There was a time when society could be divided
between people who (1) respected the Bible as “the truth” but didn’t follow it,
(2) believed and followed it devotedly, or (3) rejected it as simply a book of
legends and myths. Things are changing.
To begin with, the first group is rapidly declining
in size. And the relationship between the second and third group has become
charged in a new way. In the past, if you believed in the full authority of the
Bible, your skeptical neighbors would have disagreed and explained why they
couldn’t accept the Bible, and maybe even laughed at you in private. But they
would not have felt the need to examine your ways of understanding and
regarding the Bible and loudly ridicule them and try to shame you for
them.
Today, as never before, the character of
the Bible is publicly attacked as cruel and oppressive and those who uphold the
historic view of its truthfulness are seen in the same light. There’s enormous
social pressure on Christians today to abandon the historic understanding of
the inspiration and authority of the Scripture and the role it should play in
our lives.
Both believers and skeptics are unfamiliar with
what the Church has historically believed about the Scripture and what the
Bible says about itself. Coming to grips with this is always crucial, but, in
our time it is more important than ever.
The Word of God is the primary way we come to
understand the truth about God. If we start losing faith in the Bible we start
losing our ability to find God. For centuries, the Protestant church have
argued that it is through the reading and teaching of the Word of God that the
Holy Spirit is given free reign to illumine the mind and heart with the truth.
For years I thought that God could be active in
my life through the Spirit and that the Bible was a book I had to obey if God
was going to come in. I now realize that Bible is the way that, through the
Spirit, God is active in my life.
You can and should trust the
Bible historically.
First, you can and should trust the Bible
historically.
Many people today say that the Bible—especially the
gospel accounts of Jesus' life—was concocted by the political winners.
"Who can ever really know what the original Jesus was like?" they
say. "The idea that he claimed to be divine, did miracles, died on a
cross, was raised to life and people saw him—all of those ideas, those
accounts, were written later by church leaders who were trying to consolidate
their power to build a movement. We don't know what really happened. They
suppressed the evidence of the original Jesus who was just a human
teacher."
What do we have to say to that? We would have to
say that that's not a fair assessment—that it's not actually right. There are
several reasons why you can trust what the Bible says about Jesus, but I want
to mention just three.
First of all the New Testament accounts of Jesus
were written too early to be legends. Look at the very beginning of the Gospel
of Luke. Luke has written an account of Jesus' life, and notice what he says to
his readers: I have carefully investigated everything from the beginning, and I
have checked what I have written with eyewitnesses.
Luke is saying that even though he is writing 30 to
40 years after the events of Jesus' resurrection, a lot of people who heard
Jesus was still alive—who saw that Jesus was still alive—were still
around. He is inviting anyone who reads his words to check his sources.
Writing even more recently than Luke—in other
words, even closer to the events of Jesus' life—was Paul. He wrote his letters
only 15-20 years after Jesus' ministry on earth. In 1 Corinthians 15, Paul,
too, says many people saw Jesus appear to them after his death. At one point he
says Jesus appeared to 500 people at once. Paul then goes on to say, in
essence: Most of them are still alive, and you can still go talk to them.
In an effort to promote the Christian faith, Paul
could not possibly have written in a public document that there 500 people who
saw Jesus at once—most of them still alive—unless that was really the case.
Consider also Philippians 2. Here Paul quotes a
hymn of praise to Jesus' deity and divinity. If Philippians was written only 15
years after the events of Christ's life, and the hymn Paul is quoting had been
written by somebody even earlier than that, we know that people were already
worshiping Jesus as God. They believed his claims to be God, believed the
miracles, believed the crucifixion and death, believed the resurrection
appearances.
In The Da Vinci Code, author Dan Brown depicts
Constantine as having basically decreed Jesus' divinity in 325 AD, suppressing
all evidence of Jesus' original life as a human teacher. But as we have just
seen, the documents of the New Testament are way too early for that to be true.
Many people say, "Well, The Da Vinci Code is fiction. Most people who read
it know that the material isn't true." But there are many who think that
the notion of the divinity of Jesus was a later teaching that suppressed the
early teaching of his humanity. They think that's the historically accurate
account. But it's just not true at all. In fact after reading The Da Vinci Code,
one historian had this to say about Brown's account: "Dan Brown says that
when the Emperor Constantine declared Jesus divine, Christianity won the
religious competition in the Roman Empire by an exercise of power rather than
by any attraction it exerted. In actual historical fact, the church had won
that competition long before the time it had any power—when it was still under
sporadic persecution. If a historian were cynical, you would say Constantine
chose Christianity because it had already won, and he wanted to back a
winner."
