How to Live the Bible — Finding Faith with the Facts

howtostudythebible

This is the two-hundred-sixteenth lesson in author and pastor Mel Lawrenz’ How to Live the Bible series. If you know someone or a group who would like to follow along on this journey through Scripture, they can get more info and sign up to receive these essays via email here.


When we read Scripture are we trying to understand facts or seeking to have faith?

One can approach Bible study as a search for facts. Who wrote this passage? Where was the author writing from, and to whom, and for what purpose? When was this written? What is the exact meaning of the language used?

Pastor Mel Lawrenz says we can and must read Scripture on a factual basis of objective reality, but with the aim to know God better, which is the aim of faith.

We look at history, geography, culture, and language. We need to do this because the only way to thoroughly understand the texts of the Bible is to pay careful attention to the content and circumstances of the texts. Here is where curiosity goes a long way. If we think of history, geography, culture, and language as meaningful and interesting, our curiosity will draw us in to the gold in the goldmine.

This is a matter of respect. When I get a letter in the mail I first of all look at the return address to see who wrote to me. I can look at the date it was posted and, by the postmark, see where it was mailed from. Then I open the letter and read the contents. If it’s a handwritten letter from my mother I’ll read it carefully and respectfully. If it’s a bill, I’ll read it carefully as well (but with less enthusiasm).

I do not go to the mailbox, open a letter, and just start reading the words, wondering how the words will impress me, or if they’ll make me happy. We must not read Scripture that way either. We read it respecting the author and the context. We use the rules that apply to the use of ordinary language because God’s word comes to us in the diverse and amazing forms of poems and songs, oracles and proverbs, simile and metaphor, Gospels and epistles, etc. We read Scripture naturally.

We read a passage in context because that’s the way we see its meaning. In the same way that we hope people will take the words we use in speech or writing in context so they’ll truly understand our meaning, we read the biblical authors in context in order to get the true meaning. This is to respect them.

And it is to respect God.

That’s the other side of the equation. We read Scripture seeking to understand the facts, but we do not need to stop there. We read Scripture with faith. Many people, of course, are not interested in a faith journey. They’re only looking at the facts. Not everyone who studies the Bible believes he or she is listening for the voice of God, and that makes all the difference in the world. It’s possible to study the Bible as a purely academic exercise, and obviously many people do. In their view the texts in the Hebrew, Aramaic, and Greek portions of the Bible are no different than any other ancient texts. (Although many have started to read the Bible with no faith, and have been startled by the light of truth that awakened them to the reality of God.)

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In my book, How to Study the Bible: A Practical Guide, we’re assuming that we’re reading the Bible with faith, not just as informational reading. We can and must read Scripture on a factual basis of objective reality, but with the aim to know God better, which is the aim of faith.

Anselm of Canterbury (c. 1033-1109) said: “I believe in order that I may understand” (Credo ut intelligam.). The principle is otherwise known as “faith seeking understanding,” as it was expressed by Augustine of Hippo in the 4th century.

These leading thinkers and many others have said it is when our lives are connected with our Creator, when our minds and hearts are awakened to his power and presence, when we are “believers,” that we will begin to understand the way things really are.

Knowing the Bible is not the ultimate objective. Knowing God is. Really knowing God. And knowing God via the revelation God has given of himself, not our imaginary constructs. Studying Scripture in this way is about both facts and faith.

One last point here. Skeptics will say that taking a faith approach to the Bible contradicts a factual approach. That one either examines the Bible with all the tools of literary analysis and cultural criticism, or takes a religious perspective. That is not true. We can study the Bible in detail with all the reasonable tools of analysis of language and history, come to the conclusion that we believe what it says, and then continue to take both approaches for the rest of our lives. To say that we believe Jesus really did rise from the dead, a supernatural event, does not mean we cease to examine the text of Scripture with the canons of deductive logic. Approaching Scripture as a matter of faith and faith gives us the advantage of discovering true, objective meaning, and deepening our relationship with God.
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Mel Lawrenz (@MelLawrenz) trains an international network of Christian leaders, ministry pioneers, and thought-leaders. He served as senior pastor of Elmbrook Church in Brookfield, Wisconsin, for ten years and now serves as Elmbrook’s teaching pastor. He has a PhD in the history of Christian thought and is on the adjunct faculty of Trinity International University. Mel’s many books include Spiritual Leadership Today: Having Deep Influence in Every Walk of Life (Zondervan, 2016). See more of Mel’s writing at WordWay.

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