What’s The Point | Biblical Genres and Apocalyptic Literature - Hebrews 4:11-13 | September 1


PSALM 19 (NLT)

“1 The heavens proclaim the glory of God. The skies display his craftsmanship. 2 Day after day they continue to speak; night after night they make him known. 3 They speak without a sound or word; their voice is never heard. 4 Yet their message has gone throughout the earth, and their words to all the world. God has made a home in the heavens for the sun. 5 It bursts forth like a radiant bridegroom after his wedding. It rejoices like a great athlete eager to run the race. 6 The sun rises at one end of the heavens and follows its course to the other end. Nothing can hide from its heat.

7 The instructions of the Lord are perfect, reviving the soul. The decrees of the Lord are trustworthy, making wise the simple. 8 The commandments of the Lord are right, bringing joy to the heart. The commands of the Lord are clear, giving insight for living. 9 Reverence for the Lord is pure, lasting forever. The laws of the Lord are true; each one is fair. 10 They are more desirable than gold, even the finest gold. They are sweeter than honey, even honey dripping from the comb. 11 They are a warning to your servant, a great reward for those who obey them.

12 How can I know all the sins lurking in my heart? Cleanse me from these hidden faults. 13 Keep your servant from deliberate sins! Don’t let them control me. Then I will be free of guilt and innocent of great sin. 14 May the words of my mouth and the meditation of my heart be pleasing to you, O Lord, my rock and my redeemer.”

Beautiful Words!

Tell me, what is this Psalm about?

Perhaps you see it as a celebration of God’s word. We are currently going through a series about the Word of God, addressing how to read the Bible and the way that it shapes us in profound ways as we seek God through His revelation. These are the family stories of Jesus which shaped His life and the world that He lived in. And they’re our family stories as well, shaping us into His image.

You would be correct in your assessment. These are stories about God. He is the Hero – not us. He is the main character – not us. It’s all about Him – not us. The laws of the Lord are true. They are wisdom that gives insight for living. They cut to the depths of the heart and reveal the truth of what’s there.

This revelation of His word goes out and it reaches out to everyone, just as the sun rises every day to shine its light upon all the earth.

But what else is this psalm about?

How about the first six verses?

So, the second half focuses on God’s revelation of Himself through His word. The first half, then, focuses on the way in which God has revealed Himself to the world through His creation.

“The heavens declare the glory of God!”

It’s about creation. It’s about how the details of creation serve as evidence for God’s existence, His power, and His great design. It is all evidence of God’s majesty.

In a fashion, it’s a creation account, is it not? In its own way it’s telling the story of creation.

“God has made a home in the heavens for the sun. 5 It bursts forth like a radiant bridegroom after his wedding. It rejoices like a great athlete eager to run the race.”

How come it looks so different from Genesis chapter one? They are telling the same story, aren’t they?

Genesis 1:14 also says, “14 Then God said, “Let lights appear in the sky to separate the day from the night. Let them be signs to mark the seasons, days, and years. 15 Let these lights in the sky shine down on the earth.” And that is what happened. 16 God made two great lights—the larger one to govern the day, and the smaller one to govern the night. He also made the stars. 17 God set these lights in the sky to light the earth, 18 to govern the day and night, and to separate the light from the darkness. And God saw that it was good.”

God created two lights – lamps essentially is what the word literally means. God created two lamps which serve as sign posts. They are signs that point to the majesty of the Creator.

How come Psalm 19 and Genesis 1 look so, so different?

THE IMPORTANCE OF GENRE

What we’re talking about here, today, is the importance of understanding the genres of the Bible.

This is a huge topic and we certainly won’t be able to dive into its depths in the time that we have today, but although it may seem daunting. The reality is that we successfully navigate the complex world of genres every single day.

Brent and I went to watch “Shaun of the Dead” at the App Theatre Tuesday evening. Probably another movie I wouldn’t recommend watching. We went in expecting a dark humor comedy. Imagine if we had gone in expecting it to be a documentary? That would have been a totally different experience. We would have wondered how everyone else could remain so calm and why on earth would they be laughing.

Although, we do experience this deception from time to time. There are a number of beloved movies that performed poorly in the box office all because the movie trailer misrepresented the correct genre. “The Mummy” with Bredan Frasier was presented almost as a horror flick, but if you’ve seen it before, you would be aware that it is a comedy. The same could be said about “The Fifth Element”.

Its preview had people believing it was another serious, high action, drama. But it too is more akin to a comedy than a thriller. Of course, now they are each cult classics in their own right. But genres can confuse us if we aren’t correctly prepared on what to expect.

Still, this is natural to us, we do it all the time, we just have to relearn it a bit to apply it to ancient literature. The genres we use, though similar in some ways, are quite different from the ancient Biblical genres. And so we have to adapt a new set of tools to interpret these ancient Biblical genres.

HOW THE BIBLE IS PACKAGED

Here’s how I want you to think about genre.

As you know by now, the Bible is not a book. It is a collection of books. It is a library.

You may hear people ask for evidence outside of the Bible that points to the reality of Jesus and provides evidence. This is an incorrect way of thinking because it’s not a single source, it’s a collection of sources that span thousands of years, from authors of various backgrounds, that all point to one reality. It’s unfair to treat the Bible as one book with one genre although we do it all the time.

The Bible is a collection of 66 books, 39 in the Old Testament and 27 in the New Testament. It is a library of many types of books expressing truths through different packaging – one story but not one book.

How something is packaged matters.

We all know the feeling of unboxing a product that has exceptional packaging. It is so satisfying. Apple is particularly good at making unboxing their products an experience.

Certainly quality products can come in humble packages. However, if a company invests in the package their product comes in, then it communicates that they have put some effort into making a quality product.

The packaging of something communicates something about what is inside.

A genre is packaging. And the packaging helps determine the meaning of the content.

You may already be thinking to yourself, “this is far too complicated for me”. However, even in that sentence (a genres is packaging), you successfully interpreted the meaning of what was being communicated without falsely believing that a genre is cardboard or styrofoam. You can do this. We just have to learn the cultural contexts of the Biblical genres.

