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Now, given that we understand the importance of the Word of
God that it is in fact the Word of God and we've endeavored to
say that in a number of ways in the last couple of weeks, and
given that our lives are right before the Lord, we belong to Him,
we have this desire, this diligence, this holiness, this
commitment to obedience and prayerfully approach the Word of
God...how are we then to study Scripture? How are we to get a
grip on this book? It seems so formidable. It's such a thick
book, such a long book, in fact 66 books make up this one book.
There are so many details and since every word, therefore every
phrase and every sentence and every paragraph, every chapter,
every book itself is of such vital importance, how are we ever to
be able to grasp the fullness of the Word of God? What format do
we use? What approach do we use for effectively studying the
Bible?
And I want to share with you just some of the basic things
that are essential in coming to grips with an understanding of
the Word of God. Some of them will be familiar to you and some
of them perhaps will be new to you. Suffice it to say by way of
a little bit of an introduction, one of the grave problems in the
church today is a misunderstanding of the meaning of Scripture.
As I said to you this morning, we...and even last Sunday
night...we expect unbelievers to misinterpret Scripture, don't
we, because they are natural and they cannot understand the
things of God. The Bible in its truth is closed to them for the
Bible is only understood by those who are taught by the Spirit of
God. And since they are void of the Spirit and void of the life
of God, we don't expect unbelievers to come up with the right
answer.
But it is also true that in many cases there are believers
who for a number of reasons misinterpret Scripture. They come to
Scripture with their presuppositions and force the Bible to
conform to those presuppositions. They come to the Scripture
with their predigested theology and their understanding of
doctrine perhaps from the past and they want to force the Word of
God into that. Or perhaps they are enamored by some prominent
teacher or prominent writer and they sort of line up with that
individual and they want to affirm what he says or what that
group says without regard for a careful understanding of
Scripture.
There has been, obviously, severe damage done to the work of
God, severe damage to the church of Jesus Christ by
misinterpretation of Scripture. And there are so many
misinterpretations of Scripture under the name of Christianity
that most non-Christian people assume that there is no right
interpretation of the Bible. Is that not fair to say? Most non-
Christian people would say, "Well it's everybody's own
interpretation, that's obvious because there are so many views."
And that is a rather strange thing because for the most part if
you are, for example, a Muslim, you are locked in to a pretty
clear cut common view of Muslim authoritative writings. And
they're pretty much universally accepted and understood in the
same way. If you are a Mormon, there are not a lot of variations
in how the scriptures are interpreted and what doctrines are
believed. If you are a Jehovah's Witness, the same would be
true. If you're in Christian Science, or any other of the quasi-
Christian cults, there is much greater uniformity, even within
the Roman Catholic Church there is much less confusion about what
the church teaches than there is in evangelical and true
Christianity.
And one of the reasons why during the Dark Ages the Roman
Catholic Church didn't want the people to have the Bible, one of
the reasons why they never put the Scripture in the hands of the
people for the period of time from say 500 to 1500, the period
known as the Dark Ages, was because they were afraid that if the
people got a hold of the Scripture without the skill and the
preparation to rightly interpret it, they would misinterpret it.
And we understand that fear because that, in fact, is the case.
While they still had a responsibility to put the hand...the
Scripture in the hands of the people, it was a correct assumption
that when given the Word of God people would come up with all
kinds of misinterpretations. However, on the other hand it was
an incorrect assumption that only the church could be the
authoritative interpreter of Scripture, only the Roman Catholic
system had the right to be the interpreter. That too was a wrong
assumption. The right assumption is you give the Word of God to
the people and then you teach the people how to rightly divide
the truth. You don't keep it back from them. But it is true
that the Bible in the hands of people can be the source of truth
or the source of confusion, even within the framework of the
church.
The church has come up with all kinds of very strange
doctrines because of misinterpretations. In fact, bizarre kinds
of things have occurred in the life of the church because of a
misinterpretation of the Word of God. Cults have risen, as you
know, throughout history because of misinterpretation. Very
often misinterpretation categorically codified and defined by
singular people like Mary Baker Eddy in the case of the Christian
Science, or special vision, supposedly, come to Joseph Smith in
the case of the Mormons. And those being then the interpretation
or the appropriate interpretation of Scripture. But not just
through those mystical means, there still are today many
Christian people who...who offer an interpretation or an
understanding of Scripture that is utterly inaccurate. Their
influence varies, some of those people never get any influence
outside their own house for which we can be thankful, to some
degree. Others of them have wide influence, they're printed,
they're put in books, their books are widely distributed and the
chaos reigns from pillar to post. We really understand that. We
know there is much confusion.
In fact, I've told you many times, I don't need to point it
out again except to comment on it very briefly, that we live in a
time in the framework of evangelicalism where to say this is the
right interpretation and all these are wrong is viewed as
unspiritual, unloving, ungodly because even Christians have come
to the conclusion that almost anything goes in interpreting the
Bible. We're supposed to tolerate people who believe on the
cross, for example, that Jesus became a sinner and had to go to
hell and suffer for His sins. We're supposed to be able to
embrace those people as our Christian brothers and tolerate that.
