“It’s your destiny.” Have you ever heard that? Or, maybe you have said it. What does it mean? When I hear people say that, and often it is people who have no faith in Christ, it sounds like there is some power beyond the great out there that lures and aligns and manipulates and determines what our lives will be. It is as if we are all headed toward that preconceived and plotted point, our destiny. No one can know it, of course, but such people believe we all have a destiny and we can feel that in our bones.
Transfer that to the Christian world and you get the same sort of thoughts (and questions) around the concept of “predestination.” But, what does that really mean?
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In John 10 Jesus said some important things. He talked about being a shepherd, which doesn’t sound that important, but hang on. He said a shepherd can go through the gate to the sheep pen and lead his sheep out with his voice. He then said he is the shepherd and we are the sheep. Like I said, interesting stuff. But is it helpful?
In many ways Jesus might as well have been talking in Greek. Well, he was. He might as well have been talking about nuclear physics; maybe that is better. His words really don’t make sense to us because we aren’t shepherds and most of our buddies aren’t either. To understand his metaphor,
Continue reading "How to Understand Your Bible- Step 2: Interpretation, Part 1" »
I was casually driving down the road when all of a sudden three passengers in my car yelled, “Stop sign!” Just so you know, yelling isn’t the best thing to do to any driver. When your muscles tense and your heart pounds, you aren’t necessarily going to choose to do the right thing or physically be able to do it. Somehow, I was able to stop—a little past the sign but short of the crossing traffic. Wiping the sweat and posing as if I was in control, I realized a disturbing fact. I saw, but I didn’t observe. I was looking, but the stop sign never registered. It is a real possibility to miss important information even when you are not distracted.
And here we have an important illustration that supports a critical step in understanding the Bible.
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If the Bible can mean anything, then it doesn’t mean anything. Do you know what I mean?
I had a conversation that went like this (actually, I have had a lot of these, and maybe that says something about my communication skills). “I heard what you said, and I know what you meant. And I disagree.” Then I respond, “Yes. That is what I said. But that is not what I meant.” To which the expected reply comes, “Yes, you did. That is what you said.”
Now, in a situation like that, who is correct about meaning?
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Why do we need the Bible? So, we can know God and his ways. Why do we need to know God and his ways? So, we can love him and others better, and so we can experience the incredible life God has planned for us. God wants to bring us into an intimate relationship with him. He wants us to know about life and how to live it maxed out. He also wants to tell us about the future, and how we can prepare for it and eliminate fear of it. He tells us all that and more in the Bible. All of that, however, hinges on understanding the Bible correctly.
In a recent Reverse Why-Fi survey in our church, we found that 90% of people attending said they don’t read the Bible regularly because they are not motivated or they don’t understand how to do it. I think most people are motivated to understand the Bible, but that dissipates as they try and fail. Who wants to keep reading a book that makes no sense to you and seems irrelevant? But, if you learn to understand the Bible, your hunger (i.e., motivation) grows.
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He use to be called the “Holy Ghost,” which was a little eerie, but now he goes by the “Holy Spirit,” which isn’t much better. He is the third person of the Godhead. He is a “He” not an “It.” He lives inside every believer. He transforms, gifts, empowers, fills, and that is just the beginning. Tell all that to a new believer and she might run for the hills. And who could blame her.
So, let’s try it this way.
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I remember as a child watching the Donny & Marie Show on television. She was a “little bit country” and he was “a little bit rock ‘n roll.” It was decent. So, it was fun to see their family in person after I became a young adult and they became older people. At the end of the high-energy show, the entire Osmond family came on stage and began to sing a hymn; I can’t remember which one. As they were singing, a super-sized image of Jesus was projected on the screen behind them, and the crowd cried and cheered and worshiped. I was confused.
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We call it the “Lord’s Supper” or “Communion.” They call it the “Eucharist.” We are non-denominational. They have a Pope and a complicated hierarchical structure. We pass the bread and juice among ourselves. They only let the priest give it to you. They have confessionals. We don’t. They have sacraments. Most of us don’t know what that means. We pray only to the triune God. They pray to Mary and saints too. We are called “Protestants.” They are called “Catholics.” Some of “we” are also some of “them,” or used to be. You might wonder what the differences are and if it is right to have a “we” and a “they.” The questions have answers.
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I love the metaphor that says the Bible is like a pool of water, shallow enough for a toddler to play and deep enough for an elephant to swim. It works that way for me. Sometimes I can plunge to the depths and be challenged by the sights. Other times I struggle to understand the surface meaning of simple sentences. And often I simply want to drink and be refreshed.
The Bible is God’s Word, and that isn’t just a marketable title. It is literally the words God spoke and told his followers to write so we could read and understand and be encouraged and gain instruction and advice and rebuke and an appreciation of who he is. Sometimes, at least for me, it is difficult to understand God’s words, and my guess is that that isn’t because he is a poor communicator.
Continue reading "Mini-Lecture: An Overview of the Old & New Testaments" »