My first year of Bible Quizzing we did the Epistles. I was
about seven or eight, I think. And I had to learn the term “lustful
concupiscence”. To be completely honest, I’m not really sure what that is
without Googling….okay, Wikipedia-ing it (don’t judge me). The inclusion of
such verses bewildered parents of quizzers everywhere as they struggled to
a.)help said quizzers pronounce the words and b.)explain this atrocity in terms
that wouldn’t completely destroy their child’s fragile mind and innocence.
By the time I was in my last year of Juniors, the people in
charge of quizzing material had wised up and opted to take out the back half of
Romans 1, for obvious reasons that I won’t detail here, as they would probably
turn up in some pretty risqué Google search results.
I love the Word. My favorites are the Pauline Epistles and
the Major Prophets, loves that were
fostered during my time at Gateway with some awesome related classes. The
Epistles, I’ve learned, are a universal favorite across denominational lines,
and with good reason. It’s the Gospel. Love and mercy and God’s grace. All the
good stuff that God really wants us to know about Him and revel in. Even the
Major Prophets, on occasion, can be found as a crowd-pleaser. I’ll admit that I’ve
sought solace in Jeremiah 29:11 over and over again in times of trouble or
confusion and it’s great for uplifting. We use it to outline Messianic prophecy
and show how Jesus’ arrival really was the fulfillment thereof. But a lot of times,
not always, that’s it.
I’m not into fire and brimstone. Understand that now. I
understand that on occasion, reproof is necessary, and that’s fine, but I’m
totally not for beating someone upside the head with judgment by any means. And
this is true for many, many people. Modern Christianity has focused on the good
things in the Bible and for this I am incredibly thankful. These are things
that people need to hear. However…
When I was in late middle school to early high school, I got
a book about Cassie Bernall. Just to fill you in, in case you’re unaware, this is the girl
who allegedly was asked during the Columbine shootings if she believed in God
before being fatally shot. The book was interesting, inspiring, and absolutely
chilling, to say the least. But because of its incredibly inspirational book, I
read that book probably at least three or four times within a short period of
time after purchasing it. On one occasion, I was sitting in my living room, and
an older family member came upon my reading and asked me about it. As I went to
summarize the book’s contents, I watched as the person’s face dropped. “I don’t feel like you should be reading
that,” they matter-of-factly informed me. I was perplexed. What followed was an
explanation of what exactly was wrong with my reading, backed up with a
scriptural reference to prove the point.
“ Finally,
brethren, whatsoever things are true, whatsoever things are honest, whatsoever
things are just, whatsoever things are pure, whatsoever things are lovely,
whatsoever things are of good report; if there be any virtue, and if there be
any praise, think on these things.” –Philippians 4:8 (ESV)
In summary, my problem
was this. The book was sad; devastatingly so. And hence, it was not of a good
report. And therefore, I, as a good Christian teen, should not be partaking of
things not of a good report, including, more specifically, my book.
Granted, this story
is slightly ridiculous and (hopefully) not a typical scenario per se. But the
mindset is one that is, in fact, very present. A lot of times, in a search to
highlight the good in the Bible, we’ll candy-coat it. We’ll paint the Bible as
this pretty, perfect thing, filled with rainbows and sunshine. And the Word IS
perfect. But the rainbows and sunshine are NOT ever present. The Word is
graphic. The Word includes faults and flaws and tales of real people doing some
dirty, dirty things in pretty much any sense that you can think of. Loads of
lustful concupiscence are scattered about! Because even though they’re in the
Bible, those people were…well…people. They screwed up, just like people today.
The Bible is violent. It’s overshadowed with a constant message of mercy and
grace, but before frequently this grace is preceded by a ridiculous amount of
gore and blood and guts and slaughter and judgment, particularly in the cases
of the Major Prophets, or almost any Old Testament book for that matter. And
that nasty stuff is just as important.
Because-
First of all, there’s
that whole thing that we, as Christians, perpetually profess about God’s Word
being fully, completely true; every word of it. Yes. Even the bad stuff.
Then there’s the
whole thing about life not being perfect. Even for Christians. If you sell the
Gospel solely with pretty words, what happens to the people who have loads of
junk in their lives? What do they relate to?
And finally, there’s
the accent factor. If you put a pretty thing in a pristine environment, the
thing is still pretty. But your eye might not necessarily be drawn to the
pretty thing in that environment so much as it would be in a less than perfect
setting. When you have something perfect and clean in the midst of things that
are messy and imperfect, it makes you more apt to look at the perfect thing and
say, “Oh. That’s different.” God’s mercy and grace is accented by the fact that
it comes out of things that aren’t pretty.
It’s the whole beauty from ashes
thing.
4 comments:
You've come a long way from your first year of Jr. Quizzing. It looks like you hit the nail on the head with this post.
I had to delete my first comment because AFTER it posted, I found spelling errors. Spellcheck laughs at me when it see me at the keyboard.
Oh Bex :) you NEVER cease to amaze me with your unique and exquisite style of writing. I find myself laughing at your dry and sarcastic manner of approaching even the most grave topics! I adore your writing and I believe you are excelling beyond your expectations in this skill. Continue in it and you will be amazed at how many lives you touch. This article is amazing and SO true. I read the book about the girl at Columbine and I too was moved and changed by the book. It gave me a new perspective but also raised a lot of questions about humanity and death. I love you and am SO PROUD of you! <3
Ah, Becky, you have done it again! Love your insight.
Nice. :-)
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