We're supposed to be able to embrace as Christians those people
who believe that one is saved by baptism and apart from being
dunked in water one cannot go to heaven. We're supposed to
embrace people who believe that they make a contribution to their
salvation, that it is grace but it is grace cooperating with
human works that effects redemption. We're supposed to embrace
those people and call them our brothers and sisters and to do
anything less than that is ungodly and unloving and unbiblical
and not Christlike. We're supposed to embrace people who
completely misrepresent and misunderstand the significance of
inspiration, who do not understand that the Bible is the end of
all revelation and who misinterpret the ministry of the Holy
Spirit, and we're to embrace them unequivocally and without
question and to question their misinterpretation of those things
and somehow to undermine the unity of the church. That's the
mood of today and it is not a mood in which careful Bible
interpretation is likely to flourish, is it? Because careful
Bible interpretation is by nature divisive because if you come to
a right conclusion about the Scripture then everything else is
wrong. And so it's not a time for this from the standpoint of
the mood of Christianity today, but it certainly is a time for
this from the standpoint of God who commands us to know His Word
and to rightly divide it. We are called to a proper
understanding of Scripture so that we can truly understand God's
message, so that we can put it into practice, believe it and live
it.
We are also to understand God's Word because when believing
it, living it, and putting it into practice we therefore bring
upon ourselves the fullness of God's blessing and we have the
opportunity to give Him the glory His name is due. Any
misinterpretation of Scripture, any misunderstanding of Scripture
short circuits God's intended purpose for it. And you cannot
justify that on any grounds whatsoever. So we are commended
again to the study of the Bible.
Now let's just talk about some basic things that are
necessary. And I'll review one that I gave you a week ago and
then we'll go on to others. To understand the Scripture the
first thing you have to do is read the Bible. Now that may come
as a shock to you but it's where you have to start. Most people
don't know what the Bible means because they don't know what it
says. And maybe there are people who sort of stand at a distance
from Scripture and say, "Boy, I could certainly never figure this
deal out so I'm not even going to try." Nothing could be further
from the truth. Perhaps if we asked people who have some
familiarity with the Bible...what would be the most difficult
book in the Bible, what would be the hardest book of the Bible to
understand? They would probably say Revelation...probably most
people would say that the book of Revelation is hard to
understand. I know many preachers who throughout the life of
their ministry would never preach on the book of Revelation
because they don't think they can understand it. That's because
they have abandoned the proper hermeneutics to interpret it
because if they interpret it with the right hermeneutics they
have to interpret it literally and if they interpret it literally
it goes against their historic theology. And they really don't
want to do that so they just don't know what to do with the book
of Revelation and they leave it out. But most people would say
it's probably the most difficult book to understand. Yet at the
beginning of this book it says in chapter 1 verse 3, "Blessed is
he who reads and those who hear the words of the prophecy and
heed the things which are written in it for the time is near."
You want a blessing? Read Revelation. Listen to what it
says, understand what it says, and put it in practice. Now I
believe that the book of Revelation can be understood, it can be
understood if you just read it, it's very clear what it says.
It's only when people get mystical about it that it becomes
confusing. Obviously there are some elements of the prophecies
there that we will never understand until they actually come to
pass, but that's true of all prophecy, but the message of the
book, exalting Jesus Christ, speaking about the glorification of
the saints and the judgment of the ungodly is very clear in the
book of Revelation.
You start by reading the Bible. I suggested to you that
the way to do that is to read the Bible on a repetitious basis.
Turn in your Bible, if you will, to Isaiah chapter 28 and I want
to just set down a principle here that I think is very basic and
very important. Isaiah chapter 28, I suppose that if you were to
ask the Jews of Isaiah's day where they were on the scale of
spiritual maturity, they would put themselves fairly high, having
received the oracles of God, having the law of God, and having
the various holy writings that had been granted to them and the
words of the prophets that had come to them and certainly
included in that is the preaching ministry of Isaiah. The people
of Israel would have fancied themselves as students of the
revelation of God, students of the Old Testament revealed
Scripture. They would have fancied themselves as those who had
the knowledge of God, and the wisdom of God, and understood God
and His truth.
But that was not the way God viewed it. God viewed them not
as mature but as utterly immature. He viewed them not as adults
in terms of understanding but as infants in terms of
understanding. And so Isaiah speaks to them in that sense in
chapter 28 verses 9 and 10. "To whom would He teach knowledge
and to whom would He interpret the message?...speaking of
God...those just weaned from milk, those just taken from the
breast. For he says...verse 10...order on order, order on order,
line on line, line on line, line on line, a little here, a little
there. Indeed He will speak to this people."
Now when God went about to speak to His people Israel
through the prophet Isaiah, He had to speak to them as if they
were just infants, as if they had just been weaned from the
breast, as if they had just been weaned from milk. They were
infants and they had to be treated like infants. And how do you
teach an infant? How do you instruct an infant in knowledge?
How do you teach a child when they're in their infancy, when
they're just beginning to have the capacity to learn?
