The Word
of God Is Living and Active – Hebrews 4:12.
Approaching
Scripture as the Word of God
.
by
J.I. Packer
..
It is very important that one approaches Scripture
as the word of God, not just a mixed bag of human religious reflections
and testimonies, some of which are likely to be more right-minded, some
less, so that our main job is to pick out which are which. This is very
inhibiting to fruitful dealing with the Scriptures.
Trust or mistrust?
As I look around I see a broad division between
people whose attitude to the Bible is in general one of trust, because
they take the Bible as coming from God, and those whose attitude is fundamentally
one of mistrust, because they see it only as a very mixed collection of
human testimonies.
Some of these latter folk have been stumbled by
what they’ve been given in seminary, because it has been fashionable for
the last 100 years in many Protestant seminaries, and for some 40 or 50
years in many Catholic seminaries (Particularly after Vatican II), to highlight
the human aspects of Scripture and dwell on differences, real or fancied,
between the viewpoint of one writer and another. The effect of this can
be to leave students adrift in a sea of pluralistic relativism, with a
bewildering sense that the Bible offers a lot of different points of view
and who is to say which is right?
All Scripture
proceeds from a single source
I am not questioning the value of these studies
of the human side of Scripture, but I see a need to balance that in a way
that not all seminaries do. I would balance them by saying to all Bible
students, in and out of seminary: “Remember, all Scripture proceeds from
a single source, a single mind, the mind of God the Holy Spirit, and you
have not taken its measure until you can see its divine unity in and underlying
its human variety.” It is the word of God in the form of human words, giving
God’s point of view in the form on everything. The unity of Scripture at
that level is something that goes far deeper than its surface differences.
Only God can fill
our emptiness with an appetite for his word
The biggest thing that keeps us from getting
the full benefit of Scripture is simply that we do not feel needy enough.
One of the problems of the pastoral role is that it encourages leaders
to think that they are full of competence; they have got i made; they know
it all. This self-sufficiency is a satanic temptation. A moment of realistic
thought will remind us that we are as needy as the next person.
I find it most helpful to remind myself at the
beginning of my devotional period [daily time of personal prayer] who God
is and what I am. That is to say, I remind myself that God is great, transcendent,
that he loves me and he wants to speak to me right now. And I recall that
I am the original sinner, the perverse and stupid oaf who misses God’s
way constantly. I have made any number of mistakes in my life up to this
point and will make a lot more today if I don’t keep in touch with God,
and with Christ, my Lord and savior, as I should.
There is nothing like a sense of hunger to give
one an appetite for a meal, and there is nothing like a sense of spiritual
emptiness and need to give me an appetite for the word of God. Let that
be the theme of our first minute or two of prayer as we come to our devotional
times, and then we will be tuned in right. God says, “Open your mouth wide,
and I will fill it” (Psalm 81:10).
The quantity of theological notions in one’s mind,
even correct notions, doesn’t say anything about one’s relationship with
God. The fact that one knows a lot of theology doesn’t mean that one’s
relationship with God is right or is going to be right. The two things
are quite distinct. As a professional theologian I find it both helpful
and needful to focus this truth to myself by saying to myself over and
over again, “What a difference there is between knowing notions, even true
notions, and knowing God.” My times with the Bible, like those of all pastoral
leaders, indeed all Christians, are meant to be times for knowing God.
[Excerpt
from Encountering God in Scripture: An Interview with J.I. Packer,
published by the Alliance for Faith and Renewal, Ann Arbor 1990]
See related articles:
-
The
Unity of the Scriptures, An introduction by Don Schwager
-
Christ
In All the Scriptures, by Dr. John Yocum
-
How
to Read the Bible, by Metropolitan Kallistos Ware
-
The
Authority of Scripture, by Steve Clark
-
The
Scriptures Are One Book in Christ, quotes from early church fathers
-
Approaching
Scripture As God's Word, by J.I. Packer
-
In
the Bible It Is God Who Is Speaking to Us, by Dietrich Bonhoeffer
-
You
Can Understand the Bible, by Peter Kreeft
-
Formational
Versus Informational Reading of the Scriptures, by M. Robert Mulholland
Jr.
-
How
to Silence the Scriptures, by Soren Kierkegaard
-
Reading
the Scriptures with the Early Church Fathers, by Don Schwager
-
Scripture
Study Course, by Don Schwager
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