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Our Dangerous Familiarity With Scripture

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  • Our Dangerous Familiarity With Scripture

    Is there a problem when Christianity becomes too normative?

    The link can be found here.

    The text is as follows:

    Is there a danger in our society where Christianity is normative? Let's plunge into the Deeper Waters and find out.

    If your household is like mine, my wife and I do frequently discuss the Bible and what it means for us, particularly when we are going through a difficult time, which we all go through. We also contrast it with others we see who fail along the journey and ask what they did wrong and how we can avoid it. One thought that comes to my mind is that too many people who call themselves Christians just aren't taking Scripture seriously enough. The sad thought is that every one of us to some extent falls into that category.

    You see, we will share with our neighbors and on Facebook and on our blogs and web sites about the glorious truths of Christ. We will talk about how His power is in us to work and to bring about the Kingdom. We will even listen to Christian songs that sing that message and sing those same songs in our church service. We will stand up and we will cite the creeds in our church services as if to say that we give full support to them and back them entirely. Many of us will stand up for the Inerrancy of Scripture and say that we fully believe that which is written in the Bible.

    We're good at talking.

    We're not so good at walking.

    You see, we've become in some ways so familiar with the text that it no longer strikes us as radical in any way. Our Biblical morality has become normative for many cultures in many ways. We don't realize how much of a change it is to dare suggest that a person should not be a slave, that a woman has value in herself, that sex is something sacred for marriage, that we should want to give to the poor, etc. Even many atheists today will agree to some of the claims before. (Probably you'd only find the most resistance on the third one) These have seeped into our background knowledge so much that we don't realize it. Many people do not realize they are living with a Christian morality and frankly, we don't even realize it.

    When it comes to the story of the Bible, we've grown up with so many cute Vacation Bible School and Sunday School lessons on this that we have not got to have the shock value. We grew up thinking this is the way not only that the world is but that it has always been. The surprise of it has never been taught. Unfortunately also, we've made God detached in this one. We don't really talk about who God is at all or what He intends to do in us. We talk about what He will do for us and very rarely does that seem to include personal holiness. Instead, it most often means things like providing comfort and peace when we need it and He'll come when we pray because we're in a bind. We don't see Him as a day to day reality in our lives. It's almost like we look and say "Well yeah, I know God is there and He loves me, but so what? Look at what's going on in my life."

    We must really ask ourselves if we're saying "So what?" to our worldview.

    What does it mean when we talk about God? The great work of Jesus was that He gave us access to God, and yet we don't really bother to learn anything about this God He gave us access to. How many of you men would like it if your wife treated you like just a paycheck so she could get the things she wants at the store and did not come to really know and appreciate you as a person? (And how many of you wives are doing just that?) How many of you women would like it if your husband only came to you when he wanted sex but just showed no interest in you otherwise? (And how many of you husbands are doing just that?) Yet too often, this is how we have treated God, you know, the being we say is the most awesome and wonderful and majestic one of all. The one who has all the power to do what He wants, all the knowledge to know what the right thing to do is, and is all present meaning He sees everything. Oh yes, we also believe He's going to judge us at the end of our lives and everything we have done, thought, or said, will be called to account.

    Tell you what. Let that last part sink in for awhile before moving on.

    Everything. There are no exceptions.

    Every. Single. Thing.

    As I thought about this, I remembered a meme my wife put up that is a sentiment I have shared many times that a marriage cannot be 50-50 but 100-100 and I thought "Could it be that we do not seek to give all we can in our marriages when we don't even do that with God?" In fact, it looks like we more often than not seek to give the bare minimum. Let's consider a line like "You should not have sex before marriage." We can look at that and say "Okay. I get it. No sex before marriage." But then the rationalizations come in. "Yes, but what constitutes sex? Does this mean I can do absolutely nothing truly intimate before marriage?" It's like we want to get as close to that line before we cross it. It's practically thinking that we suspect God is holding out on some joy and keeping it from us.

    Why on Earth would you give God the bare minimum? Do you think He's going to waste what you give to Him? Do you think that if you give money or time or service to Him that He will waste that? Do you not realize that your actions in this life really show the world what you think of God? If your actions do not match up with your words, you can be sure that the people will go with your actions instead of your words.