You teach them this way. "Order on order, order on order,
line on line, line on line, a little here, a little there." The
bottom line, repetition...simple repetition. Repetition, over
and over and over and over again is how little ones begin to
learn. That's how God's people have to learn. You come into the
Kingdom of God, as it were, according to Matthew 18, if we can
spread this metaphor across to the New Testament, you come in as
a child, you are a child of God and you have certain childlike
characteristics. One of them is that you need to learn the truth
of God and you have to learn it by repetition. It's true of
anything you learn, you learn it by repetition.
Even as a student in seminary, I go back to the days when I
was endeavoring to pass exams in seminary and show my proficiency
in the various course work that I had to do, and perform at a
level so that I could get the grade I wanted to get, proceed
toward my graduation. And I found that the only that I could
really retain what was necessary to retain was by constant
memorization, constant repetition in my study. That's how we all
learn. You learn by repetition, over and over and over and over.
And as you read the Bible, that is what will happen. I
suggested to you that with regard to the New Testament in
particular, you read it repetitiously. Read the same section
every day for thirty days. Take about seven chapters or so,
sometimes a little more, maybe a little less if you're reading a
book like Philippians that only has four chapters, then read four
chapters every day for 30 days. If you're reading a book like
John, divide it into three sections of seven, read seven for 30
days, the next seven for 30, the next seven for 30. In two and a
half years you can do the entire New Testament that way. That
repetitious reading will cause you to remember what you have
read.
Now you say, "Well as I go through the Old Testament, do I
do the same?" No, just read through it in a narrative fashion.
And when you're done, go back and read through it again. And
then go back and read through it again. You cannot remember the
vast volume of detail and the wideness of the Old Testament. But
I remind you of this, that the themes of the Old Testament and
the themes of the New Testament are very clear and there are not
that many of them. Do you remember what I told you were the
basic themes of Scripture? First of all, Scripture is God's
self-disclosure. It tells us about God. So as you read through
the Scripture, you can start at Genesis and read right through
the Old Testament, noting in your mind everything that is true
about God. And you'll find things repeated again and again and
again, that God is wise and God is powerful and God is the
creator and God is a judge, and God is just and God is merciful
and demonstrates loving kindness. You see it here, you see it
there, you see it here, you see it there. And so there is a
repetition of that throughout the Old Testament. Every book
doesn't unveil some brand new kind of revelation heretofore never
known, but rather unfolds in a new way in a new environment in a
new context in a new experience the character of God so that you
are hearing about God over and over and over and over again.
Secondly we said that the Bible points out that God has a
law which man violates and as a result of that he suffers the
cursing of God. Violation of God's law, disobedience to God
brings cursing. That is clear in the Scripture. You'll start in
Genesis and you'll see it immediately in the Fall. You'll see it
again and again and again and again as you go through the record
of the Old Testament. Everywhere you go you're going to run into
the same basic theme, illustration after illustration after
illustration.
Thirdly we said that to those who keep the law of God and
obey the law of God there is promised blessing. You will see
that repeated again and again and again. Where there is the
honor of God, the worship of God, where the sinner recognizes his
sin and comes to God and seeks to glorify Him and honor Him,
believes in Him, trusts in Him, and obeys Him, there will be
blessing. Repeatedly in the Old Testament that record is
unfolded.
The fourth great theme of the Old Testament is there is a
Savior coming. Man is in desperate need. He is guilty before a
holy God because of his sin. He can't do anything about it
himself. Someone must come to pay the penalty for man's sin.
That someone will come and that is the Savior. When you're
reading in Genesis, you will read about one who will come and
bruise the serpent's head, you will read about a ruler who will
come who will be Shiloh, as it were, who will bring peace. As
you move through you will read about the sacrificial lamb, you
will read about a day of atonement. You will read about a
scapegoat that bore away sin. All of that picturing the coming
Savior. And then the psalmist will begin to identify the Savior
and even quote what the Savior will say when He hangs on the
cross. And then you will read the prophets and they will predict
things about the Savior, about His birth, about His life, about
His death, about His resurrection, and so it goes. And the
Savior will be that recurring theme again and again and again and
again, the one who is to come, the one who is to come.
And finally, the final fifth great sweeping reality of the
Old Testament is that history will end with God establishing an
earthly kingdom in which His glorious Savior will rule and reign.
You will find that again and again and again and again. God will
take back the earth. Paradise will be regained.
Those are the five great themes that sweep through the Old
Testament, and, of course, through the New Testament as well. So
when you read the Old Testament, just keep reading and reading
and reading, you can hang everything you read on those five
hooks. So there is repetition. There are just those few themes
in the Bible. Those themes obviously have various shades and
significances and nuances and they break open into a myriad of
truths but they all are built around those themes. Reading the
Bible will put you in touch and make you familiar with those
themes and the man explicit statements about those themes, the
many illustrations of those themes in the history that God has
recorded for us in the Old Testament.
Another thing about the Old Testament in your reading is
that the Old Testament is simple. And I say that in this sense.
The Hebrew language is simple. It is a concrete language. It
is not an abstract language like Greek. Greek has many
abstractions. Greek is a language of cognition where Hebrew is a
language of action. The Hebrew language is very specific, very
concrete, very clear. And most of the terminology has very
concrete and obvious significance. You should be able to read
the Old Testament and understand what is going on. You may run
across a word you don't understand, you may run across a ceremony
you don't understand, you may run across a historical event that
maybe is a little bit confusing to you, but in general the
language of the Hebrew is simple and straightforward. And as you
read through the Old Testament continually, and I would suggest
that you read mostly in the same version, occasionally reading a
different version for just a little bit of a nuance of
understanding, but mostly in the same version so that you
increase your familiarity with the text. Read the Scripture.
