The Bible is Not About You!

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Chris Rosebrough of Fighting for the Faith (http://www.fightingforthefaith.com) passes along a recent article by Byron Yawn that argues that the Bible is not about you.

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Now, I don't have any music for this segment, but this is from the website Christianity .com.
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The headline reads, The Bible Is Not About You. The Bible Is Not About You.
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This is by Byron Yawn. And this is a fantastic article.
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And let me read it to you. Byron writes, he says, I hate to disappoint you, but the
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Bible is not about you. Specifically, it was not written to improve the quality of your daily existence in the world that you think.
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It's not a spiritual handbook and it's not a guide to determine God's will for your life. The Bible is not a story of God determining an eternity past to send his son to earth to create a more satisfactory existence for you.
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But this is usually where we take the story. We are seriously self -absorbed when it comes to our
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Bibles. Who else could take the unbelievable episode of Moses and the burning bush and bend it back toward our everyday experience, or the life of Joseph and draw out principles for effective management?
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Your life and happiness are not adequate points of reference for the scope of what
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God has done and is doing. Neither are mine. It's bigger than you and it's bigger than me.
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In the Bible, we are watching as redemption comes to pass on the pages of Scripture, one unbelievable event after another, eventually leading to Christ.
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Each page rumbles with anticipation. When you see it from here, the Bible opens up in ways you've never imagined.
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It takes off. Unfortunately, we've been conditioned to read ourselves onto the pages and into the events of Scripture.
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We don't even realize we're doing it. What's the first question we ask of the
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Bible in our personal reading times or church services? The question is, how is this relevant to me?
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This is the wrong question entirely. No question could push us further from the real story.
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It's very much like walking out into the night sky and assuming all the stars showed up to look at us.
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When we approach the Bible this way, we can't help but read it as if we're the center of the biblical universe and all of its history revolves around us.
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When everything is read through the lens of self, self -improvement, self -contentment, we're destined to miss the point.
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But this is what we always do. Is it any wonder most Christians, even those who care deeply about the
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Word of God, are unable to put it all together? Usually, biblical stories are approached as a set of isolated events with no connection to each other or to the greater redemptive plotline of the
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Bible. Without the real story, the events of the Bible become merely parables for better living, moral platitudes, character studies, or whatever else we can come up with.
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In the absence of a greater plot, this is all we have. Over the years, popular
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Christianity has practically rewritten the Bible. Our version of various events reads more like a fairy tale than God's story.
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Here we go. These are some examples. Eve's decision to eat the fruit and the subsequent disintegration of humanity becomes a lesson on the effects of negligent leadership and an absentee husband.
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Cain's homicidal rage becomes a lesson on avoiding sibling rivalry. Abraham's attempted sacrifice of his only son becomes a lesson in trusting against all odds for God to provide or how we should all surrender our children to God.
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Moses, before a burning bush, becomes a prototype for decision making. Gideon becomes an example of how to determine the will of God.
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The prayer of Jabez becomes a lesson about expanding our personal influence. David's encounter with the fighting champion of a hostile nation becomes a lesson in overcoming our greatest personal challenges.
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Jonah, a prophet miraculously swallowed by a fish and vomited out on a specific shoreline, becomes an example of the futility of resisting
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God's purpose in your life. Jesus's testing in the wilderness is a template for how we can resist temptation.
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The story of a caring Samaritan is a model of how we should reach out with compassion to those and other races and classes.
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And a young unnamed paralytic dropped through a roof at the feet of Jesus by four men becomes a lesson on the value of friendship.
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None of these interpretations are remotely close to the real point of the events themselves. We've told them wrong.
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You may think I'm crazy, but stick with me. I used to approach the Bible the same way.
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I totally missed it. Or to be more specific, I missed the point. All of these events and people led us to the person of Jesus.
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It's about Jesus. The lessons we typically draw out of the biblical stories are secondary observations at best.
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Usually this is because it's all we know to do with them. Fact is, the same sort of life lessons could be derived from any contemporary biography or history.
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The meanings and applications we've given these events have nothing to do with what's going on in the true story.
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Our approach is about the same as looking for stock tips in the sonnets of Shakespeare.
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This oversight is so very tragic. Something so much greater is underway in these sacred passages.
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These events were not intended to be spiritualized into oblivion and then dissected as lessons about raising kids or starting businesses.
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They are intended to be marveled at by God's people. We stand in point at what
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God has done. They are each a link in a chain of redemptive history that moves from Genesis to Revelation.
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They are not isolated at all. They are amazing demonstrations of the divine continuity of God's power.
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They are each the commitment of a holy God to keep His promises and honor His holy name among men.
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Our response to the individual incidents should be, look how God used this to get us to Jesus, not look how this relates to my longing for significance.
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We've lost the main storyline that pulls all the pieces together and gives them a consistent meaning.
