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Loaded Bibles and made-up minds
All of us bring our biases, prejudices and
preconceived ideas to the Bible, like it or not.
ot long ago, I was listening to a smartly dressed
Christian lady seeking recruits in a Sunday School class for a new Bible study
program she had helped launch.
"We don’t push any agenda," she explained. That
sounded good, I thought. It would be nice to study the Bible with people who
have nothing to prove, no agenda to push. I kept listening.
"You’ve probably been in Bible studies where people
argue over this biblical interpretation or that biblical interpretation. Well,
as you know, that’s how heresies get in. So we just study the Bible and don’t
get into any arguments or controversies over doctrine."
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by Mike Feazell

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That’s a noble
approach, I thought. Maybe they agree ahead of time that when a point of
disagreement comes up, they will just identify it, move on and focus only on
non-controversial issues. I kept listening. |
“All of us bring our
prejudices and pre-conceived ideas to the Bible. We might do our best to
control them, but we cannot entirely eliminate them.”
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"We just let the Bible lead, and that settles
all the arguments and prevents heresy," she explained. Well, after that,
all I could hear was, "There are no cats in America, and the streets are
paved with cheese" (from Papa Mouse’s song in the animated film, An
American Tail), because I happen to know that there is no such thing
as a Bible study that "just lets the Bible lead." All of us bring our
biases, prejudices and pre-conceived ideas to the Bible, like it or not.
We might do our best to control them, but we cannot entirely eliminate
them, so we do well to at least be aware of them.
Feuding
families
There are many things that Christians do not
agree about. That is, after all, why there are denominations, sects,
non-denominational churches, independent churches, reformed churches and
reorganized churches—all split—neatly, or not so neatly, categorized
somewhere within mainline Protestantism, mainstream Christianity, Orthodox
Christianity, Roman Catholicism, Evangelicalism, Fundamentalism, et al.,
and sporting theologies ranging from conservative to liberal to orthodox
to neo-orthodox to liberation to natural, et cetera.
So we speak of the Methodist "family" of
churches, or the Baptist "family" of churches, or the Episcopal,
Presbyterian, Lutheran, Pentecostal, Adventist, Reformed or Congregational
"families" of churches. There is even a Mennonite "family" of churches.
(And we’re only talking about North American churches!) And what do all
these "families" have in common? You guessed it. They can’t get along.
They disagree over some point or points that have convinced them that they
are the faithful ones, in distinction to the rest of the "family," not to
mention in distinction to the rest of Christianity.
The real
essentials
We hope, of course, that we all agree on the
real essentials of the faith: Jesus Christ, the Son of God, died for our
sins and rose again for our salvation. After that, it gets sticky as to
exactly what the essentials are, and worse, exactly how they should be
worded. I’m sure some will take great exception to my wording two
sentences back.
In my experience, "We stand on the Bible" is
just another way of saying, "We use the Bible to promote and defend our
sectarian views." People who want to learn from the Bible don’t come
together with loaded Bibles and made-up minds. They come together with
open hearts and humble spirits, not to argue, but to listen. Regardless of
what church family we might be signed up with, we can still learn from one
another in healthy, respectful discussion, under the word of God, as loved
children in God’s family. •
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copyright 2007
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