The suggestion that the truth will set you free is another one of those statements whose untruthfulness can be seen from several vantage points. First, and foremost, the problem with the statement is what it leaves out. To suggest that the truth will set you free is only a partial quote from Jesus Himself. What He actually said, in its totality, is “You shall know the truth and the truth shall set you free.”
Truth alone has no ability to bring about any change in our lives. The Pharisees proved that. Although they knew their Bible as well as anybody in their day, their knowledge of biblical content did nothing for them. To them, Bible study was an end unto itself. In other words, they studied the Bible to know the Bible. As strange as it may seem, that is a terrible reason to study Scripture. In fact, it can make a modern day Pharisee out of you!
We don’t study the Bible to learn its contents. We study the Bible to know its Author. It is only as the Scripture leads us into an experiential knowledge of our God that it has fulfilled its purpose in our lives. Remember that Jesus told the Pharisees, “These are they which testify of Me” (See John 5:39) If you’ve found something other than Jesus Christ through Bible study, you’ve missed the point. Again, we don’t study the Bible to learn it. We study it to learn Him.
The modern church world has taken the idea that the truth will set you free and has mistakenly believed that learning the propositional truths of Scripture will change us. Because of that viewpoint, they’ve turned the Bible into a handbook of religious guidelines. Ask them if the Bible is a book of guidelines for life and most will say no, but watch the way the application of Scripture to people’s lives is made in sermons and Bible studies and you’ll come to a different conclusion about what they really believe.
There is often much application about what we are to now do that mentions nothing about knowing our Savior more intimately. Some may call this sort of teaching “practical,” but I think a better term for it could be “Christianity Lite” because its emphasis is so heavy on religious performance and so light on Christ Himself.
Unless many find a biblical “principle” of some sort and then show how that principle should guide our actions, they think the teaching isn’t practical. In reality, the demand for “practical teaching” in the church world today is a subtle mask for an underlying hunger to do something as opposed to knowing Someone. There’s certainly nothing wrong with understanding the practical ways that Christ wants to express Himself through our daily lifestyle, but the problem that often exists is that “biblical principles” are taught in such a way as to suggest that the aim of “Christian living” is to do right and nothing could be further from the truth. Remember, it’s about knowing Him. All the “doing” will flow from that. When we reverse the two, we end up with nothing more than dead religious works, regardless of how admirable they may look to everybody around us.
We have not been called to live by biblical truths. We have been called to live by The Truth, who is the indwelling Christ. He is our life-source and animates our daily actions, not religious determination to act on information we might have learned. At times when I have shared a message from the Bible that focuses on Jesus Christ and somebody tells me that they wished the message had been more practical, I shudder. Where did we ever get the idea that telling people what to do is a better way to teach the Bible that showing them who their God is? Jesus came to reveal the Father to us, not to tell us how to live. If that was His purpose in the world, doesn’t it seem reasonable to argue that that’s a good purpose statement for those who profess to follow Him?
Many think that if we build our lives around biblical principles then we’ll experience the life God intends for us. The result is that there are a multitude of religious programs designed to help us learn the content of the Bible. We are largely a generation of Christians who think that the better we learn the Bible, the better life will be. “Christian education” has become a matter of memorizing Scripture at the novice end of the spectrum and parsing Greek verbs at the advanced end. But if that’s the only thing that has happened, the result is a person who has some degree of Bible education but still hasn’t been set free to really live. Studying the Bible is not enough. We must engage with the Spirit of Christ through the Scripture to find real freedom. Facts only enlighten us. The Truth emancipates us!
Thursday, March 25, 2010
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Thanks Steve
ReplyDeleteIf everyone would come to “know the truth” before trying to have the “truth will set you free” we would have a different world.
For years I tried to have a relationship with Papa through searching the scriptures. It created an offensive nightmare of abuse on others, even though it may have looked good. Today the practical Good News is the overflow of Jesus’ heart in me as the Spirit renovates my thinking on who Papa is. It just happens without my works. Now scripture opens up the love of God for all his enemies and what he has completed, irrespective of what we believe it says! jg
Good stuff Steve. Thanks for the reminder about what Jesus really said.
ReplyDeleteThanks for yet again another fine-tuned recalibration!! Is there any way I can stop the default settings from constantly drifting back in the wrong directions? (I don't mean demonic or anything I just mean bad varieties of religious brainwashing.) I'm really feeling frustrated with myself here.