FAITHFUL CAREFUL READERS

Why does this matter? What’s the point?

In September of 1999, after almost 10 months of travel to Mars, the Mars Climate Orbiter burned and broke into pieces. The orbiter was designed to study Mars from orbit and relay communications back to NASA. On a day when NASA engineers were expecting to celebrate, the reality turned out to be completely different.

Ok, Zach has lost his mind. He’s talking about NASA now.

What’s the point?

It was an interpretation error.

An investigation found that the spacecraft burned up in Mars' atmosphere after entering an orbit that was too low. The failure was attributed to a measurement mismatch between the metric units used by NASA and the US customary units used by the spacecraft builder, Lockheed Martin.

All because someone failed to interpret the right units!

We’re talking about interpretation. Genre is fundamental to interpretation.

The fancy word is hermeneutics. Which essentially means how we read the Bible.

2 Timothy 2:15 says, “15 Do your best to present yourself to God as one approved, a worker who has no need to be ashamed, rightly handling the word of truth.”

We have to be a people who know how to correctly handle God’s word.

The false assumption too often made among Christians and in churches is that the Bible is a collection of ideas, and that the individual texts are a delivery system for an idea. But the reality of the Bible is much more complex than that. It’s not like there are secrets that you have to cleverly unlock. But there is wisdom and treasure to dig for.

And the goal is that we would be faithful and careful readers of the Word of God.

Each of these messages have had goals. I want you to fall in love with the Word of God. I want you to be saturated with the Word of God. And I want you to rightly handle the Word of God. I want you to be a faithful and careful reader.

GENRES OF THE BIBLE

So there are a number of genres you will encounter in the Bible.

How many? It depends on who you ask.

Here is a list of several of them. The reason there’s not a straightforward answer is because there are genres and then each genre has subgenres and some people think subgenres are unique enough to be counted as their own genres.

Generally speaking people like to overcomplicate things.

Here are the seven we’ll focus on. I believe these to be the five root genres with the others falling into the category of subgenre. We have 1. Narrative, 2. Poetry, 3. Wisdom, 4. Prophecy, 5. Epistles/Letters, and will also separate out a sixth 6. Apocalypse.

Generally speaking, each book has a dominant genre but it can often contain multiple genres through the course of a reading. And each genre has rules, not all the rules apply at the same time in the same way, but there are set rules for understanding each genre.

NARRATIVE

As I mentioned a couple weeks ago, narrative makes up the bulk of the Bible. I said nearly two thirds. Some people would say almost half. It really depends on how many genres or subgenres they have. Let’s say around 60% of the Bible is narrative.

The Bible is a story. It is an expansive, epic narrative

This means there is a plot, with characters, in some setting and these form design patterns that repeat over and over again. These are the basic tools of narrative. You can make the statement about these writings, I ____ am writing you this story about ____ to teach you about _____. It’s placed in a context for a purpose. It’s not just history alone but it’s communicating a message.

Narrative tells us what happened, according to the purposes of the author. Sometimes there are spiritual lessons from events, and sometimes we are just gaining the context of the history of God’s people.

Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, and Deuteronomy are narrative. They are stories. The Torah is a story. Joshua, Judges, Ruth, Samuel, Kings, Chronicles, Ezra, Nehemiah, Esther are narratives. The Gospels are narratives. Acts is a story. The Bible is full of narrative.

Genesis tells the story of God’s creation presented with a beautiful garden full of purpose, living in His presence. But humanity wanted to define blessing and curse on their own terms so they took what seemed good in their own eyes.

This is one story, but this is a repeated story.

Abraham and Sarah wanted the blessing God promised to them so instead of waiting patiently for the promise they took Hagar and did what seemed good in their own eyes. During the time of the judges it says repeatedly that everyone did what seemed good in their own eyes. Even David takes Bathsheba because she was desirable in his eyes. All of this repeats and repeats, builds and builds, until Jesus appears on the scene. And when He’s in the wilderness he is offered every opportunity to see, desire, take, and have. But instead He trusts…

“Man shall not live on bread alone, but on every word that comes from the mouth of God.” “‘Do not put the Lord your God to the test.” “Worship the Lord your God, and serve him only.” (Matthew 4:1-11)

The story of the Bible leads us to trust in the one who is trustworthy.

POETRY

There is poetry in the Bible. Poetry that is designed to make you feel something. They communicate ideas, but they especially express emotion. They show life in its fullness.

Poems in the Bible don’t work in the same way as the poetry we’re used to. They don’t follow the same patterns. Most of the time they don’t even rhyme.

What they do is form repetitive groupings of two lines, they use acrostics, they use chiasm to reveal truth as you meditate on the beautiful language of metaphor and symbolism.

Psalm 24 begins, “24 The earth is the Lord's and the fullness thereof, the world and those who dwell therein, 2 for he has founded it upon the seas and established it upon the rivers. 3 Who shall ascend the hill of the Lord? And who shall stand in his holy place? 4 He who has clean hands and a pure heart, who does not lift up his soul to what is false and does not swear deceitfully. 5 He will receive blessing from the Lord and righteousness from the God of his salvation. 6 Such is the generation of those who seek him, who seek the face of the God of Jacob. Selah”

There is a repetition, a building. The phrase, “the earth and all it contains” is amplified by the phrase “the world and all who live in it”. The phrase “he sets its foundation upon the seas” is rephrased “established it upon the ocean currents.” The question of who is allowed to ascend to the mountain of the Lord is restated “Who may go up to his Holy Dwelling place?”

This passage leads us to a beautiful truth. He who has clean hands and a pure heart. We can seek to be that person, but ultimately Jesus has become that person for us. And we are identified in Him through faith.

WISDOM

There is wisdom – wonderful wisdom in the Bible.

Proverbs, Ecclesiastes, Song of Solomon, Job, even James in the New Testament has some wisdom leanings to it.

The wisdom literature of the Bible is general truth based on observations. What it is not is absolute truth or promise of what will always happen. Even when I live by God’s wisdom, life can be full of disappointments. These are general truths that are designed to shape the moral and ethical lives of the reader.

