Hey all,
Sorry for the lack of posting lately. I made it through my first full week of teaching (the partial week the week before was only Thursday and Friday classes) and I am still working on settling in up here in Moorhead. Having a routine helps, but I still feel a bit lost and disconnected. Outwardly things are going well though.
Since it is a three day weekend, I have a little extra time to relax and unwind, and to survey the scenery here, but I also have grading to do (the bane of the teaching profession).
Just this morning, I finished reading "The Drama of Scripture" by Bartholomew and Goheen. It is a good read--fairly quick and very thought provoking. It has a lot to say both about how we read Scripture and about the nature of the reality in which we are living. Here's an excerpt that begins on page 196:
The church of the first century is almost two thousand years removed in time and (for most of us) half a world away in distance. Jesus lived in Palestine, died, and rose again there a little before most of the events recorded in the book of Acts. The ancient nation of Israel sought to walk with God while conquering and settling a homeland in Canaan more than a thousand years before that. The biblical accounts of how all these different people struggled to live faithfully in their distant times and places may seem to have little to do with you and me.
Yet it is not so. The world of the Bible is
our world, and its story is
our story. This story is waiting for an ending--in part because we ourselves have a role to play before all is concluded. We must therefore pay attention to the continuing biblical story of redemption. We must resist the temptation to read the Scriptures as if they were a religious flea market, with a basket of history and old doctrines here, a shelf full of pious stories there, promises and commands scattered from one end to the other. Some readers of the Bible turn it into little more than an anthology of proof texts assembled to support a system of theology. Others seek only ethical guidance, ransacking the Old Testament for stories of moral instruction. Still others look just for inspirational or devotional messages, for comforting promises and lessons for daily living. The result may be that we lose sight of the Bible's essential unity and instead find only those theological, moral, devotional, or historical fragments we are looking for.
But all human communities, including our own,
live out of some comprehensive story that suggests the meaning and goal of history and that gives shape and direction to human life. We may neglect the biblical story, God's comprehensive account of the shape and direction of cosmic history and the meaning of all that he has done in our world. If we do so, the fragments of the Bible that we
do preserve are in danger of being absorbed piecemeal into the dominant cultural story of our modern European and North American democracies. And the dominant story of modern culture is rooted in idolatry: an ultimate confidence in humanity to achieve its own salvation. Thus, instead of allowing the Bible to shape
us, we may in fact be allowing our culture to shape
the Bible for us. Our view of the world and even our faith will be molded by one or the other: either the biblical story is our foundation, or the Bible itself becomes subsumed within the modern story of the secular Western world. If our lives are to be shaped and formed by Scripture, we need to know the biblical story well, to feel it in our bones. To do this, we must also know our place within it--where
we are in the story.