    Now some of you can say "God is going to judge me, but I'm saved so I get to spend eternity with Him." Well to begin with, that's just taking advantage of the grace of God. It's saying "I'm already covered so this sin is no big deal." That despite the fact that any one sin is enough to require the death of the Son of God so you can be forgiven. Sorry, but to Him, it's all a big deal and if you do not see sin in your life as a big deal, then frankly you are not taking God seriously. You must also realize on the bright side that if you do take it seriously and come to Him and ask Him seriously for help as you repent, that He will help you.

    Still, let's suppose as we have good reason to that it is true that you will make it into His Kingdom. How you spend your life here will determine how much you will enjoy eternity the next life. So let's look at you men again who might say "Look. I mainly value my wife for sex, but I love her still and our marriage is fine. What's the big deal?" To begin with, I'm not sure why you would want your marriage to be described as "fine" when it should be described as awesome, but if you treat your wife as a sex object, you can certainly get a lot of jollies down here, but if you're married to a Christian, that Christian is the temple of God and you will get called to account for how you treated that temple.

    Your capacity to enjoy God in the next life could be greatly lessened by your failing to appreciate Him in this life.

    Let's also add in the case of Jerry Walls. Walls is a Protestant who believes that we shouldn't have jettisoned the idea of purgatory. God has to make us holy somehow and he doesn't see a guarantee of a sudden zap when we die. There will be a time of waiting according to Walls where God will purge our unholiness out of us.

    Let's suppose that that is true.

    If so, do you not realize that living a life of sin means you will be further and further from experiencing the joy of the Kingdom because you lived so long in contradiction to it? I'm not sold on Walls's idea yet, but it does make me look at myself and say "Am I taking sanctification seriously? Am I taking holiness seriously?" We can often act like our wrong doesn't really matter to God and on what basis do we normally do it?

    Feelings and experience.

    "Sure. I did this thing I normally shouldn't have, but I didn't feel awful and the sky didn't come crashing down around me so it must not be any big deal to God." If personal experience and feelings were a guide to holiness that was surefire, I suspect many of us would be living better. Unfortunately, how we feel in a situation is often a result of not just that situation but a lifetime of training our emotions and feelings a certain way. They become repetitive. We can numb ourselves to any idea that we are doing something wrong by just ignoring it. That's one reason so many guys can get caught in internet pornography. They ignore the one feeling and they emphasize that other feeling that certainly feels oh so good to them.

    But for that, judgment is still coming. You will stand before God.

    Again, let that sink in for a bit before moving on.

    And what are the consequences of not taking Scripture seriously and thus not taking holiness seriously? Look around you.

    How many of you live lives that the rest of the world will look at you and say "Wow. That's what I want my life to be like." How many of you husbands would have your wives be able to wake up and say "My husband is just so much like Jesus it's a joy to be married to him." (And wives, if you are saying that, are you indeed giving him your very best like you should give your best to Jesus?) How many husbands get up and say "I love my wife so much that I am willing to die for her at this moment." (And if you say that, dying is no doubt difficult to do for someone, but are you willing to also live for them?) Again, many of us seek to give the bare minimum in our marriages. That could be why the divorce rate is so high.

    Okay. I know there are times that a divorce is Biblically allowable. I also don't think the claim is true that it's just as high for Christians as it is for non-Christians since it's my understanding that Christians who regularly worship and pray and read the Bible together and thus seek to live out a Biblical worldview have a much lower divorce rate. Despite that, divorce is a tragedy. Even if it is Biblically allowable, divorce is a tragedy. Our hearts should weep when we hear about it taking place in the church again even when we think it needs to be done. In fact, at our house, unless we're discussing it in a context like this, we never use the word. It is simply "The d-word."

    This also includes our sex lives. Isn't it a shame that we look at sex in our culture and the Christians are seen as the prudes who don't really enjoy sex? We Christians should be the ones who are enjoying it the most. (Adding in if we are married of course.) If you want the world to look at your marriage and see it as something that they should desire, that will include your sex life in it. Sex is a covenant making activity and it serves the role in marriage of renewing the covenant as it were with your spouse. You come in and give everything you have to your spouse and leave yourself totally vulnerable to them. Yet in that vulnerability, there is to be the greatest of joy for you come knowing you are fully accepted and loved. Christians should in fact corner the market on having great sex and too often, we don't.