The wisdom literature of the Bible presents us with an opportunity. That every day we all stand before the tree of knowing stuff with our own choice to make. Godly wisdom urges us, choose wisdom and life.

They’re about how God designed all of us to rule the world by his wisdom so that we can all find true life – real life.

PROPHECY

Then there’s prophecy. These certainly have the potential to be among the more confusing genres of Scripture. They are filled with strange imagery and often very poetic.

But in reality they are all God’s word to his covenant people, warning them and encouraging them and strengthening them during periods of pronounced spiritual and national danger. The prophets are most concerned with bringing God’s people back to His covenant.

People always think of prophecy as telling the future or a prediction. Certainly there is a bit of foretelling contained within this genre, but usually it is God sharing His heart with His people. It is God speaking His voice to His people for that time. Not for all time necessarily but for that time definitely. That’s what usually gets us in trouble. These are most readily for God’s people in their time and not for God’s people for all time for us to look for their fulfillment.

It is God’s faithfulness and His desire to make things right.

“This is what the LORD says— he who made you, who formed you in the womb, and who will help you: Do not be afraid…” (Isaiah 44:2)

EPISTLES

Then there are epistles or letters.

When you think through the genres of the Bible, poetry and this one are usually the favorites. These letters are typically the favorites because they are a bit more obvious and comfortable to our modern understanding. Since the New Testament epistles are directed to churches and individuals in the church, they most directly apply to us today. Most commands given in the epistles are general enough in nature that we need to obey them, or in the case of promises we can claim them.

Even so, context is the most important interpretive tool for this mail of ancient dead people. Context that fits into the larger story. Context that fits into the Roman Empire.

How often do you think about that?

And context that fits into the occasion and purpose of the writing of the letter. Epistles are “occasioned” texts, and so we need to get at the circumstances that led to them being written.

In the letters we pay attention to logical connections that flow through the texts.

If we add another verse to our passage in Hebrews, “11 Let us therefore strive to enter that rest, so that no one may fall by the same sort of disobedience. 12 For the word of God is living and active, sharper than any two-edged sword, piercing to the division of soul and of spirit, of joints and of marrow, and discerning the thoughts and intentions of the heart. 13 And no creature is hidden from his sight, but all are naked and exposed to the eyes of him to whom we must give account.” (Hebrews 4:11-13)

“The aim of life is to enter God's rest—to be saved from our sin and spend eternity joyfully in God's restful presence. That's the great goal of life—and to lovingly take as many people there with us as we can.

To enter this great and joyful rest we must trust God. Verse 3 says, "We who have believed enter that rest." We must believe and trust in God.

Verse 2 tells us that what they believed, what we are to believe is the Word of God – the good news that was preached to us. And Verse 6 tells us that we fail to enter into that rest because of disobedience.

“If we didn't have the good news preached to us, then we would not be able to believe the Word of God.”

Hebrews is steeped in Old Testament narrative, so if we cosider the overarching context, “what [Israel] failed to trust was the good news, the Word of God, that was preached to them in the wilderness—the promises of God that he would care for them and give them victory and forgive them and be merciful to them. They didn't believe God.

So we must Hebrews 2:1, "Pay much close attention to what [we] have heard"

Hebrews 3:1, "Consider Jesus.."

Hebrews 3:12, "Take care, lest there should be in any one of [us] an evil, unbelieving heart"

Hebrews 3:15, "Today if [we] hear his voice [his Word], do not harden [our] hearts

APOCALYPSE

Finally apocalypse, which I guess you could argue is a subgenre of prophecy.

The Revelation is apocalypse. The book of Daniel is narrative with a good helping of apocalypse. This is the most confusing genre of Scripture. These are the parts that are the harvest to interpret. Some see most of it as purely historical. Some see most of it as yet future.

Unlike the books of prophecy that have a conditional element; this will happen if you don’t return to God. Apocalypse does have more of a melody of this will happen and cannot be stopped by anyone. These are things that have come to pass and will come to pass that God has ordained to happen.

The difficulty is that it is veiled in extremely heavy symbolic language. Very vibrant language that is not really designed to let us know something but it is very much designed to make us feel something.

Apocalypse does not mean “end of the world” and that’s not what it’s primarily communicating. Apocalypse means to uncover or reveal – when you suddenly see the true nature of something that you couldn’t before.

We all have familiar ways of seeing the world that can limit or blur our vision, we need to see reality a bit more in other words. Apocalyptic literature provides a Heavenly perspective on our Earthly circumstances. And despite its difficulty, it’s designed to bring us encouragement and hope. Because we can trust the future with God.

And that is what is in store for us in the second half of Daniel.

OUTRO

God’s word is packaged beautifully in a library of books all telling one unified story. These are our family stories that shape us. I want you to fall in love with them. I want you to be saturated by them. I want you to read them carefully.

And my prayer is that God would change us through this consistent and faithful pursuit of Him in His word.

Resources (*the views expressed within the following content are solely the author's and may not necessarily reflect the opinions and beliefs of Mountainside Church):

https://www.christianity.com/wiki/bible/ways-genre-informed-understanding-of-scripture-can-transform-your-study.html#google_vignette

https://bible.org/seriespage/lesson-6-principles-biblical-interpretation

https://www.crossway.org/articles/10-things-you-should-know-about-the-genres-of-the-bible/

https://research.lifeway.com/2014/03/12/7-principles-of-biblical-interpretation/

https://www.biblegateway.com/blog/2016/03/the-many-genres-of-scripture

https://youtu.be/4x2kg52WXRs?si=W2TICouiL7h59FDW

https://youtu.be/e97O01IBU-E?si=tlye_p1Pc4GLmPTE

https://youtu.be/BYJPMPkY-Ko?si=xPCzvNU9ovhJ2_E-

https://youtu.be/PiHJT7eK-9k?si=5aC8cbIa8q4AwSbK

https://www.youtube.com/live/F2Nx6cjtIck?si=kPlf756jf6FmHCJb

https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLH0Szn1yYNedn4FbBMMtOlGN-BPLQ54IH&si=UW7SV98fgkw70UqU

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=48xhO1bmAss

https://www.desiringgod.org/messages/the-word-of-god-living-active-sharp

What’s The Point | How to Read the Bible? - Hebrews 4:12-13 | August 25


INTRO

Hey family.