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So we essentially take what's available and make up a story. What we've come up with in evangelicalism is a bit like Little House on the
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Prairie. Didn't Michael Landon bear a strange resemblance to King David? The Bible is now the epic tale of trials and triumph on the frontier of a long -ago land.
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It's no longer about what God has been doing for man and is more about what humanity has done to impress
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God. We approach it more as a collection of fables that indirectly offer principles for life.
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The Bible is no longer about how God went about saving humanity from the brink of desolation.
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The Bible is more the account of how God occasionally stopped to applaud the faith of a few exceptional people.
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It's less about what He has done. It's almost exclusively what we can do if we learn from the lives of the heroic figures in God's Word.
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We do the weirdest things to the Bible in the absence of the cohesive theme. No other book is treated so recklessly by people who honor that same book so greatly.
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Among our favorite rewrites are character sketches. We like to examine the lives of Old Testament saints, triumphs, and tragedies alike, and offer various patterns for living.
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Almost everyone assumes that this is the very reason the Old Testament saints show up in the biblical record.
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Abraham, Joseph, Moses, Joshua, Gideon, and Deborah have all come to represent examples to live by or not to.
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What else could be the reason for this focus on their lives? Therefore, we mine them for spiritual and moral principles.
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Sermons are preached and books are written about their lives and offered as blueprints for daily life, success in business, or practical decision -making skills.
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Every Sunday, kids sit in the Sunday school classes, look at flannel boards or snip at construction paper with safety scissors, and learn how these ancient figures are examples of faithfulness or failure.
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The consistent message is, be like them and life will work out better, or don't be like them and life will work out better.
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Work harder, make good decisions, and stay out of trouble like Joseph and God will bless you.
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When these same kids reach their early twenties, struggle with real life, and fail to reach Joseph's moral high ground, they despair.
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They can't do it. Joseph was exceptional. They get angry with God when life does not work out according to the coloring pages.
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Eventually, they find Christianity irrelevant and powerless to save them, and then they walk away.
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They're exactly right. Joseph is powerless to save them. We're creating angry moralists, setting them up for failure, and then they'll be blaming it on the
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Bible. Tragically, the one message that actually could save them from their failure was before us in the story of Joseph the entire time.
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We failed to mention it. Families would run from our children's programs if parents knew the effect our
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Bible lessons are having on their kids. This approach to understanding this amazing book could not push us further from the real message and central character of the
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Bible. I know this sounds ridiculous to most of us, and maybe even sacrilegious to some, but it should be obvious.
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The Bible is about Jesus, not Moses or any other biblical figure.
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The point of Moses is not Moses, but the one whom Moses points to.
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The Bible explicitly argues this very thing. In Hebrews 3 verses 1 -6 it says,
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Therefore, holy brethren, partakers of a heavenly calling, consider Jesus, the apostle and high priest of our confession.
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He was faithful to him who appointed him, as Moses also was in all his household. For he has been counted worthy of more glory than Moses, by just so much as the builder of the house has more honor than the house.
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For every house is built by someone, but the builder of all things is God. Now Moses was faithful in all his house as a servant, for a testimony of those things which were to be spoken later.
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But Christ was faithful as a son over his house, whose house we are if we hold fast our confidence and the boast of our hope firm until the end.
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Great article by the way. And it's not even an article, this is actually a small snippet taken from the forthcoming book written by Byron Yon entitled,
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Suburbianity, Can We Find Our Way Back to Biblical Christianity? I'm looking forward to reading this book.
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I think Byron Yon has put his finger on the exact problem. And that's this, you go to church
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Sunday after Sunday after Sunday to hear about you rather than Christ, to read yourself into the biblical texts, to basically use
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Jesus for experiencing an easier, more influential, affluent life.
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That's not what Christ is about, nor is that biblical Christianity. It's a complete twisting of scripture. And the twisting is so bad and so off topic that you don't really know the truth about who the
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Bible is about and the message that it's trying to convey. The suburbianity that we constantly hear at Fighting for the
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Faith in the Seeker Driven Movement, that's not Christianity. That's a false Jesus and a false gospel and a false message, all using the
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Bible to create these messages. But that message and that gospel and that Jesus is powerless to save you because that's not the real gospel, nor the real
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Jesus that's being preached in those sermons. All right, we're up on our second break.
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If you'd like to email me regarding anything you've heard on this edition or any previous editions of Fighting for the Faith, you can do so. My email address is talkbackatfightingforthefaith .com
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or you can subscribe on Facebook, facebook .com piratechristian or you can follow me on Twitter, my name there at piratechristian.
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We come back, sermon review from Potential Church. They're not a church anymore, they're just Church in Potentia.
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Sermon entitled, If I Could Do It All Over Again. Stay tuned, we'll be right back. We don't need to rethink