The dates for the writing of the New Testament
documents essentially show that everything about Jesus—his words, his death,
his resurrection, his claims to be deity—really happened. Anyone could write
documents 200-300 years later when all the eyewitnesses were dead and say
anything they wanted about a figure—especially back then. But that person could
not say Jesus was crucified and then resurrected when thousands of people were
still alive who had seen whether he had been or not. If Jesus hadn't been
crucified, if there hadn't been appearances after his death, if there hadn't
been an empty tomb, if he hadn't made these claims, and these public documents
were just going around claiming all these things to be true—Christianity would
never have gotten off the ground.
Second, the New Testament documents are too
counterproductive in their content to be legends. The theory is that the Bible
doesn't give you what actually happened. Instead, what you have in the gospels
is what the church leaders wanted you to believe happened, because this is the
view of Jesus that helps them consolidate their power and build their movement.
Really?
If I'm a church leader living about 70-80 years
after Jesus, and I'm concocting these stories, would I record that in the
Garden of Gethsemane Jesus asked the Father if he could get out of the events
that were about to take place? Would I put in my account the moment where Jesus
looks up from the cross and says, "You've forsaken me"? Such passages
are confusing and offensive even today—let alone to first century readers.
If I was making up these stories, would I have
included verse 24 of our text for today—that those who first saw Jesus raised
from the dead were women? At a time when women's testimony was not admissible
evidence in court because of their low social status, all four gospel accounts
say the original eyewitnesses were women. If you were making these stories up
in an effort to consolidate your power, you would never make women the
eyewitnesses.
Consider also the character of the leaders of the
early church. When you study the lives of the apostles in the New Testament,
they look like jerks. They look like fools. They look slow of heart. They look
like cowards. They look terrible. If you were a leader of the early
church, would you make up stories that highlight such unflattering features? Of
course you wouldn't! The only possible explanation for these features being
listed in the text is because they are true. They're totally counterproductive
for the power of the leaders of the early church. The New Testament documents
are too counterproductive to be legends.
Finally, the New Testament documents are too
detailed in their form to be legends. One of the problems with saying the
gospel accounts have to be legends is that we don't know much about ancient
fiction. The novel or the short story, in which you have realistic fiction
written almost like history, is an invention of the 18th century. In ancient
times legends were not written like that. You would never start a myth with an
invitation to readers to test the facts. Read Beowulf. Read the Greek
myths, the Roman myths. Go read anything from the ancient world. They don't
start out the way Luke begins—with a challenge. C. S. Lewis was an expert in
ancient literature. He had this to say when looking at the gospels: "I
have been reading poems, romances, vision literature, legends, and myths all my
life. I know what they are like. I know none of them are like this. [With] the
gospel texts, there are only two possible views. Either this is historical
reportage, or else some unknown ancient writer without known predecessors or
successors suddenly anticipated the whole technique of modern novelistic,
realistic narrative. The reader who doesn't see this has simply not learned how
to read."
Here's the point: The New Testament documents don't
have the form of legends. They were written too early, the accounts are too
counterproductive, and they don't match the fictional style of the day. You can
trust these accounts historically. They tell you what really happened.
You can and should trust the
Bible culturally.
First of all, you can and should trust the Bible
historically. Second, you can and should trust the Bible culturally.
In recent years I've noticed that more people are troubled
by the cultural aspects of the Bible than the historical aspects we just
covered. People read things in the Bible that they consider offensive,
primitive, or regressive. They see these things and say, "Look at what
this teaches! That's awful! We got over that a long time ago, and it's best to
leave it in the past."
I don't have enough time to go down the list of all
the things in the Bible that offend people. It's a very long list, and it
shifts around all the time. Instead, I would like to give you three ways to
handle any text of the Bible that seems to offend you.
First of all, when you encounter a text that
strikes you as offensive, please consider the possibility that it doesn't teach
what you think it teaches. Notice in our second text for the morning that the
Emmaus disciples are upset. Why? As Jesus is going to show them, they think the
Bible teaches something it doesn't. When Jesus sees that they are upset, he
says: You didn't really understand the Scriptures. You were not patient with
the passages in question.