How are we all today? It is such a blessing to be out here at Sky Ranch once again. It’s such a special place to be. It holds such a special place in our hearts. And I’m glad that I’m here with each of you.

We just began the ever so briefest of studies about the Bible. The name of this series is “What’s the Point?” And so, last week we began by discussing what the Bible is and why we read it. Why are we so set on reading one book for the rest of our lives, over and over again, believing that we are going to see something we never saw before. Why not read more books? What’s the point?

The Bible, just to combine a few of the definitions I mentioned previously, is carefully crafted, ancient, Jewish, meditation literature, with every word intentionally placed to tell one unified story, to bring order out of chaos, and to lead us to an end goal of being rescued – salvation through trusting in the Messiah – Jesus. Written over thousands of years by more than 40 authors, yet all inextricably woven together to tell one story. It is a rescue story about a God who fiercely loves His creation, enduring and suffering greatly in His faithful pursuit of people.

So, we set our hearts to seek Him like buried treasure by digging through His words over the course of our lifetimes. We read to see Him more clearly. To experience the living God. To be changed by Him and shaped into His image. In these words is light and life for the darkness in and around us. And as we read them, we are changed in profound ways by the power of His word. The same word that has gone out from before the beginning of time, creating and initiating life and accomplishing all that God has purposed for them.

Today we’re going to talk about how we should be reading the Bible. I mentioned last week that there is an intended way to read the Bible. It was written at a specific time, to a specific people, for a specific purpose. The implication here being that the Bible was written for us, but the words contained within were not written to us.

It says in Romans 15, “4 For whatever was written in former days was written for our instruction, that through endurance and through the encouragement of the Scriptures we might have hope.”

All these things were written in the Scriptures long ago to teach us. And the Scriptures give us hope and encouragement as we wait patiently for God’s promises to be fulfilled.

They were written for us.

Paul also writes in Ephesians chapter 2, “God is so rich in mercy, and he loved us so much, 5 that even though we were dead because of our sins, he gave us life when he raised Christ from the dead. 6 For he raised us from the dead along with Christ and seated us with him in the heavenly realms because we are united with Christ Jesus. 7 So God can point to us in all future ages as examples of the incredible wealth of his grace and kindness toward us, as shown in all he has done for us who are united with Christ Jesus.”

The reason God accomplished this, is that He might demonstrate His grace in the coming ages. God has accomplished what He has to demonstrate His grace, and kindness, and faithfulness through the ages and it produces within us hope.

To extrapolate this even further, what God is doing in your life right now is to demonstrate His faithfulness for even more generations to come.

The Bible is for us. It very much is. At the same time. The Bible wasn’t written to us.

It is essentially the mail of ancient dead people.

But don’t let that lead you to believe it is irrelevant. It is extremely relevant. It is for us.

This story will work on you over time. It will affect the way that you live. It will affect the way that you see yourself. And it will change the world that we live in.

JUST READ IT

So, even though what I am about to say is “you’re reading your Bible wrong”, and then we’re going to talk about what that means and the actual way to read and engage the word of God. What I want you to hear more than that is – just read the Bible.

What is of utmost importance is that you are reading the Bible, even if right intuitions lead you to less than ideal methods. Just read it!

Whatever you do, just read it! Seek God in His word with all your heart. Just read it.

We are verging into trademark territory or copyright infringement, whatever applies in the particular area of intellectual property law – but just do it.

I’m afraid to say that it is as simple as that. And that may be disappointing. You may have expected more or wanted more.

If you have been struggling to understand and connect with the Scriptures over the years it may grieve you to hear the answer is to just read it. But there is no secret sauce. It’s the wisdom gleaned from “Kung Fu Panda” – there is no secret ingredient, just the consistent and faithful pursuit of God through His written word.

I have been contemplating Namaan lately.

Anyone want to guess where Namaan shows up in the Bible? Maybe it’s not a guess, maybe you know. 2 Kings chapter 5. I’ve been reading 2 Kings lately.

What is Naaman known for? Namaan was the commander of the armies of Syria. At this time Syria was the empire. Namaan, I’m sure, led many attacks and raids against Israel, defeating them at every turn. But Namaan had a not very well kept secret. He had leprosy. We don’t know the extent of the disease, or rightly what kind of skin condition it actually was as there were many that were called leprosy.

At some time in his many conquests, Namaan had acquired a girl from Israel that served his wife in their house. One day this little slave girl was brave enough to speak out and say that if only her master would travel to Israel, there was a prophet of God who could heal Namaan of his ailment.

Namaan left with the king's blessing and much riches to seek out Elisha. When he finally found the prophet of God, Elisha didn’t even come out to see him but sent word for Namaan to dip himself in the Jordan river seven times and his flesh would be restored.

Namaan left furious. “I thought that he would surely come out to me and stand and call on the name of the Lord his God, wave his hand over the spot and cure me of my leprosy. 12 Are not the rivers of Damascus, better than all the waters of Israel? Couldn’t I wash in them and be cleansed?” So [Namaan] turned and went off in a rage.” (2 Kings 5:11-12)

Luckily some of Namaan’s servants/men were a bit more reasonable. They pointed out that if Elisha had asked Namaan to do something great and extravagant he would have gladly obliged, so why not even more so when instructed to do something so simple as washing in a river. Namaan thought it too simple, to easy, to on the nose, and it turned him away disappointed. Yet, when he followed these simple instructions He experienced the healing of the Lord.

Just read the Bible. Whatever you do, just read it.

I know it sounds too simple. But don’t leave disappointed. Don’t let your history of experience deter you. None of us are starting with zero experience of the Scripture. We all have bad habits to break ourselves of.

Would it be any easier if I instead had some extravagant solution for you to experience God? Would you not gladly follow through with it for the chance of experiencing Jesus? Why not through these simple instructions. Read the Bible.

When we fail to engage with God’s word in meaningful and appropriate ways, we let other voices speak more clearly into our lives. And there are so many other voices yelling that will win if we lose vigilance in the faithful pursuit of God through His word.