    What do you take the time to enjoy the most? Peter Kreeft spoke about one of his sports teams in baseball he likes once and said sometimes he worries he's more of a fan of them than he is a fan of Jesus. How many of us could say likewise? How many of us follow our favorite sports team with more devotion and excitement than Jesus. Now some of you might call foul (pun intended) on me in this saying that you know I'm not a sports fan. Fair enough. Could I be more interested in a game I am playing at the time? Could I be more interested in a TV series I am watching at the time? Unfortunately, looking at the state of my prayer life, I think I could often say that yes, some things are more appealing. Could it in fact sometimes be that the ministry of Jesus is more appealing than Jesus Himself?

    To get back to judgment, some of us will read and say, "Yes. I know I need to get things right, but judgment is off in the distance."

    For some people in Chattanooga, judgment came suddenly yesterday. I am not saying that their deaths was God's judgment on them. Not at all. I am saying that they woke up yesterday morning I'm sure thinking they had the rest of their lives ahead of them. They had time to do things they meant to do. They had time to tell their loved ones that they loved them. They had time to play with the kids later on. They had time to show their spouse how much they appreciated them.

    But they didn't.

    Before the day was over, they unexpectedly stepped into eternity.

    And what guarantee do you have that the same won't happen to you today?

    We often look at our world and wonder how it got the way that it did. The idea of redefining marriage would have been unthinkable decades ago. Now it's normative to most people. We can actually rip apart a baby in the womb and have people that will defend and celebrate it. Many of the things we were sure would never happen have in fact happened and as I tell people as an apologist, it really blows my mind the things that I have to defend today because I never would have dreamed someone could think otherwise.

    This did not happen because the world did what the world does.

    This happened because the church did not do what the church is supposed to do.

    Do we really think this would have happened if we were taking the claims of Christ seriously? Do we really think this would have happened if we had properly informed ourselves on our worldview? Do we really think this would have happened if the church had more consistently lived what it believed? No. The blame falls on our heads for not doing the job of standing up and contending for the faith and we will be called to judgment for that.

    In fact, we often talk about caring for the poor in Christianity. You know who's job that is in Christianity? Yours. It is not the job of the government to take care of the poor. It is the job of the church to do that and the reason the church is having such a hard time is we decided to ask Caesar for his help. Do we really think that Christ is so weak and incapable that His church would need the help of Caesar to do what He had told them to do? The sad reality is yes, yes we do in fact think that. We can know we think that because that is in fact what we did.

    Please also understand I am not going hard on everyone else and ignoring myself in all of this. I do take a serious look at myself and ask if I'm doing all that I could be. Of course, we can all always do more. None of us will live perfectly, but if I really do think God can help me in my struggle with sin, that He can empower me to live a holy life, that eternity of bliss with Him is the best thing that can possibly be, and that He will be my judge one day, I should take it seriously. If I believe the Bible is from Him and the commands in there are true, I should take that seriously.

    Am I? Good question.

    Are you? Also a good question.

    Think about it.

    In Christ,
    Nick Peters

  • #2
    Good post!

    Minor points, but I'm curious.
    1) Just what do you mean by "meme" in its context here? You also used that word in another thread IIRC.
    2) "[The Church] decided to ask Caesar for his help." I think it's more the politicians try to buy votes with things like Social Security, Obamacare, food stamps, low-cost mortgages, etc.
    The greater number of laws . . . , the more thieves . . . there will be. ---- Lao-Tzu

    [T]he truth I’m after and the truth never harmed anyone. What harms us is to persist in self-deceit and ignorance -— Marcus Aurelius, Meditations

    Comment


    • #3
      A meme is an image put up on the internet usually with some humorous caption or some point to be made.

      Comment


      • #4
        STM the problem is not so much taking the Bible for granted, as taking the benefits of Christ for granted. [If this has no place in the thread, please delete it.]

        Comment

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