Let me give you a personal example of this from my
own life. Many years ago, when I first started reading the Book of Genesis, it
was very upsetting to me. Here are all these spiritual heroes—Abraham, Isaac,
Jacob, and Joseph—and look at how they treat women. They engage in polygamy,
and they buy and sell their wives. It was an awful to read their stories at
times. But then I read Robert Alter's The Art of Biblical Narrative
. Alter is a Jewish scholar at Berkeley whose expertise is ancient Jewish
literature. In his book he says there are two institutions present in the Book
of Genesis that were universal in ancient cultures: polygamy and primogeniture.
Polygamy said a husband could have multiple wives, and primogeniture said the
oldest son got everything—all the power, all the money. In other words, the
oldest son basically ruled over everyone else in the family. Alter points out
that when you read the Book of Genesis, you'll see two things. First of all, in
every generation polygamy wreaks havoc. Having multiple wives is an absolute
disaster—socially, culturally, spiritually, emotionally, psychologically, and
relationally. Second, when it comes to primogeniture, in every generation God
favors the younger son over the older. He favors Abel, not Cain; Isaac, not
Ishmael; Jacob, not Esau. Alter says that you begin to realize what the Book of
Genesis is doing—it is subverting, not supporting, those ancient institutions
at every turn.
When I read Alter's book, I then reread the Book of
Genesis and loved it. And then it hit me: What if when I was younger, I had
abandoned my trust in the Bible because of these accounts in Genesis? What if I
had drop-kicked the Bible and the Christian faith, missing out on a personal
relationship with Christ—all because I couldn't understand the behavior of the
patriarchs? The lesson is simple: Be patient with the text. Consider the
possibility that it might not be teaching what you think it's teaching.
Second, whenever you encounter something in a text
that seems offensive to you, consider the possibility that you are
misunderstanding what the Bible teaches because of your cultural blinders.
The Emmaus disciples understandably misunderstood
the prophecies about the Messiah because, as Jews, they were only thinking of
the redemption of Israel. They actually admit as much in verses 20-21. They
weren't thinking of the redemption of the whole world, and therefore they had
cultural blinders on. They were trying to read the prophecies, and they misread
them. They couldn't understand why Jesus did what he did. In the same way, I
want you to consider how easy it is for us to do the same.
Let me offer just one case study—one that people
consistently mention as a reason not to believe the Bible. I can't tell you how
often I hear people say, "The Bible condones slavery, and slavery is
wrong, so who knows what else it's saying that's wrong!" But does the
Bible actually condone slavery? "Of course it does!" some would
reply. "Just look at these passages where Paul says, 'Slaves, obey your
masters.' There it is! Paul condones slavery!" But if you study the one
book of the New Testament where Paul most directly speaks of a master/servant
relationship—the Book of Philemon, where Paul speaks of the relationship
between a servant named Onesimus and his master, Philemon—you would see the
servant/master relationship is more along the lines of something you might call
indentured servanthood. It's not what we think of as slavery. When you and I
see the word "slave" in the Bible, we immediately think of
seventeenth, eighteenth, and nineteenth century New World slavery: race-based,
African slavery. When you do that, when you read it through those blinders, you
aren't understanding what the Bible's teaching.
Many years ago historian Murray Harris wrote a book
about what slavery was like in the first century Greco-Roman world. He says
that in Greco-Roman times, slaves were not distinguishable from anyone else by
race, speech, or clothing. They looked and lived like everyone else and were
never segregated off from the rest of society in any way. What's more, slaves
were more educated than their owners in many cases and many times held high
managerial positions. And from a financial standpoint, slaves made the same
wages as free laborers and therefore were not themselves usually poor and often
accrued enough personal capital to buy themselves out. Finally, very few
persons were slaves for life in the first century. Most expected to be
manumitted after about ten years or by their late thirties at the latest.
In contrast, New World slavery of the seventeenth,
eighteenth, and nineteenth centuries was race-based, and its default mode was
slavery for life. The African slave trade was started and resourced through
kidnapping, which the Bible unconditionally condemns in 1 Timothy 1:9-11 and
Deuteronomy 24:7. Therefore, while the early Christians, like Saint Paul,
discouraged first century slavery—saying to slaves, "get free if you
can"—they didn't campaign to end it. But eighteenth and nineteenth century
Christians, when faced with New World-style slavery, did work for its
complete abolition, because it could not be squared in any way with biblical
teaching.