Let me ask you, how many times do you look at your phone in a day? More or less than you engage with the word of God? I know some of us primarily read the Bible on our phones. But, how many times does that lead to distraction and wandering into other apps, other media, other voices? We are not primarily being informed by the word of God. It’s not the voice we hear the most. We have to change that. We have to stop being distracted.

“The only reason anybody sins [at all] is because at some level they are deceived [distracted by another voice rather than upheld by the voice of truth]. They start believing the lies of sin instead of the promises of God.”

FIGHT THE UNBELIEF

Hebrews 4:12-13 is serving as our home base for the teachings over these weeks. Let me go ahead and read those verses again for you now.

“12 For the word of God is living and active, sharper than any two-edged sword, piercing to the division of soul and of spirit, of joints and of marrow, and discerning the thoughts and intentions of the heart. 13 And no creature is hidden from his sight, but all are naked and exposed to the eyes of him to whom we must give account.”

There are many voices of deception that are winning the battle for our attention. They are winning the war for our minds. They are taking captive our hearts.

You are much more aware of this in the world around you than you are in your own heart. Every fool you ridicule for believing what seems to you to so obviously be utter rubbish. Are you aware of those deceptive beliefs in your own heart? Would you judge yourself with the same measure?

“God has given you his good news, his promises, his word to protect you from the deep deceptions of sin that try to harden your heart and lure it away from God and lead it to destruction.”

“The word of God is living and active and sharper than any two-edged sword, it will penetrate deeper than any deception of sin has ever gone and reveal what is truly valuable and what is truly worth trusting and loving.”

But we have to do a little bit of work to get there. We have to dig for the treasure. We have to let it work on us overtime. And to do that, we have to know how.

We have to know how we’re supposed to read these words so that we can know how to properly apply them to our lives.

How do you read the Bible?

MAYBE I DON’T KNOW

We have to defamiliarize ourselves with the Bible a bit. We have to remember that this is ancient literature that is quite literally foreign to us.

There are a series of essays I encountered published under the title “For Us, But Not to Us”. One passage from these essays reads, “[I]f we are to interpret Scripture so as to receive the full impact of God’s authoritative message, we have to set our cultural river aside and try to understand the cultural river of the ancient people to whom the text was addressed. The Bible was written to the people of ancient Israel in the language of ancient Israel; therefore, its message operates according to the logic of ancient Israel.” In other words, “we cannot seek to construe their world in our terms.”

There is often a big difference between what we hear and what the authors intended to say. It’s a communication problem. You all have experienced this in your life, in your marriages, and relationships.

I know for me a particular story stands out that is going to sound ridiculous. As you all know by now, I am not usually wrong. My friends, those closest to me, love to point out the rare times this doesn’t hold to be true. Eric has already taken advantage of this relationship dynamic.

But the story I remember, and perhaps Jenny remembers, is that we were walking in a crowd somewhere in the evening and a man came up to me and asked if I had a light. And I said I did not. That seems pretty normal and appropriate.

Now, what was that man asking for? (He wanted me to help him light his cigarette right?)

What did I think he wanted? (a flashlight because it was getting dark)

I won’t outlive that mistake even though it’s been like twenty years now.

Gosh I’m getting old.

I think there’s a pretty humorous story along this vein in the Delany household as well. Probably many of them. Help me remember, Krissy, you told Emerson repeatedly to not let the chickens out. He went outside, came back in and said okay, I let the chickens out. What he heard and what she said were not the same things.

We have to relearn how to read the Bible.

Because the truth is, we all have experiences that we’re bringing with us. We all have a history, a relationship with these words. We can begin to think we know this book so well. Of course, I know how to read the Bible.

Psssh!

Perhaps we need to stop and think - maybe I don’t know how to read the Bible!

Maybe I don’t know.

Oh no! What if I don’t know?

RIGHT INTUITION WRONG METHOD

What are the ways we read the Bible incorrectly?

We can’t possibly cover all the ways we may read the Bible wrong.

I can’t even imagine all the ways.

So instead, what I want to do is focus on some of the right feelings, the correct intuitions we have with regard to the Bible, what it is, what it does, and what we can get from it. These are intuitions that are right.

We can often have right intuitions that lead us to less than helpful methods that are not what the Bible is designed for but we can make them work pretty well.

I know there have been several times when I was building something and I was using a drill to screw it all together. At some point what I really needed was a hammer to tap a board over or something along those sorts. But instead of putting down the drill and picking up the hammer, it was much more convenient for me to just bash the drill against the board until it was where I wanted it to be. The drill was the wrong tool, but hey I’m kind of lazy.

Oftentimes, when reading the Bible, we might use a tool to do something it wasn’t designed to do thus missing out on the full potential of what it is meant to do.

We have to use the right tools when we read the Bible.

So what are these right intuitions? These right assessments about the Bible?

We rightly assume that Scripture is designed to teach us about what is true. It definitely is. God’s word is the source of truth. Through it you will encounter someone who is not yourself – the living God whose thoughts are not your thoughts and whose ways are not your ways. It’s God’s truth.

We believe that Scripture is meant to give us wisdom of how to live. Absolutely. It is not instruction alone, but it absolutely leads us to God’s wisdom which guides us in life. The word of God will teach you to think in ways you’ve never thought before.

We think that Scripture is the place where we learn to hear God. Of course. It’s His word! In Scripture you learn how to trust in the one who wants to rescue you.

2 Timothy 3:14-16 says, “14 You must remain faithful to the things you have been taught. You know they are true, for you know you can trust those who taught you. 15 You have been taught the holy Scriptures from childhood, and they have given you the wisdom to receive the salvation that comes by trusting in Christ Jesus. 16 All Scripture is inspired by God and is useful to teach us what is true and to make us realize what is wrong in our lives. It corrects us when we are wrong and teaches us to do what is right. 17 God uses it to prepare and equip his people to do every good work.

God’s word teaches us about what is true. It gives us wisdom on how to live. And it is where we learn to listen to the voice of God. They are His words!