Now as you read, and this is what I've always done, as you
read keep a little bit of a log alongside your reading and note
the things you don't understand. Note the things you don't
understand. Don't get bogged down in your reading with
everything you don't understand as you're just reading through.
Keep reading and start making a list, put down a little list for
each book you're reading, put down the chapter heading and start
writing down the things that you don't understand and you'll
begin to sort of feed your curiosity a little bit. That's a very
important process to do...read and note the things you don't
understand for future study so that you can go back and dig a
little bit more deeply.
Now in the New Testament, as you're reading what I told you
to do was take a little three by five card, or some kind of a
card, a little post-it or whatever you want to use, and write
down the theme of every chapter...write down the theme of every
chapter. You're reading through 1 John, you're reading through
the chapters of 1 John, five chapters, you give a little heading
to each of those five chapters which plants in your mind what's
in that chapter. Memorize that the 30 days you're reading 1
John. Keep it in your memory, go back and rehearse it and you'll
always know where things are in the Bible. You can find them
easily. There's no substitute for this.
It's almost impossible to calculate, for example, the number
of sermons that someone like John Wesley preached. I've heard
numbers upwards of thirty and forty thousand sermons that he
preached. It is recorded in history that John Wesley, of course,
preached all the time. Sometimes he preached from dawn to sunset
day after day after day. He preached thousands upon thousands
upon thousands of sermons. In fact, I used to wonder how in the
world the man could preach that man sermons...how did he have
that much material in his mind? The answer comes when you
understand that every day of his life John Wesley arose at four
o'clock in the morning and proceeded on an absolutely rigorous
routine of reading the Scripture which he did for hours until he
was ready to preach in the mornings. And he read the Scripture,
interestingly enough, in five languages. Now we don't expect to
be able to do that. He was able to do that. That giving him the
breadth, and length and depth and height and all the nuances
possible in the understanding of the Scripture. He was a man
literally bursting with the knowledge of the Scripture which fed
this immense capacity that he had for preaching. It all starts
with reading the Scripture repetitiously.
One of my...one of my great teachers and a man who so
wonderfully influenced me, Dr. Charles Fineberg, who was in many
ways my mentor, is now with the Lord. But he was sort of my
spiritual hero when it came to knowing the Bible. Knew the Bible
so well he...if there was any man who didn't need to read it, he
didn't need to read it, he knew practically the whole Old
Testament in Hebrew. He had memorized massive sections of it in
Hebrew and he had such an incredible mind, I don't know what his
IQ was but he had that familiar photographic memory that
sometimes people talk about, never seemed to forget anything. He
had immense mind and yet it was his routine habit to read through
the Old Testament and the New four times every year. And he did
that for decades which is why he had such great familiarity with
the text of Scripture.
And as I told you earlier, familiarity with the text of
Scripture is its own interpretation. As you begin to read
Scripture it begins to interpret itself. It begins to unfold
itself because these consistent truths are repeated again and
again and the Bible becomes its own best source of explanation,
one scripture explaining another. And you'll be amazed as you
begin to absorb the Word of God, reading as I told you through
the Old Testament, and then on a 30 day basis repetitiously in
the New, you do that for a few years and you will begin to marvel
at the grasp that you have on the meaning of Scripture because it
becomes so clear just by virtue of the repetition.
And as I've told you before, I just repeat briefly again, I
like to interpret the Bible with the Bible. That's the best
source of interpretation. And in most cases you can do that. In
other words, nothing in the Bible is so absolutely isolated that
you have to interpret in its own context and not beyond.
Everything in Scripture, most everything in Scripture is linked
to other matters in Scripture that assist in the interpretation
of that matter itself.
An illustration of that, for example, and there could be
many but one that comes to mind. In reading through John chapter
3, Jesus talks to Nicodemus and Jesus says to Nicodemus, "You
must be born of the water and the Spirit." Now somebody might
ask the question...what is He talking about? What does He mean
you must be born of the water and the Spirit? And I've heard
people say, "Well the water there means baptism. You have to be
Spirit-baptized and you have to be water baptized." And there
are whole groups of people who teach that. That doesn't make any
sense since Christian baptism hadn't been instituted at the time
of that conversation. And furthermore, since water baptism is
not the means of salvation.
Others have suggested and I've heard this preached that what
it means, you must be born of the water and the Spirit is you
must be born physically, that's the water, you know, the water
breaks and then the baby comes, and so that's the water that is
part of human birth, you must be humanly born and then you must
be born of the Spirit. The problem with that is the Jews didn't
refer to that as water.
