience, etc. You could answer the first question very easily.
            But if you stopped there, you’d miss the bigger truths. God was working to show His glory in an amazing way, using a prisoner to prevent Egypt from starving. How God was setting Joseph up to bring his family to Egypt to grow the nation of Hebrews. The second question reveals some amazing truths.
            What about the third question? God was using Joseph (a prideful snob, really), a nobody, to do great things. The Lord has done that many times over, using the weak and useless to accomplish His will. God then used Israel as a model nation for the world, showing mankind what happens when we obey or disobey Him.
            You can get all of that (and much more) by asking those three questions. There are more questions you can ask to get different angles, but you get the picture. What is God telling you? How was God working? And how was God accomplishing His greater goal?

Summary

            I have a few more tips, but these two are helpful ways of getting more out of Bible studies. We often think “the Bible is weird” because we read it like a fiction novel. We read it for entertainment purposes. When we don’t get that “movie in a book” feeling, we stop. But we have to read the Bible in ways it was meant to be read.




*Unlike today’s culture with quotation marks, Jesus’ culture was concerned about preserving the message of a speaker, not His words. That’s why, in the same story, Jesus sometimes uses slightly different words depending on which gospel you read. The writers were concerned about what He was meaning, not what He was saying. That doesn’t mean they were wrong per say, but we have to read His words with this in mind.
**For instance, Paul basically curses in Philippians 3:8. He writes “skubalo”, which, in the Greek, means a stronger version of “dung”. Different translations have different words depending on how strongly they want to translate that word. Some say “dung”, others say “waste”, etc. They are technically correct, but the force is definitely lessened. A more accurate translation might be the s-word, believe it or not.

Friday, June 6, 2014

Reading Scripture with All Your Mind: Why Should I Read?

            Currently I am listening to a lecture by Walt Russell called “Reading Scripture with All Your Mind”. Now before you fall asleep, let me tell you some why this is such an important topic.
            Teens often say reading the Bible is boring. Though I beg to differ, I see their point. They read about crazy stories and weird theology… why? What is possibly in it for them?
            I confess I was the same way. That is, until I decided to stop playing “church kid” and actually enter into a loving, obedient relationship with my Creator. You see, when you love someone, you want to find out all about that person. You read what they read (unless they read boring theological and philosophical works… like me). You listen to their music. You listen to them (hopefully). You watch them. You… get the point.
            With God it is no different. When you are committing to an eternal relationship with Him, you want to grow closer to Him. He is your everything. You want to listen to Him. You want to know what He knows. You want Him to guide your steps.
            All of those things are possible through Bible reading and prayer (I’ll be focusing on the former). We see how He thinks and a glimpse of His vast knowledge. We see what makes Him happy and sad. We see how deeply He loves us.
           Why do we read the Bible? We read the Bible because we want our relationship with God to grow.

Okay, That’s Great… But…

            Okay, so you understand that Bible reading draws us closer to God. But still… what’s in it for me? Well, if the above reason doesn’t stir a desire in us to read the Bible, the following benefits won’t either. I’ll give them to you anyways.

1) One result of meditating on God’s word is found in the very first Psalms (verses 2-3):

            “But his delight is in the law of the Lord, And in His law he meditates day and night.
            He shall be like a tree planted by the rivers of water, that brings forth its fruit in its season, whose leaf also shall not wither; and whatever he does shall prosper.”

            Though written in poetry, there are solid truths to be found within this beautiful Psalm. The first is that a man will be grounded and nourished. When winds of tribulations come, he won’t be moved because he is rooted. He won’t grow tired of life because he is always energized.
            Also, he will recognize opportunities given to Him by God. When God calls on him to bring fruit (i.e. be productive), he understands and obeys.

2) Another reason is found in Psalm 119:105:

            “Your word is a lamp to my feet and a light to my path.”

            A person needs to know where he is going in life. Without this knowledge, he is basically useless because he can’t tell the difference between danger and opportunity. Is his next step leading him toward a pit or water? Well, don’t ask him because he has no clue.
            The Word of God is that lamp that illuminates our life.

3) James 1:23-25:

  For if anyone is a hearer of the word and not a doer, he is like a man who looks intently at his natural face in a mirror. 
   For he looks at himself and goes away and at once forgets what he was like.
   But the one who looks into the perfect law, the law of liberty, and perseveres, being no hearer who forgets but a doer who acts, he will be blessed in his doing.”

           The basic questions of life are answered in the Bible. Who am I? Why am I here? The Bible answers those things. It is the mirror that shows us ourselves in ways nothing else can. It is honest; it doesn’t distort images. You can find rest in the Word of God.

 4) I could go on for eternity on the benefits of reading the Word. There are so many. People have written books upon books on what happens when you delve into this Book.

Summary

            The reason why we read the Bible is to grow in our relationship with Him. But God didn’t us an obituary or a phone book to go through; He gave us a book that benefits us in all facets of our lives.
            Now in my next few posts I’ll be going through HOW we should read the Word. I’m not an expert (duh), but there are a few tips I’ve learned that I would love to share.