Tuesday, May 29, 2012

Biblical Illiteracy Part II



                The theologian and pastor, R. C. Sproul, points out a couple of other reasons individuals might utter to defend their distance from Scripture. He refers to them as myths and summarizes them thus:

Myth 1: The Bible is so difficult to understand that only highly skilled theologians with technical training can deal with the Scriptures.[1]
 and
 Myth 2: The Bible is boring.[2]       

In reference to the first of these justifications for not reading God’s Word, we must admit that there are certainly some portions of Scripture that we find confusing, at least at first read. Training in the biblical languages, logic, culture and history certainly help us in our interpretation. However, understanding the Bible is not as difficult as many make it out to be. Sproul explains:

When we express this myth, we do it with astonishing ease. The myth is so often repeated that we do not expect it to be challenged. Yet we know that as mature adults, living in the United States of America [or Canada!], having a high-school education or better, we can understand the basic message of the Bible.
If we can read the newspaper, we can read the Bible. In fact, I would venture to guess that more difficult words and concepts are expressed on the front page of a newspaper than on most pages of the Bible.[3]

I wonder how often this argument (that the Bible is difficult to understand) is put forth by those who have a bias against reading and obeying Scripture in the first place? How often is it an excuse, rather than a road block? Soren Kierkegaard comments on this myth. Philip Yancey explains: “Kierkegaard dismisses the objection ‘There are so many obscure passages in the Holy Scriptures, whole books which are almost riddles’ with the reply that he would only consider that objection from someone who had fully complied with all the passages that are easy to understand!”[4]

The suggestion that “the Bible is boring” needs some comment as well. Perhaps the most helpful idea that can be stated here is simply that many people strongly disagree with this sentiment. Borrowing again from Philip Yancey and R. C. Sproul:

The Old Testament portrays the world as it is, no holds barred. In its pages you will find passionate stories of love and hate, blood-chilling stories of rape and dismemberment, matter-of-fact accounts of trafficking in slaves, honest tales of the high honor and cruel treachery of war. Nothing is neat and orderly. Spoiled brats like Solomon and Samson get supernatural gifts; a truly good man like Job gets catastrophe.[5]
               
            and

When people say the Bible is dull it makes me wonder why. Biblical characters are full of life. There is a unique quality of passion about them. Their lives reveal drama, pathos, lust, crime, devotion, and every conceivable aspect of human existence. There is rebuke, remorse, contrition, consolation, practical wisdom, philosophical reflection and, most of all, truth. Perhaps the dullness some experience is due to the antiquity of the material that may seem foreign. How does the life of Abraham—lived so long ago and so far away—relate to us? But the characters of biblical history are real. Though their life settings are different from ours, their struggles and concerns are very much like ours.[6]

These are not the words of individuals whose eyes glaze over and whose minds wander as they read from the Holy Scriptures. At times the Bible shocks us, then it convicts us, it teaches us, entertains us and challenges us to be more than we have been. This is not to say that it is without less exciting sections for us to read. I admit that genealogies, for instance, do not stimulate my imagination the way that narratives do. However, the number of passages which I find intellectually, emotionally and spiritually stimulating, far outweigh those which I find “slow.”  


[1] R. C. Sproul, Knowing Scripture (Downers Grove: InterVarsity Press, 1977), p. 13.
[2] Sproul, Knowing Scripture, p. 14.
[3] Sproul, Knowing Scripture, p. 14.
[4] Philip Yancey, The Bible Jesus Read (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1999), p. 30.
[5] Yancey, Bible, p. 11.
[6] Sproul, Knowing Scripture, p.

1 comment:

  1. I have to say that some parts of the old testament can tend to the boring if not incomprehensible. I don't deny that they are the word of God but it's hard for a modern Christian to appreciate the laws of Moses. The characters can be quite interesting. For example, Samson would be considered a psychopathic mass murderer today.

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