So how can we get that wrong?

TRUTH TO STAND ON

Scripture is truth to stand on. This is a right intuition. How can we get that wrong?

Well, how do we treat other sources of truth?

We tend to treat them like textbooks. We treat them like encyclopedias. We treat them like references.

This right intuition can lead us to an incorrect method where we have a question and we ask the Bible like an encyclopedia looking for a page, a paragraph, and a sentence that most directly answers our question.

How many of you do this or have done this?

Hey Jesus, what does the Bible say about money?

Ok Jesus, is it a sin to have sex before you are married?

Thank you Alexa – I mean Jesus.

You can make this tool work in a lot of ways for a lot of things. But what happens when the story doesn’t contain the answer to your question? Do you just skip it?

Last week I picked on the book of Numbers a lot, so I won’t do that. But I honestly can’t tell you why the book of Nahum is in the Bible. It seems so useless. But it’s in there.

When we treat the Bible like a reference book even when we are searching for truth some details will become irrelevant to your questions on life. Some stories wont’ fit your musings because they are answering questions that you never thought were important in the first place.

What you’re doing is missing out on the richness of what God is trying to communicate to His beloved creation. You can make it work, but you’re not really paying attention to the form – the narrative, the poetry, the letters, the apocalyptic literature.

What is that?

I don’t know! It sounds scary.

When you don’t know how the flow of the story works and how the context of every sentence fits into the larger work and the larger story you will come up against what appear to be surface level contradictions all the time.

Proverbs teaches us about prudence and that “a good man leaves his inheritance to his children” (Proverbs 13:22). Honor the Lord with your wealth (Proverbs 3:9).

And Jesus tells us a parable to be faithful in unrighteous wealth (Luke 16:11), but then He also says to give away all your wealth (Mark 10:17-27).

Then Paul says that money is the root of all evil (1 Timothy 6:10). What do you do with all that?

You have to read it all together. Never read a Bible story out of context and never read a verse in isolation.

There is truth and wisdom to be gained when we read the Bible as the story it is, paying attention to why and to whom it is being written. What is the purpose of the words? Then we can begin to decipher their purpose for our lives as well.

WISDOM TO LIVE BY

Speaking of wisdom, Scripture is wisdom to live by. This is a right intuition. How can we get that wrong?

There are so many ways we get this wrong.

What comes to mind first is when we read character stories in the Old Testament.

What we tend to do, and what I hear sermons doing all the time, is we try to turn the Old Testament characters into heroes that we are to modal our life after.

So often we read these stories, we don’t understand them. We are confused by them. We think there must be a nugget of wisdom here for me. What’s the moral of this story? What can I incorporate into my own life?

All of those characters in the Old Testament are messed up. All of the characters in the New Testament are messed up. They are not heroes to be idolized, to modal our lives after – except Jesus. That’s not primarily why they’re there.

David is not someone you should hope to be like.

Esther is not the picture of Biblical womanhood.

You can make that tool work for a while but what happens when the character is too bad?

Do you just turn them into a negative case study? And so, you read about how some of the Kings of Israel whored after Molech and sacrificed their children as burnt offerings and just think, got it, don’t sacrifice children.

That’s not the point. There’s a deeper truth there, a deeper wisdom if you’ll dig for it.

When we too quickly try to find an application we shortcut the role of meditation and miss out on God’s work in our lives.

In our search for wisdom, we can also approach the word of God as a behavior manual or rule book. Basic. Instructions. Before. Leaving. Earth. Right?

If we were to primarily read the Bible in this way, there would be an overwhelming number of situations and scenarios where a variety of behavioral responses would be appropriate depending on any number of various stimuli. Life is too unique for that.

A rule book can only help make one decision in one type of situation.

What are you going to do about tattoos? Does the Bible really even answer that question in the single time something sort of similar to what we would call a tattoo is mentioned in one particular scenario? Is it even trying to?

No, it’s not.

Wisdom is what God wants for you. Wisdom that forms the core of your values, what you care about, shaping you to see the world through His eyes, in the way He sees them.

The Bible is wisdom literature that leads us to listen to the voice of wisdom – the voice of God. It’s not trying to correct our behavior. It’s trying to lead us to God’s heart.

It will correct and train you in ways of living to act rightly toward other people and form new habits and moral thinking and ethical decision making to contribute good into the world all as you seek the heart of God.

GOD’S VOICE TO LISTEN TO

Scripture is God’s voice to listen to. This is a right intuition. How can we get that wrong?

I do this so often. I’m absolutely sure you do as well.

Let’s do it this way. Here’s the end of Psalm 139…

“17 How precious to me are your thoughts, O God! How vast is the sum of them! 18 If I would count them, they are more than the sand. I awake, and I am still with you.

19 Oh that you would slay the wicked, O God! O men of blood, depart from me! 20 They speak against you with malicious intent; your enemies take your name in vain. 21 Do I not hate those who hate you, O Lord? And do I not loathe those who rise up against you? 22 I hate them with complete hatred; I count them my enemies.

23 Search me, O God, and know my heart! Try me and know my thoughts! 24 And see if there be any grievous way in me, and lead me in the way everlasting!”

Which part of that do you think I’m going to commit to memory? Which part am I going to conveniently forget about?

So often we treat the Bible as a grab bag of warm spiritual fuzzy lines, fixating on what makes us happy but avoiding the lines that make us uncomfortable.

If you take a mental note of any Bible verses that you fixate on, are they mostly what people might call “life verse” material? Or do they look something like these three verses in Psalm 139?

Should David even be praying these words? Have you ever thought about that in the Psalms? Jesus teaches us to love our enemy and pray for those who persecute you (Matthew 5:44). Does that mean David was wrong? And if we shouldn’t imitate the form of justice prayers David takes can we fully embrace the other lines as well?

Ask questions. If you don’t have questions, you’re probably not reading it right. The Bible is full of strange, unfamiliar things that should cause us to ask questions, to challenge our assumptions.