The right answer is simply available to you if you read
Ezekiel because in the prophecy of Ezekiel chapter 36 Ezekiel
says, "There's coming a New Covenant and in that New Covenant God
is going to take away the stony heart of your flesh and He's
going to give you a heart of flesh, a tender heart, He's going to
put His Spirit within you and He's going to sprinkle water upon
you and wash you." And if you further read back into the New
Testament you're going to find that it is the washing of the
water of the Word. That's what it's talking about. The Scripture
gives its own explanation, you don't need a medical explanation
or a clinical explanation and you don't need some kind of
ecclesiastical explanation...the Bible itself is its own best
interpreter.
I remember when I was going through Peter's epistles and was
talking about a very interesting phrase in 1 Peter...1 Peter 1:2
that you may obey Jesus Christ and be sprinkled with His blood.
And I read that phrase and I thought what in the world does that
mean...and I started reading in commentaries and I couldn't find
anything that satisfied me, I had all kinds of explanations.
What does it mean to be sprinkled with the blood of Jesus?
That's not a term used anywhere else in the New Testament.
And as I began to study I found that same concept in the
twenty-fourth chapter of Exodus. Because I was familiar with
Exodus said, went back to Exodus chapter 24 verses 3 through 8,
found a whole ceremony there, a ceremony when the people of
Israel declared their obedience to God and that they would be
faithful to the Word of God, and at that particular time Moses
splattered blood all over them as a symbol of their declaration
of obedience. And that's precisely what Peter who was a Jew
would have in mind as he was writing to Jews. He would be saying
to them that when you acknowledge Jesus Christ as Savior, you are
like those of old, affirming your obedience...and in a symbolic
sense being sprinkled with His blood rather than the blood of a
sacrifice in the case of Exodus 24. I don't need to go into any
more detail other than to say Exodus 24 gives a clear
understanding of what 1 Peter 1:2 is talking about.
So to be a student of the Bible, first of all, is to grasp
the sweep of Scripture by repetitious reading.
Now let's go a second feature and that is to interpret the
Bible. And we'll have to spend a little time on this. You've
read it and hopefully as you've read it you've kept a little bit
of a log of the things that interest you and you're going to
spend some extra time each week going back to some of those
issues that you wrote down because you didn't understand them.
And this is what I've done through the years. Those things that
I don't understand become the priority list for my own personal
study in depth. Again, this has to go beyond devotions. And as
I mentioned this morning, just sort of reading the Bible as a
little bit of a daily exercise of fifteen minutes and then
reading another passage the next day and another one and never
really understanding the depth of what you read is not life
changing, it's sort of like popping one aspirin a day, you know,
it may have a little bit of effect in the long run, but it's not
going to change your life.
The Ethiopian eunuch was asked the question, "Do you
understand what you're reading?" To which he replied to Philip's
question, "How can I except some man should...what?...should
guide me." I have to have some help. I'm reading it but I'm not
sure I really understand it. And that's going to be true as you
study the Bible. That's why when you go back to Nehemiah, go
back for a minute to Nehemiah chapter 8. In Nehemiah chapter 8
the word of God had been found and Ezra the scribe read the Word
of God to the people. Verse 1, they all gathered as one man at
the square which was in front of the Water Gate. They asked Ezra
the scribe to bring the book of the law of Moses which the Lord
had given to Israel. Ezra the priest brought the law before the
assembly of men, women and all who could listen with
understanding on the first day of the seventh month.
"And he read from it before the square which was in front of
the Water Gate from early morning till midday in the presence of
men and women, those who could understand and all the people were
attentive to the book of the law."
Now they were there for at least six hours, standing in the
open square listening to six hours of Bible reading. That tells
me they had an attention span that our culture doesn't know
anything about. And they were attentive the whole time.
"And Ezra the scribe stood at a wooden podium," that's where
these came from, I guess, these pulpits, "which they had made for
the purpose. And beside him stood Mattithiah, Shema, Anaiah, and
the rest." And verse 5, "And Ezra opened the book in the sight
of all the people for he was standing above all the people and
when he opened it all the people stood up." So they stood up for
six hours in the open square and listened to him read.
"Then Ezra blessed the Lord the great God and all the people
answered, `Amen, Amen!' while lifting up their hands," that was
the start, I guess, of what still goes on when the Word of God is
proclaimed, people say Amen. "They bowed low, worshiped the Lord
with their faces to the ground." And those who were assisting
Ezra are listed there in verse 7. Look at the end of the verse,
"Explained the law to the people while the people remained in
their place and they read from the book, from the law of God,
translating or interpreting, or explaining to give the sense so
that they understood the reading."
That's the second aspect of Bible study. You listen, you
hear, you absorb what you can and then you go beyond. What does
the Bible say? First question, what does the Bible say? Second
question, what does it mean by what it says? What does it mean
by what it says? This is dividing the truth rightly. This is
cutting it straight. And this is absolutely necessary if it's
going to fit together. If you don't cut the pieces right you
can't put the whole thing together.
We were having a discussion the other night in the elders'
meeting which I thought was a very helpful discussion about
theology. And there are many people who would say, "I reject
systematic theology and I accept biblical theology." Well, I
want to be known as a biblical theologian, in that sense your
theology...your theology unfolds from the text, your theology is
unleashed from the text. Your theology rises from the text of
Scripture. You don't want to develop a system of theology and
then impose it like a grid on the Bible. You want to be a
biblical theologian. And that is to say that the theology arises
out of the text, it arises out of the very verses themselves.