So, when you hear somebody say, "The Bible
condones slavery," you and I can say, "No it didn't—not the way you
and I define 'slavery.' It's not talking about that." (Of course, several
will still point out that people in the south used biblical passages like
"Slaves obey your masters" to try to subjugate the African slaves.
That's true. But they, too, were reading it through their cultural blinders.
Their interpretation was an illegitimate twisting and perversion of what
Scripture taught.)
Aside from the possibility that a text might not
mean what we think it means, and aside from the possibility that we might
misinterpret a text given our cultural blinders, we must also keep in mind that
certain biblical texts might offend us because of an unexamined assumption of
the superiority of our cultural moment.
Many of us read a certain passage of Scripture and
say, "That's so regressive, so offensive." But we ought to entertain
the idea that maybe we feel that way because in our particular culture
that text is a problem. In other cultures that passage might not come across as
regressive or offensive.
Let's look at just one example. In individualistic,
Western societies, we read the Bible, and we have a problem with what it says
about sex. But then we read what the Bible says about forgiveness—"forgive
your enemy;" "forgive your brother seventy times seven;"
"turn the other cheek;" "when your enemy asks for your shirt,
give him your cloak as well"—and we say, "How wonderful!" It's
because we are driven by a culture of guilt. But if you were to go to the
Middle East, they would think that what the Bible has to say about sex is
pretty good. (Actually, they might feel it's not strict enough!) But when they
would read what the Bible says about forgiving your enemies, it would strike
them as absolutely crazy. It's because their culture is not an individualistic
society like ours. It's more of a shame culture than a guilt culture.
Let me ask you a question: If you're offended by
something in the Bible, why should your cultural sensibilities trump
everybody else's? Why should we get rid of the Bible because it offends your
culture? Let's do a thought experiment for a second. If the Bible really was
the revelation of God, and, therefore, it wasn't the product of any one culture,
wouldn't it contradict every culture at some point? Therefore, if it's really
from God, wouldn't it have to offend your cultural sensibilities at some point?
Therefore, when you read the Bible, and you find some part of it outrageous and
offensive, that's proof that it's probably true, that it's probably from God.
It's not a reason to say the Bible isn't God's Word; it's a reason to say it is.
What makes you think that because this part or that part of God's Word is
offensive, you can forget Christianity altogether?
You can and should trust the
Bible personally.
First of all, you can and should trust the Bible
historically. Second, you can and should trust the Bible culturally. Third, you
can and should trust the Bible personally.
It is often hinted—and sometimes said outright—that
people who believe in the absolute authority of the Bible, and therefore
believe they should submit to its authority, have a cold, legalistic kind of
faith. This can certainly be true of some. But I would like to make the case
that a completely authoritative Bible is the prerequisite for a warm, personal
relationship with God—not the enemy of it.
Look at verse 32 in our text. When the Emmaus
disciples looked back on everything that had been said, they summarized it like
this: "Were not our hearts burning within us as he opened to us the
Scripture?" In English, when we speak of the heart, we are speaking of the
seat of our emotions. But in the Bible, the heart is the seat of the whole
person. Greek scholars will tell you that this phrase—"were not our hearts
burning"—speaks of an uncontrollable desire for someone. In other words,
the Emmaus disciples were saying that they had had a life-changing personal
encounter with the Lord. They felt their hearts going out to him. They felt a
love they had never experienced before. And when did they feel it? When the
Scriptures were properly expounded to them—when they understood what the
Scriptures really meant.
Notice how Jesus expounds the Scriptures. Verses 20
and 21 are almost comical—especially in light of what we know about the purpose
of Christ's life, death, burial, and resurrection. One disciple explains how
Jesus had been handed over to be sentenced to death and then crucified. He
adds, "We had hoped he was going to be the one to redeem Israel."
Jesus turns to these two disciples and says, "How foolish you are and how
slow of heart to believe all the prophets have spoken." He says: You
misunderstood Scripture! Christ had to suffer these things and then enter his
glory!
The key verse in our passage is 27: "Then,
beginning with Moses and all the prophets, he explained to them what was said
in all the Scriptures concerning himself." What Jesus is saying is,
"Everything in the Bible is about me. From Moses to the prophets,
it's all about me."