“It’s a good thing when our reading of Scripture drags up a lot of uncomfortable questions. Times of questioning are almost always opportunities for deep learning and spiritual growth. As Solomon says in the Proverbs, “Cry out for wisdom, and beg for understanding. Search for it like silver, and hunt for it like hidden treasure. Then you will understand respect for the Lord, and you will find that you know God” (Pro 2:3-5). When we approach the difficult questions head-on, we almost always find a blessing there.“

It’s the parts that bother us that could be the most important, that present to us ways to challenge our thinking and our own assumptions we didn’t know we even had.

As we press through the questions, as we dig we discover the treasure.

What are the parts of the Bible you avoid? Those might say more about you than you are willing to admit.

HOW TO READ THE BIBLE?

So, how do we read the Bible then?

Let me just give you four quick instructions.

Read the Bible in context. Resist the urge to flip it open, point at a sentence, and start reading. Read it as a single unified story where what comes before and what comes after has something to say about what you are reading now. It is interconnected and carefully woven together. Don’t pick it apart and don’t consume it piecemeal.

Ask questions. Be curious. Dig for the treasure. We shouldn’t avoid the challenging parts or think that we have them all figured out to solve the tension we are experiencing. Real problems can surface when we try to easily solve the tension. The word of God is meant to be wrestled with in the same manner the Jacob wrestled with God. Only, rather than trying to be the victor, let it master you. Let it stand above your assumptions and presuppositions and be your authority, especially when it doesn't shake out the way you want it to.

Read the Bible with other people. It wasn’t until the last 500 years that it was even possible for an individual to hide in a room themselves and seek God alone. The Bible was never meant to be read in isolation. Read it with other people. Ask each other questions. Challenge each other. That’s the way we fight our history of baggage and cultural influences. Read it together. We grow together. I’ll never stop saying that.

Finally, live it out. Don’t just acquire knowledge. Let this story shape you. Let it change you. As you wade into the depths of its riches, find practical ways for God to change you in all the unimaginable ways He wants to.

“The word of God is our only hope. [God’s word is] sharp enough and living enough and active enough to penetrate to the bottom of my heart, show me that the lies of sin are indeed lies,” fill me with the truth of His promises, and shape me into the image that reflects His glory and goodness into the world.

DIVE IN DEEP

Saturate yourself with these words so that you can discern truth from the cacophony of lies constantly presented to us by our flesh, by the world, and by the false gospel of the enemy.

What would it look like, right now, for you to press into the word of God more?

What is your relationship with the Bible currently? Honestly, what comes to mind when I ask that question? What’s your first inclination? What is your current relationship with the Bible?

How can you grow? How can you take a step deeper?

What would it look like for you to wade a bit further into the depths of the Bible?

I neglected to present a challenge to you last week that I will now set out to correct. Would you put away the phones, the devices, and would you pick up a printed Bible again? The words aren’t going to change, but the experience might just. You might find yourself less distracted. You might build a bit more familiarity with turning these pages and a bit more understanding of the flow of this story. Take notes and ask questions.

“What we need is protection from unbelief. Day in and day out we need to fight unbelief in the promises of God.”

Let it pierce through to the depths of your soul and spirit. Let it penetrate “deep—like a sword through tough, hard layers—and [let it] make judgments about what's there.”

Let God change you through His word.

Resources (*the views expressed within the following content are solely the author's and may not necessarily reflect the opinions and beliefs of Mountainside Church):

https://youtu.be/2JcYCHo8600?si=-estt_DN7Y3hj-60

https://instituteforbiblereading.org/none-of-the-bible-was-written-to-you-and-thats-a-good-thing/

https://www.biola.edu/blogs/good-book-blog/2021/scripture-is-for-us-but-not-to-us

https://www.desiringgod.org/messages/the-word-of-god-living-active-sharp

https://www.tmumc.org/stories/posts/praying-the-difficult-psalms

What’s The Point | What Is The Bible? - Hebrews 4:12-13 | August 18


INTRO

Hey family!

Let’s see if I still remember how to do this. It’s been a minute.

I hoped you enjoyed the last several weeks, as different voices came together to proclaim the truth of God’s mission. This is what we’re here for. This is what we have been created for. This is what we are setting our hearts to as a family – as a community. It’s not what I’m calling you to, but it’s what we have all been called to. So I hope you have been challenged as we set out to make purposeful movements toward the mission of God.

This mission is something we’re going to constantly be reminding each other of over the weeks and months and years to come because this is what our life is all about and we so easily forget it. So just know, as we talk about becoming real people, as we talk about becoming a real family, as we talk about worshiping the real God, what we’re talking about is this mission.

To be a place where Heaven meets Earth by proclaiming the universal reign of God, embodying Jesus to our communities, and inviting our neighbors to join us in becoming real people, who are part of a real family, and who worship the real God.

Because as we talked about our mission and as we talk about our mission, what we’re talking about is purposeful movement. This is not just something we learn – not just something we commit to memory. These are steps that we take, to be changed, to reflect God’s image and glory into the world, to become who God wants us to be. Real people, a new creation filled to overflowing with His life-giving Spirit.

Today we are turning our attention to the Bible - not that we don’t turn to the Bible every week, every day perhaps - maybe not, I don’t want to presume.

But today, we are starting a brief series about the Bible. We are talking about what the Bible is, what the Bible is not, how to read it, and some other topics as well.

I know that might sound funny. Aren’t all of the teaching serieses we do about the Bible? Maybe. Not necessarily about the Bible so much as poured out from the word of God.

So why start this series?

The short answer is that it’s really going to set us up well to understand some of the more challenging parts of the Bible – let’s say the book of Daniel which is coming up next. Perhaps a more challenging answer is that we are reading our Bibles wrong. All of us have ways in which we approach the word of God in a less than an ideal manner.

As we read the Bible, there are sort of four voices we have competing for our attention at any given moment in time, even as we read the Bible. Three of them are not very helpful and most of the time pretty darn harmful.

There’s our voice, the voice of the flesh. It’s alright. Usually it’s concerned with self care and comfort and generally pretty me-centered. But it has its moments.

There’s the voice of the world, our culture. It’s not necessarily evil, but the Bible does spend much of its words calling us to live counter to the culture. We saw this time after time in Corinthians. Paul’s instructions to the Corinthian Church all revolve around how the Corinthians looked a bit too much like the world and too little like Jesus.