But, listen very carefully, that is not in conflict with
systematic theology. It may be in conflict with the classic
concept of dogmatic theology which is an ecclesiastical
theological system imposed upon the Bible and people. It may be
in conflict with dogmatic theology which is a technical term for
that. But it is not in conflict with systematic theology.
I'll tell you what I mean. When you have gone through the
Bible and it has yielded all of its truth and it has said
everything God wants to say, when you're done that will be a
perfect flawless non-contradictory system of truth. It has to be
systematic because God is a God of absolute order. So as we were
saying the other night, it is simplistic to say you reject
systematic theology, you can't say that. You can say I reject a
non-biblical theological grid or dogmatic theology developed by
some ecclesiastics or some people or some person and imposed upon
the Scripture. But when you have done...all your work on
biblical theology, what it yields is a perfect harmonious ordered
theology with no contradictions which is what a perfect system
is...achieving and accomplishing everything that is perfectly
reflective of the nature of God. So we are...we're trying to
come to such a clear and comprehensive and complete understanding
of what the Bible teaches from Genesis to Revelation that we can
say...Here it is in its perfect order and perfect harmony,
perfect interrelation without contradiction. In that sense we
acknowledge systematic theology. It is not the interpreter of
Scripture but it is the result of a proper interpretation of
Scripture. When you go to the Word of God with the exegetical
tools, with an expositional approach and it yields its truth, in
the end it will be perfectly harmonious. And that's part also of
believing in what we call analogous scriptura, that is to say the
Scripture is consistent within itself, analogous to itself and
non-contradictory in any sense. There are mysteries, yes we
don't understand, there are things that are apparently
contradictory to us but they are not in reality contradictory at
all because God is a God of order not a God of confusion.
So it is necessary then for us to carefully interpret
Scripture so as to come up with what it says and in the end so
that it perfectly comes together in order and harmony without
contradiction. Now if you mess up the interpretation on the way,
you can't have that ordered system at the end. It's absolutely
crucial that we rightly divide the Word of God. That's why I've
said through the years, the only person who really has a right to
be a theologian is an exegete. Somebody who interprets Scripture
has a right to say I'm a theologian, somebody who does not
interpret the pages of Scripture can say he's a theologian but he
is a theologian by borrowing from somebody else. The purest
theology rises out of the text itself.
Now misinterpretation of the Bible has created many, many,
many problems. Let me give you some illustrations. Some have
since the patriarchs in the time of Abraham and Isaac and Jacob,
the patriarchs practiced polygamy so may we. Who says that? The
Mormon church.
Others have said since the Old Testament sanctioned the
divine right of the king of Israel, all kings have divine rights.
Europe had lots of kings that exercised what they thought was a
divine right...somehow borrowed from Old Testament Israel.
In America even there was this interesting viewpoint back in
Massachusetts.
Since the Old Testament sanctioned the death of witches, we
should kill them all too. Because some Old Testament plagues
were from God, we should avoid sanitation. Now there's an
interesting view. If you start getting...if you start getting
too sanitary you're going to cripple God. Because God uses
plagues to destroy ungodly people we ought to avoid sanitation.
Here's another interesting viewpoint that has arisen.
Because the Old Testament teaches that women suffer in childbirth
as a divine punishment, no anesthetic should ever be used.
That's an interesting thought, isn't it? Since part of God's
curse on humanity is that women have pain in childbearing,
anything that mitigates that pain is against the will of God.
And I told you about the one that I ran into in Rumania some
years back and it's also true in Russia. Since women are saved
by childbearing they should never do anything of a contraceptive
nature and if they ever do they're liable to lose their
salvation.
Now some people look at the Bible and they see all of this
and they just sort of scratch their head and say, "I don't know
what to do with all of this." I remember talking to a very
prominent man who was a pastor, who was a former fellow student
of mine, eventually went on to attend seminary, graduated from
seminary, was a pastor of a church and I was talking to him one
time at a conference at Hume Lake where both of us were speaking.
And he was speaking on interpreting the Old Testament. And he
just openly said to the people, he said, "You know, I..I've just
decided to take everything for everybody." Everything in the Old
Testament for everybody? That's a...that's a pretty amazing
statement.
And so when I saw him after some of the sessions I said to
him, I said, "I wanted to ask you about that thing you said last
night, you said that you decided that trying to sort it all out
in the Old Testament was pretty complicated, you just decided to
take everything for everybody." I happened to catch him too at
the time while he was eating a hot dog and it was not an all-beef
frank. What do you mean you take everything for everybody? When
did you slaughter your last lamb? And how come you cut your
sideburns and haven't wrapped them around your ears? I mean, why
are you eating that hot dog?
You can't say that. You have to interpret the scriptures.
You can't come up with a blanket concept. People often ask me,
"What is the key to interpreting the Old Testament in order to
understand what was for the Jews in their time and what is for
us?" Answer...the context of every passage. There's no singular
formula that you can just dump on the whole Old Testament.
Now, in accurately handling the Word of God three errors
have to be avoided. I'm going to give you these three errors to
be avoided, and then next Sunday we're going to talk about how to
get it right. Three errors have to be avoided.