If you think the Bible is all about you and what
you must do and how you must live and how you have to do everything to get the
blessing, then you don't need a Messiah who dies for you. All you need is the
rules. There are only two ways to read the Bible: (1) You can read it as if
it's all about you and what you must do to be blessed, or (2) you can read
every part of the Bible as if it's all about Jesus and what he has done for
you. If you read the Bible that first way, that is when an elevation of
the Bible can lead to a cold and legalistic lifestyle.
Let's do what Jesus did that day on the road to
Emmaus. Let's begin with Moses—just Moses, because of the time limits. What is
the story of Moses about? Is it about you? Is it about how you've got to be faithful
like Moses? How you've got to be brave so that you can face down Pharaoh? How
you've got to be a good leader so you can lead the children of Israel out? Is
it all about you? No! If you really listen to what Scripture is saying, it
shows you that God did not come to Moses and say, "You are such a good
man. You know what? You deserve to be the leader. Because you are really
faithful to me, because you obey the Ten Commandments, I'm going to let you
lead the children of Israel out of Egypt." Instead, here's what God is
saying in the story of Moses and the Passover: "You all deserve to die
because of your sins. Slay a lamb, put the blood on the doorpost, take shelter
under the blood of that lamb, and when the angel of death comes by you won't be
paying for your sins." Jesus would put it this way: "Do you really
think that the holy God of the universe put your sins away because of those
sweet, wooly little lambs? I am the Lamb of God who takes away the sins
of the world. I am God come into this world to absorb in myself your
debt so that we can be together for eternity."
On that road to Emmaus, Jesus probably went on to
show his presence in the rest of the details of the story of Moses. The rock of
Moses, smitten in the wilderness for the sake of water in the desert—that's
Jesus. Jesus was smitten with the rod of God's justice so we could have water
in this desert. Jesus is also the tabernacle, the temple, the sacrifice, the
altar, the light, the bread, the prophet, the priest, the king. Jesus was
saying to those on the road to Emmaus that it's not about them or what they do,
it's about him. And Jesus is saying to you today through his Word that it's not
about you or what you have to do. It's about him and what he has done. There
isn't any place for a cold, legalistic approach to life.
Isn't that good news personally? Doesn't that make
you want him more? Don't you begin to feel your heart burn? Isn't there a kind
of longing? You have in your heart a longing for purpose, a longing for
infinite love, a longing for significance and security that nothing in this
world can possibly satisfy. Your hearts are not going to be satisfied until you
find him, and the way you find him is when in some particular Scripture text
you see that it is really about him and what he has done.
Conclusion
Let me close with an additional word of challenge.
What we're talking about is not just simply understanding that everything in
Scripture is all about Jesus. You still have to see it as authoritative. You
have to submit to it for a full personal encounter.
As some of you know I love movies. I remember
watching a remake of the film The Stepford Wives starring Lindsay Wagner, the
Bionic Woman. The movie tells the story of a group of wives in whom you just
stick a little microchip and they never argue with or contradict their husbands
again. You see, if there is no conflict, you don't have a person anymore. You
have a robot. If you have a person, you're in a personal relationship where
there will be contradiction and conflict. If that's gone, one of you has stuck
a microchip in the other person. Where am I going with this? If you consider
the Bible and say, "I like a lot of things in the Bible, but not this
part," that's a good thing. Unless you have a completely authoritative
Bible that can contradict you, come after you, teach you and change you, then
you've got a Stepford God. You've put a chip in him. You have a god of your own
making. An authoritative Bible that you have to submit to whether you like it
or not is not the enemy of a personal relationship with Jesus Christ and
God—it's the precondition. If we let our unexamined beliefs undermine our
confidence in the Bible, the cost may be greater than we think.
The person who had the greatest relationship with
God was Jesus. When he came as a human being, he bled Scripture. He was always
talking about it. When Peter challenged him, he pointed to Scripture needing to
be fulfilled. When he was confronted by the Devil, how did he respond? With
Scripture. When he confronted hell on the cross, he quoted Psalm 22. When you
cut Jesus, he bled Scripture. That's how he had this incredible relationship
with God. Jesus shows us the relationship with Scripture we've got to have.
Do you want your heart to burn within you? Do you
want the deepest longings of your heart to find their rest in a personal encounter
with God? Go where the Scripture is expounded. Go to Bible studies where
together in community you figure out what Scripture says. Make sure that you
personally dig into it all the time yourself as an individual.