ARE YOU
BIBLICALLY ILLITERATE?
SHOULD YOU CARE?
by
BILL EDGAR
Would you know what a journalist meant if he called a break away
political party the Adullamites? I didn’t when I read about
such a group in England’s Parliament one hundred fifty years
ago. A footnote said that the nickname was a biblical allusion.
I had to look it up, but English writers back then assumed that
their educated readership would understand.
So what? So what if Christians don’t know their Bibles well
and people outside the church don’t know the Bible at all?
One man in our church answered this way: ignorance of the Bible
means no fear of God, and no fear of God means no respect for life
and no respect for authority. People have nothing to fear, so everyone
does whatever he likes.
Even people who attend church and say that they have been born
again often have little fear of God. They seem to think that God
exists simply to forgive sins, comfort us when life hurts, and otherwise
leave us alone. They do not know that our Father in heaven chastens
His sons. (Hebrews 12:6) They do not know that God forgave David’s
murder and adultery, but punished him with his son’s death
and trouble that never left his house. (II Samuel 12:9-14) They
do not know that judgment begins at the house of God (I Peter 4:17)
where Ananias and Sapphira met their end. (Acts 5) They do not know
that God has promised that He will see to it that oath-breakers
are punished. (Exodus 20:7) They are shocked to find that all who
live godly lives will be persecuted. (II Timothy 3:12)
The Bible is God’s revelation of Himself to us. Little knowledge
of the Bible in the church means little knowledge or fear of God.
The result is whatever-pleases-me worship and whatever-pleases-me
doctrine and whatever-pleases-me lives. (see Judges 21:25) Church
services do not revel in God’s great acts, but focus on “worshipers’
“ expressing their feelings. Regular churchgoers will sometimes
even say casually that, “of course, it’s fine for someone
else to be a Buddhist, as long as his faith helps him.” In
other words, they don’t believe that the Bible is actually
true. Biblical illiteracy in America’s churches produces people
who only half know God and His ways.
Biblical illiteracy among Christians produces immature churches
like the proud, presumptuous and morally careless church in Corinth
that Paul wrote to. They needed to be reminded from the Scriptures
that God is not to be toyed with. (I Corinthians 10) Paul had to
review again how to observe the Lord’s Supper (chapter 11),
how to behave in worship (chapter 14), and what the basic doctrines
of our faith are. (chapter 15) Biblically ignorant Christians are
careless Christians.
How ignorant of the Bible are Americans outside of the churches?
When students at the Center for Urban Theological Studies in Philadelphia
took turkeys to neighborhood families at Thanksgiving time, they
gave them “in the name of Jesus Christ.” Some families
asked, “Who is this Jesus Christ who gave us the turkeys?”
Elsewhere in the city, at the University of Pennsylvania, I once
taught a class in modern European history. Half the class needed
to be told that Europe’s religion for centuries has been Christianity,
which teaches that there is one God existing in three Persons. He
made the world and visited it in the person of Jesus Christ. At
the end of time there will be a general resurrection and judgment
to heaven or hell. These Ivy League undergraduates did not know
these things.
Modern culture is certainly not Christian, yet ignorance of the
Bible is undermining it. Bible knowledge gave dynamism and optimism
to the European Enlightenment thinking of the 1700’s that
dominates modernity. Without the Bible the modern, Enlightenment
belief in rationality and progress cannot endure.
Enlightenment thinkers denied God, but they could not ignore the
Bible. As long as the Bible provided the most profound ways that
people possessed to think about the world, rejecters of the Bible
had to imitate it. In fact, they had to claim biblical blessings
as their own or no one would have listened to them. For the Coming
of Christ they substituted the promise of a future glorious earthly
paradise. For God’s providential care they substituted a “law”
of progress. For Original Sin they substituted a corrupting society.
They did not dare deny the essentials of biblical morality, but
they had to find a source for it outside of God, somewhere in man
himself. For the Bible’s history of the world they offered
their own history of everything. Modern culture, in fact, purported
to be more realistic than the Bible. Today, however, the Bible no
longer provides society’s thinkers with the ideas which they
must either accept or imitate. Our society is biblically illiterate,
and the result is the further erosion of modern non-Christian culture.
What is replacing it? Various writers have called the emerging culture
post-modern, no longer committed to rationality, no longer optimistic,
and doubtful of progress and morality.
The post-modern mentality no longer knows the Bible even to reject
it. What does such a mentality mean in practice? Consider storytelling.
In modern culture the accepted way of knowing about life has been
the realistic story. Autobiographies, detective stories, the news,
histories, and soap operas, all tell stories that make sense and
which describe things that at least might happen in the “real”
world. But notice! The way in which we tell stories assumes that
there is a grand story of everything within which our little stories
make sense.