Don't ever come to a conclusion at the price of a proper
interpretation. Don't ever come to a conclusion or make a point
at the price of a proper interpretation. Don't use the Scripture
to support your viewpoint. You come up with a neat idea, you
think it works, so you just push the Scripture into it. I mean,
this gets real bizarre. This rather frantic writer was preaching
against women putting their hair up on top of their head because
he thought that since a woman's hair was her covering her glory
it ought to be all over the place all the time. So putting it up
on the head was a breach of Scripture. And supposedly the verse
used was found in Matthew 24, "Top not come down." Now you know
the verse, don't you? It's talking about the time of Tribulation
and it says, "Let those on the housetop not come down."
It's like the preacher who went visiting one day and knocked
on the door of his parishioner's home wanting to give them some
spiritual counsel. He banged and banged, he could see the
television running, the lights were on, bang, bang, bang, bang,
no one came. So he wrote out, "Behold, I stood at the door and
knocked, if any man had heard my voice and opened I would have
come in and supped with him." Stuck it in the doorknob. Sunday
a lady came by and handed him a note, said, Genesis 3:10, "I was
naked and hid myself."
Well, I suppose there are such bizarre uses of Scripture.
That's a bizarre way to illustrate the point. Scripture gets
clumsily used, that's one thing. Scripture gets inappropriately
used, Scripture gets manipulated. I remember reading about
interpretation Jewish, this is not just germane to us but Jewish
interpreters of Scripture of long ago when writing about the
Tower of Babel wrote some pretty bizarre things. Rabbis wanted
to stress concern for people, there were some rabbis who were
very concerned that the folks in Israel didn't care and show love
toward people. And so they took the story of the Tower of Babel
an they said that the reason God changed all the languages and
scattered the nations all over the earth was because you remember
about them building this tower and they were building it higher
and higher and higher...the rabbis concocted this amazing story
about guys who were the hod carriers, you know, who had to carry
the mortar and the bricks clear to the top. And as the thing got
higher they had to go higher and walk up and walk up this
scaffolding higher and higher and higher. And according to this
rabbinical insight many of them fell off the scaffolding and
died. It took many, many hours for a man to carry a load of
bricks to the bricklayers at the top and, of course, if a man
fell off the tower on the way down, no one paid attention. But
if he fell off on the way up, they lost their bricks. And so
they were mourning because the bricks were dropped and that's why
God confounded their language because they were more concerned
about bricks than they were about the death of people. And
that's how the rabbis interpreted that passage to get their point
across. Good point, you should care more about people than
bricks, but it's not there.
Don't take scriptures out of context. Don't make a point at
the price of an interpretation that is accurate and true. This
requires diligence, careful study, thoughtful study, so that we
rightly divide the word of truth and therefore do not need to be
ashamed, 2 Timothy 2:15.
Second, avoid superficial interpretation...avoid superficial
interpretation. One of the common problems in interpreting the
Bible is this little phrase, "This verse means to me...." so
forth and so forth and so forth. Let me tell you something. It
doesn't matter what it means to you, the question is what would
it mean if you didn't live? What would it mean if you didn't
exist? What does it mean period is the issue, not what does it
mean to you.
Sometimes you'll hear people get together and supposedly
have a Bible study which is a little more than a pooling of
ignorance. People say, "Well, I look at this verse and I feel
this verse is saying..." It doesn't matter what you feel. That
has nothing to do with it. It's not a matter of how you feel
about the verse, it's not a matter of what you think it means to
you. Avoid adlibbing in Bible interpretation. Avoid free
wheeling in Bible interpretation. Haphazard handling of God's
Word.
We all want to acknowledge the priesthood of the
believer...yes, we all want to acknowledge that we have anointing
from God, the Spirit of God who dwells within us and the Spirit
of God who dwells within us is the teacher who teaches us. We
all want to acknowledge that. But that is not justification for
flippancy dealing with Scripture. That's why in 1 Timothy 5:17 it
says, "The elders who work hard in the Scripture are worthy of
double honor." It is hard work. Avoid superficial
interpretation. Avoid "this means to me." That is not a
statement that should preface any interpretation of Scripture.
The question is, what does it mean if you don't exist? What did
it mean before you were born? And what will mean it after you're
dead? What does it mean to people who will never meet you? What
does it mean period, is the issue.
And then thirdly, another thing just to mention by way of
avoidance...avoid spiritualizing or allegorizing the Bible.
Spiritualizing or allegorizing the Bible. This is that which
gives to the Bible some kind of mystical meaning. In other
words, what is on the surface is not the meaning, but what is
hidden becomes the meaning. This is very popular. We could talk
about allegorizing, it's quite...it's not quite as popular today
as it used to be, although it's finding a resurgence.
Allegorizing means to say that the historical meaning is not the
real meaning, and in fact may be nothing but a fabrication. The
historical meaning is not the real meaning, the real meaning is
the spiritual meaning hidden beneath the surface. And once you
say that something in the Bible is an allegory, that is it is
only a symbol of the reality, you have just made it impossible to
know what that reality is because if that reality cannot be
discerned through the normal understanding of language, how can
it be discerned?
