From Tullian Tchidivjian:
We often read the Bible as if it were fundamentally about us: our
improvement, our life, our triumph, our victory, our faith, our
holiness, our godliness. We treat it like a book of timeless principles
that will give us our best life now if we simply apply those principles.
We treat it, in other words, like it’s a heaven-sent self-help manual.
But by looking at the Bible as if it were fundamentally about us, we
totally miss the Point–like the two on the road to Emmaus. As Luke 24
shows, it’s possible to read the Bible, study the Bible, memorize large
portions of the Bible–even listen to “expository” preachers who are
committed to preaching “verse by verse, line by line, precept by
precept”–while missing the whole point of the Bible. It’s entirely
possible, in other words, to read the stories and miss the Story. In
fact, unless we go to the Bible to see Jesus and his work for us, even
our devout Bible reading can become fuel for our own narcissistic
self-improvement plans, the place we go for the help we need to “conquer
today’s challenges and take control of our lives.”
Contrary to popular assumptions, the Bible is not a record of the
blessed good, but rather the blessed bad. That’s not a typo. The Bible
is a record of the blessed bad. The Bible is not a witness to the best
people making it up to God; it’s a witness to God making it down to the
worst people. Far from being a book full of moral heroes to emulate,
what we discover is that the so-called heroes in the Bible are not
really heroes at all. They fall and fail, they make huge mistakes, they
get afraid, their selfish, deceptive, egotistical, and unreliable. The
Bible is one long story of God meeting our rebellion with his rescue;
our sin with his salvation; our failure with his favor; our guilt with
his grace; our badness with his goodness.
So, if we read the Bible asking first, “What would Jesus do?” instead
of asking “What has Jesus done” we’ll miss the good news that alone can
set us free.
As I’ve said before, the overwhelming focus of the Bible is not the
work of the redeemed but the work of the Redeemer. Which means that the
Bible is not first a recipe book for Christian living, but a revelation
book of Jesus who is the answer to our unchristian living.
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