A Message
From the Pastor
Rev.
Dr. Johan Bergh, Pastor
In May here among People of Faith we lift up the
2nd of 6 Marks of Discipleship: Reading the Bible Daily.
We have Life Journals available in the
lobby area of the Worship Center to help you get started with a daily practice
(of course, you can use a lot of different resources to help.....the point is to
get started!)
How can I help draw you into daily reading of
the Scripture?
Maybe if I share with you some thoughts from
Frederick Buechner’s Wishful Thinking: A Theological ABC.
Take a few minutes to read Buechner below. And
then pull out your Bible and get started!
Pastor Johan
“How does twentieth-century man {sic} with all
his hang-ups try to see what they were looking at and hear what it was they
heard? What follows are some practical suggestions on how to read the Bible
without tears. Or maybe with them.
1. Don’t start at the beginning and try to plow
your way straight through to the end. At least not without help. If you do,
you’re almost sure to bog down somewhere around the 25th chapter of
Exodus. Concentrate on the high points at first. There is much to reward you
in the valleys too, but at the outset keep to the upper elevations. There are
quite a few. There is the vivid, eyewitness account of the reign of King
David, for instance (2 Samuel plus the first two chapters of 1 Kings)
especially the remarkable chapters that deal with his last years when the
crimes and blunders of his youth have begun to catch up with him. Or the
Joseph stories (Genesis 39-50). Or the Book of Job. Or the Sermon on the
Mount (Matthew 5-7). Or the seventh chapter of Paul’s letter to the Romans,
which states as lucidly as it has ever been stated the basic moral dilemma of
man {sic} and then leads into the eighth chapter, which contains the classic
expression of Christianity’s basic hope.
2. The air in such upper altitudes is apt to be
clearer and brighter than elsewhere, but if you nevertheless find yourself
getting lost along the way, try a good Bible commentary which gives the date
and historical background of each book, explains the special circumstances
which it was written to meet, and verse by verse tries to illumine the meaning
of the difficult sections. Even when the meaning seems perfectly clear, a
commentary can greatly enrich your understanding. The Book of Jonah, for
instance – only two or three pages long and the one genuine comedy in the Old
Testament – takes on added significance when you discover its importance in
advancing the idea that God’s love is extended not just to the children of
Israel but to all mankind {sic}”
3. If you have even as much as a nodding
acquaintance with a foreign language, try reading the Bible in that. Then you
stand a chance of hearing what the Bible is actually saying instead of what
you assume it must be saying because it is the Bible. Some of it you may hear
in such a new way that it is as if you had never heard it before. ‘Blessed
are the meek’ is the way the English version goes, whereas in French it comes
out, “Heureuz sont les debonnaires” (Happy are the debonair). The debonair
of all things! Doors fly open. Bells ring out.”
4. If you don’t know a foreign language, try
some English version that you’ve never tried before – the New English Bible,
Goodspeed’s translation, J.B. Phillips’s New Testament, or any other you can lay
your hands on. The more far-out the better. Nothing could be farther out than
the Bible itself. The trouble with the King James or Authorized Version is that
it is too full of Familiar Quotations. The trouble with Familiar Quotations is
that they are so familiar you don’t hear them. When Jesus was crucified, the
Romans nailed over his head a sign saying, ‘King of the Jews’ so nobody would
miss the joke. To get something closer to the true flavor, try translating the
sign: ‘Head Jew’.
5. It may sound like fortune-telling, but don’t
let that worry you. Let the Bible fall open in your lap and start there. If
you don’t find something that speaks to you, let it fall open to something
else. Read it as though it were as exotic as the I Ching or theTarot
deck. Because it is.
6. If somebody claims that you have to take the
Bible literally, word for word, or not at all, ask him if you have to take John
the Baptist literally when he calls Jesus the Lamb of God. If somebody claims
that no rational person can take a book seriously which assumes that the world
was created in six days and man {sic} in an afternoon, ask him if he can take
Shakespeare seriously whose scientific knowledge would have sent a third grader
into peals of laughter.
7. Finally this. If you look at a window,
you see fly-specks, dust, the crack where Junior’s Frisbie hit it. If you look
through a window, you see the world beyond. Something like this is the
difference between those who see the Bible as a Holy Bore and those who see it
as the Word of God which speaks out of the depths of an almost unimaginable past
into the depths of ourselves”