For example, a book was written a number of years ago called
If I Perish, I Perish, it was purported to be a commentary on the
book of Esther. And in it Esther, it was allegorizing the book
of Esther so that Esther became the Holy Spirit and the whole
story of the book was the operation of the Holy Spirit in the
life of a believer in the battle between the flesh and the Spirit
and spiritual warfare and so forth. Much of what was in the book
was true New Testament truth but it had absolutely nothing to do
with the book of Esther so it therefore convoluted the meaning of
Esther and no person reading the book of Esther ever would have
understood that meaning. No normal understanding of Esther would
have yielded that.
Patricia and I were at a Bible conference back in Lake
Geneva and I was there with another speaker, another preacher.
I'll never forget the occasion because he was preaching, and then
I was preaching and we were alternating and having a good time
doing that. And I said to him, we were having some lunch or a
snack in this little cafe place there at this conference center,
George Williams College on Lake Geneva. And I said, "What are
you going to preach on tonight?"
And he said, "I'm going to preach on the Rapture of the
church."
I said, "Oh, that's great, that will be wonderful, I'm sure
and folks will be encouraged." I said, "What's going to be your
text?"
He said, "John 11."
And I said to myself, John 11? The Rapture is John 14, 1
Thessalonians 4, 1 Corinthians 15...what is John 11? I said,
"John 11 is the resurrection of Lazarus. It's all about Lazarus
being raised from the dead, Mary and Martha and..." I said, "How
is it that you're going to preach on the Rapture from John 11?"
He said, "Oh, you'll have to come tonight."
I said, "I guess I will." So he preached on the Rapture
from John 11. Now I can't remember, it was really clever and
people were saying, "Deep, deep, wow," you know, they don't know,
it just.... And Lazarus was the church and him coming forth was
the dead saints being raised and I think Martha was the Old
Testament saints, and Mary was the living New Testament saints.
And the thing went on for an hour and it was very cleverly done.
It just wasn't there. And when it was over we met again and he
said to me, he said, "Had you ever seen that in John 11?" And I
said, "No one has ever seen that in John 11."
And the next day when he got up to speak. He said, "You
know, I got a wonderful compliment yesterday. John MacArthur
said no one before me had ever seen that in John 11."
Now I believe in the Rapture of the church. It's not in
John 11. There are things in John 11 that ought to be preached.
But once you tell me what it says is not what it means, then you
can tell me it means anything. Because if I can't get the
meaning out of the normal use of the language, how in the world
can I get the meaning?
I listened to a series of eight tapes, a study...a study of
the book of Nehemiah. And I remember this so vividly because we
were in a dialogue in some counseling when Jerry Mitchell was on
our pastoral staff years ago, and Jerry came to me and said, "I
had a very strange counseling session this morning, John, maybe
you can help me with it. I counseled with a young couple,
they're going to get married. They decided to get married. And
I started to ask them why they want to get married and the only
good answer they had was that it was a sermon their pastor
preached." It was the same pastor that had put this series out
that I had been listening to.
And I said, "Well what did he preach on?"
He said, "He preached on the walls of Jericho."
I said, "What do you mean he preached on the walls of
Jericho? What does that have to do with them getting married?"
He said, "Well, it went like this. You claim something and
then march around it seven times and it will fall to you. So it
was applied that if you see a girl that you really believe is
God's choice, just find some way to march around her seven times
and the walls of her heart will fall down." And it was on the
basis of that sermon that they had determined to get married.
And Jerry said, "What do you think our counsel ought to be
because we had an interesting discussion."
I went from that to the series on Nehemiah in which Nehemiah
was the Holy Spirit. The king's pool which is in the city, you
know, when they were building the wall, he mentions the king's
pool, was the baptism of the Holy Spirit and the building of the
wall, the mortar between the bricks was tongues. And the whole
point of Nehemiah is that God wants to send the Holy Spirit to
baptize you with the Spirit and build the fallen walls of your
human personality through speaking in tongues.
Now, you see, if you're going to do that with the Bible you
can't get that from the text. It's pure fantasy. But it goes on
all the time and I've often said...sometimes I say to our
pastors, "You don't need the Bible for that, if you're going to
do that you can use anything...you can use anything." You can
preach Little Bo Peep, you could...you could start off by
saying...Little Bo Peep, oh she was only little but God can use
the little ones. And her name was...her name was Bo Peep...what
a name of insignificance, what a name of ridicule, but God uses
those who have been ridiculed. Little Bo Peep, she lost her
sheep, all over this world sheep are lost. Doesn't know where to
find them. The only part I couldn't figure out was what you do
with wagging their tails behind them.
It's a very dangerous thing to allegorize or spiritualize
Scripture. What it means is what it says when rightly understood
in its historic context. Well, that's enough for tonight, next
Sunday I'm going to tell you how to do that. Okay? Look how the
time went, sorry. Let's pray.
Father, help us to have a love for Your Word developing in
our hearts to the degree that we will study it faithfully and
diligently. Thank You for giving us Your Word, thank You for the
gift of language which conveys Your truth simply and directly.
Lord, show us the truth as we diligently study Your Word, may we
rightly divide it so that its truths can transform us and bring
You glory in Christ's name. Amen.
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