The necessity of the big story to make sense of the small story
can be illustrated with the following story. “He got the ball,
cut left, stumbled, recovered his balance, and scored.” You
can’t know what that little story means unless you know whether
he is playing basketball, soccer, lacrosse, or football. And if
you couldn’t guess that the story referred to a sport, you
couldn’t make much sense of it at all. So it is with the little
story of your life and mine. Without a big story to give it context
and meaning, our lives’ stories are only so much sound and
fury, signifying nothing. If the big story does not make sense,
then our own little ones cannot either. Who can construct the grand
story? Only an omniscient storyteller! The only truly omniscient
storyteller is God, and the story that he has to tell about the
world and us in it is the Bible.
When people knew their Bibles, they knew that the entire human
story must make sense. Secularized versions of the Bible’s
outline of Creation, Fall, Redemption and Christ’s Return
energized the modern world: the vision of a world advancing from
theology to metaphysics to science; the drama of dialectical materialism
leading to a classless society; the faith in ever-expanding freedom,
equality, and prosperity guaranteed by the triumph of liberal democracy
throughout the world. All of these modern faiths assumed an objective
world which makes sense as a whole. Thinkers today, however, are
losing their faith in the modern world’s substitutes for the
Bible partly because they do not even know the Bible that once lent
credibility to its own substitutes.
The loss of faith in any grand story of the whole human experience
appears today mostly in the arts, which are already post-modern.
Writers write books that don’t make sense, or which don’t
relate to the real world. Artists paint pictures which don’t
tell a story, which don’t relate to the real world, which
deal only with the techniques of art. Musicians compose dissonant
music because they believe that the world is dissonant. Professors
of English deny that books can convey an author’s intent to
his readers.
Modernity’s substitutes for the Bible still control American
life in general; our society as a whole is not now post-modern and
may never become so. A revival of biblical Christianity, especially
among America’s intellectual leaders, would stop post-modernism
in its tracks, just as the Reformation once stopped a pagan Renaissance
in Europe. Or, because the negations of post-modernism are even
further out of touch with the realities of God’s creation
than the tenets of modernity, our society’s leaders may reject
such nihilism before it dominates society. We can’t be sure
that America can never become a post-modern society, however, because
at least one country once rejected the Enlightenment’s substitutes
for Christianity and embraced a different set of ideals. Fortunately,
the Nazi’s Thousand Year Reich lasted for only twelve years.
Nevertheless, signs that general American society is now catching
up with the post-modern arts abound. Activists of various sorts
try to reshape language in order to create a new world. We have
people who cannot “find” themselves or their place in
the world because they cannot imagine an orderly world into which
they could fit. We have people who can think and talk about human
behavior using the language and the pseudo-insights of psychology,
but they can’t use ethical language. Because there is no big
story that makes sense of life, people not only can’t keep
their promises, they can’t even make promises. How can they
bind themselves for a future that may have nothing in common with
today? Without knowing about God who sees all our days, individuals
live disconnected lives, unable to meet themselves in the future
with a promise. The growing refusal even to make promises is one
reason for the catastrophic increase in illegitimacy, more than
half the babies in the black community and almost a quarter among
whites. It is beginning to seem to many that the fleeting images
and emotions of MTV represent the world better than logical thinking.
Knowledge of the Bible once held the modern world to a secularized
faith in reality. Biblical illiteracy now opens the way for a post-modern
world which has lost its faith that a coherent world with discernible
meaning even exists. All that is left is blood and soil, tribal
loyalties to our own groups and our own places.
Our society needs to know the Bible. The knowing must begin in
the church. Away with empty sermons with cute titles that only tickle
the ears of the hearers -- for twenty minutes, maximum! Away with
Sunday School curricula that downplay biblical knowledge and replace
it with self exploration! The church must reemphasize the biblical
story summarized in the confession, “I believe in the Father,
the Son, and the Holy Spirit” and outlined in the Apostles’
Creed. “Prescribe and teach these things.” (I Timothy
4:11, see verses 6-10 preceding)
Finally, we must look forward to the Coming of our Lord without
reservation. Observing the weekly Sabbath rest will help us to keep
looking forward. We must allow God’s promise of the Resurrection
to give shape and direction to our lives and make the church itself
a place of promise making and promise keeping. Fidelity is the foundation
of love. We need to be immersed in the Bible so that we know God’s
ways and think God’s thoughts about the entire story of the
human race and our place in God’s plan. Only then can we can
be a light to a world that is losing even the secularized and vain
hopes of the Enlightenment.
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