There
is no short cut to a knowledge of the Bible. Publishers of and agents
for specially edited Bibles with fancy trimmings and helps of various
kinds have reaped a considerable profit for themselves by raising false
hopes in the minds of the gullible, who would like to have, and imagine
they can get, a knowledge of the Book without much hard work. The price
tags attached to such wares are far from modest and in some instances so
ridiculous they reflect on the intelligence of the customer. When the
Bible with "helps" costs considerably more than twice as much as the
same Bible without the "helps," it ought to occur to somebody that too
high a value has been placed on human help. Some books of the sort are
helpful after a fashion but they contain no magic that will cause one to
absorb knowledge from sleeping with one of them under his pillow. This
is true even of the best ones.
A lot of
sectarian and speculative propaganda is spread about with the help of
these doctored, high-priced Bibles. Sales resistance is entirely too low
among the brethren, and especially the sisters, when some of these
talkative vendors ring the doorbell. When one is let in, he should be
viewed with enough suspicion to give a healthy curiosity a chance to
determine what he is and what he has. A very intelligent sister asked me
to inspect a book she had bought from an agent for a financial
consideration of several good American dollars. The agent got the money
and she was laboring under the impression that she was getting just what
the doctor ordered to help her and her household to grow in the grace
and knowledge of the Lord Jesus Christ. What she got was "Bible Readings
For the Home Circle." Sounds good, doesn't it? And it was mechanically
very pleasing to the eye and had pictures in it. The agent of course did
not tell the sister that he was a Seventh Day Adventist and the book was
arranged for the spread of Adventist doctrine. When she found that out,
was she mad!
There are a
lot of people, too, who do not distinguish between the text of the Bible
and the comments made upon it in some of these highly specialized
editions. Some brethren proudly display their "Scofield" Bibles until
somebody tells them that the Scofield part is the rottenest sort of
premillennial propaganda, and then they nearly die from shock. Anybody
who buys one of the things without knowing what he is getting is being
sadly imposed upon. A lot of men who write Bible "helps" are in need of
a liberal amount of help themselves, or past the point where any amount
of it will do them any good. Brethren can at least take care not to pay
out good money in exchange for such blindness on paper. "Our" own
publishers are not too careful, conscientious or something, sometimes,
when it comes to what is said about such works advertised in their
catalogs. In one of them, I have seen the "Scofield Bible" praised as
though it were almost inspired exegesis, instead of the pitiful,
driveling web of fancy which it really is.
Brother
Larimore was wont to say that a fairly intelligent human being of either
sex, was very well equipped to increase his knowledge of God, if he had
a good text of the Bible, a good English dictionary and a good Bible
dictionary. There is some wisdom here. This is no argument against the
reading of good books, or the use of any "helps" that are helps. It does
add up to this. There is no way to really learn what is in the Bible
without reading and studying the Bible itself. Few students are capable
of passing an examination on any subject, history for instance, after
only one casual reading of a text and listening to a few lectures. The
text must be read, re-read and studied. So it is with the books that
make up the Bible. And dealing with the Bible after such a fashion
yields tremendous and pleasing results. A student should read the
gospels until he knows the life of Christ. He should read the book of
Acts until he knows the history of the early church. He should read the
epistles until he knows what the Lord expects of His church and His
people.
If he reads
these things often enough, he will know them just like he knows other
things he is interested in enough to read about. Some brethren can tell
us where Joe Louis landed every punch on Lou Nova and which fist he
used, who can't quote a memory verse at a prayer-meeting. There are two
reasons for this. In the first place, they are not at prayer-meeting and
in the second place they do not know the memory verse. It isn't lack of
ability, it is lack of interest.
This is
really a serious matter. "Wherefore be ye not foolish, but understand
what the will of the Lord is."
(Eph. 5:17)
"Let the
word of Christ dwell in you richly."
(Col. 3:16)
The
prevailing ignorance of the word of God on the part of large numbers in
the church is both amazing and appalling. I still think we know more
about the Bible than our religious neighbors do, but that just goes to
show what I think about how little they know. It is my conviction that
if an ignorant brother with a fairly good mind would pick out one book
in the New Testament, start with a few interesting facts about it, and
then read it over and over until he knew it, he would be so proud of
himself and feel so good otherwise that he would keep up the good work
and really find out what growth in grace and knowledge means. Reading
the Bible should not be viewed as a task, or drudgery. The pleasure it
affords is commensurate with the profit it yields. There is no short cut
to a knowledge of the Bible. The, man who knows it was not born that
way. He got that way by keeping company with the Book and behaving
himself intelligently while he was at it.
Bible Banner - October 1941