ReplyDeleteMoriah - it's a common vulnerability among all of us, especially with the pervasive influence of legalism within the church world. Even the writer of Hebrews warned the believers to pay careful attention to what they had learned so that they wouldn't "drift away" from it. (Hebrews 2:1) So your frustration only validates how normal you really are :)
ReplyDeleteAmen Steve:
ReplyDeleteWhat helped me is to see that the Word of God or the Logos of God is the reasoning or computation, logic of God. How does God see things and how are they expressed.
He sees and reasons through one reference point and that is Christ. In Him there is completion and no condemnation.
Anything that creates distance between us and God is thinking outside of "God's Box"
For it pleased the Father that in him should all fulness dwell; (Col 1:19)
PS.
ReplyDeleteIt is in knowing (Intimate relationship with) Him as "He is" that we know who "we are" and HE IS LIFE
True Knowledge proceeds out of life not life out of knowledge - The tree of knowledge could not bring forth life.
And this is life eternal, that they might know thee the only true God, and Jesus Christ, whom thou hast sent. (Joh 17:3)
.... because as he is, so are we in this world. (1Jn 4:17)
Praise God!!! Thank You Jesus!!! The Lord is so good. Thank you so much Steve for this empowering word. It has blessed me no end. God bless you and thank you for bringing the Word with grace imparted so that people will have a personal revelation of Who our wonderful Lord and Saviour is. Love Isy :)
ReplyDeleteJoshua - post a profile and I'll post your comment. I won't argue, though, with anonymous posters. It's easy to be bold when nobody knows who you are.
ReplyDeleteSteve,
ReplyDeleteI have been in churches since I was 18 that has always taught "performance Christianity" -what you can do for God. I've always thought of Bible study as a way to improve my "performance" for Him (How to be a better Christian) rather than how to know Jesus more. The problem is I've never been able to live up to the mark and have failed in many areas such as tithing, service, attending the numerous activites held at church etc etc.
Two weeks ago I have never heard of you until I found your You Tube postings on "101 lies...". I have listened to all of them and quiet frankly they have challenged the way I think. In saying this, it does not mean that I agree with everything you've said and I have alot to work through. But I want to thankyou for the "shake up and wake up" and say well done!
Cheers from Australia,
Karl
Thank you, Karl. I'm glad to meet you online. I encourage you to befriend me on FaceBook too. There you can see more of my ministry posts, etc. If the YouTube videos have caused you to rethink some things you've been believed and examine the in light of Scripture, I'm pleased. No problem if we don't agree on everything. Sometimes I don't agree with me either :) (In other words, I'm growing too and evolving in my own understanding.) I invite you to visit my web site at www.gracewalk.org to learn more of my ministry. Again, nice to meet you here. I have many friends down-under and will be returning to Australia for ministry in 2011.
ReplyDeleteI believe that this is absolutely awesome! The other day as I was reading Luke 6, from verses 29-28, the scales just fell of my eyes and I saw the truth instead of memorizing the truth,I saw how God is to us, in us & through us whereas those are familuar passages taught in the light of 'practical principals' so that God will do the same for us! Its exactly as you have stated! I am free to not judge or condemn because God has judged & condemned Jesus & does not judge and condemn me, I am free to forgive others, NOT TO GET GOD to forgive me because I already have the forgiveness of sins according to the riches of His grace, not according to how much I forgive, I forgive and I am forgiven, not by God, I already am, by the person I forgive, that person (not God!) will forgive me, I give not to get God to give to me, He already has & does give me freely all things, I give to people and people give to me, pressed down shaken together and running over, MEN GIVE (not God based on our giving) into our pockets/bosom, for with the same measure I give (to people) it shall be measured to me (by people) again. All I am saying is this is what you are saying, I saw in scripture not 'what to do' but what I am free to do because this is how God is to me because of what Jesus has done, Jesus was condemned, I will not be, Jesus was judged, I will not be, Jesus was fully punished so I would be forgiven! Awesome teaching/message Steve!!!!!!
ReplyDeleteSteve,
ReplyDeleteI can't thank you enough for this blog. It's tough to find grace-oriented stuff in Christiandom.
I'd like to fine-tune your point, in my mind, if you'll permit. In several churches, in recent years, the problem, as I see it, is a DE-EMPHASIS on scripture. We get scripture-based motivational speeches, rather than the meat of God's word. The deep truths of God are treated as "impractical" and we get do's and dont's, busyness, challenges, et al, instead. My take on the problems in the church-at-large is the dearth of in-depth teaching, not an over-abundance of it. We're starving for solid food out here.
That being said, I agree with you. Spiritual growth is about a deepening relationship with the Truth in Person. But that can never be divorced from a deepening relationship with the Word of Truth. OK? or am I missing your point?
Humbly submitted,
Bob