The third voice is the voice of the enemy, the accuser which serves only as a voice of opposition to God. But it can be very deceptive. It can sound so close to truth if we’re not careful. As we know from the garden all it takes is twisting truth just the slightest amount. The devil is very clever at imitating truth.

Finally is the voice of God, the Holy Spirit in us. I was recently reading Psalm 103, which says in verse 20, “20 Bless the Lord, O you His angels, you mighty ones who do His word, obeying the voice of His word!”

Oh to be counted among the host of Heaven, obeying the voice of His word.

And these are the four voices conversing within us all the time.

But how do you distinguish them from one another?

So there’s also, of course, an even deeper reason we’re endeavoring to understand the depths of the Bible, and that is because through the Bible, the written word of God we experience Jesus, the living Word. We observe the Word and we learn to listen for the voice of truth.

“We want to make sure that what we are hearing from the Holy Spirit, what He is saying to us through this book, is somehow connected to what the original authors were trying to communicate so that our whole life of reading the Bible doesn't become an exercise in hearing our own voices echoed back to us. Let us push back against remaking the Biblical narrative in our own image.

We tend to start with ourselves instead of what the authors intended in the writing. Because, believe it or not, there is an intended way to read the Bible, it was written in a certain way to a certain people for a certain purpose.

So we want to ensure to the best of our ability as the Spirit of God instructs us that we are reading in a way to not impose our agendas on to it, but to mine it for the gems it most definitely contains and what Jesus and the other NT writers, especially those of Jewish background saw in it.

WHAT IS THE BIBLE?

So, maybe the not so obvious question to start us off is, what is the Bible?

What is the Bible?

Surely you have an answer. What is the Bible?

Many of us have grown up with the Bible. So we must have an answer. Perhaps you have attempted to connect with the Scriptures over the years but often just find them confusing. That’s alright.

Maybe some of you have had a bad experience where someone in your life, maybe they were well-meaning, maybe not, has tried to use the Bible to correct or instruct you, and it just left a bad taste in your mouth.

There are some of you, I’m sure, who have been a Christian for quite a long time, your whole life even and have yet to read the Bible through in its entirety. Hey, I get it. Numbers is a hard book to get through.

Here’s a Christian pick-up-line for you. If you’re single you can try this out and let me know how it goes. “Last night I was reading the book of Numbers and I realized I didn’t have yours.”

One of the goals of this series is to defamiliarize ourselves with the Bible in a way. We take for granted that we can read and understand these words. We forget that it is ancient near-eastern literature. It is literally foreign to us. We have to remember that. There are parts that are hard, hard to read and hard to understand. And that’s alright.

My hope is that there are some of you who already love the word of God and you are hungry to understand it more.

In Psalm 63 David says, “1 O God, you are my God; earnestly I seek you; my soul thirsts for you; my flesh faints for you, as in a dry and weary land where there is no water.”

My prayer for you is that you would earnestly seek God in the revelation of His word. And if that’s not you today, I hope you will become this more and more over the next couple weeks.

I want you to fall in love with the word of God.

WHAT THE BIBLE ISN’T?

Maybe we should really start with what it’s not.

The Bible is not a lawbook. That’s something you may have thought at one time or another in your life.

“Man, Christianity is just a list of dos and don’ts.”

It’s not. There are approximately 613 laws in the Hebrew Bible (Old Testament). And while that may seem like a lot, the Bible is not written in the same style as an ancient near-eastern law book such as the code of Hamerabi or something like that. It’s not intended to be a law book. It contains a selection of laws for sure, but if you treated it as such you would find it to be incomplete.

When we talk about the Torah, we often translate it as “law” but in reality it can mean something more along the lines of “teaching” rather than law. It’s not intended to be a law book. It’s not written to be a law book. And therefore the authors did not intend you to read it as such.

Interestingly enough. People point to Jesus and the New Testament as stepping away from the law, even though He said He didn’t come to do away with the law. There are some 1,050 laws or commandments you might say in the New Testament. Nearly double than the Old Testament. Clearly, we don’t think of the New Testament as a law book. We shouldn’t think that way of the Hebrew Bible either.

What’s more, it’s not even written to be a set of instructions. Or at least not instructions alone. So when we teach our kids that Bible stands for Basic. Instructions. Before. Leaving. Earth. That may be a clever acronym, but it only vaguely represents the heart of the Scriptures. We can glean instructions to live by from the word of God, but even there we will find situations, scenarios that God apparently never thought to address. Of course, that’s ridiculous. It’s not that God’s instruction is lacking. It’s that the Bible was never intended to be an instruction manual. We can’t boil the Bible down to an “insert Tab A into Slot B” conveyance of information a’la an Ikea assembly instructions manual. That’s never been the point.

WHAT’S THE POINT?

Throughout the scriptures there are wonderful descriptions of what the Bible is and does.

Isaiah 55:8-11, “8 “My thoughts are nothing like your thoughts,” says the Lord. “And my ways are far beyond anything you could imagine. 9 For just as the heavens are higher than the earth, so my ways are higher than your ways and my thoughts higher than your thoughts. 10 “The rain and snow come down from the heavens and stay on the ground to water the earth. They cause the grain to grow, producing seed for the farmer and bread for the hungry. 11 It is the same with my word. I send it out, and it always produces fruit. It will accomplish all I want it to, and it will prosper everywhere I send it.”

God’s word has gone out from since the beginning of time, creating and accomplishing all that God has willed it to. In His words are power to accomplish His purposes in your life.

Jeremiah 23:29, “29 Does not my word burn like fire?” says the Lord. “Is it not like a mighty hammer that smashes a rock to pieces?”

It is a consuming fire. A mighty hammer. The word of God breaks down and builds up. It warms and refines.

In John 6:63 Jesus says, “The very words I have spoken to you are spirit and life.”

Acts 7:38 says that Moses ”received life-giving words.” God’s word is life-giving.

And 1 Peter 1:22-25, “22 You were cleansed from your sins when you obeyed the truth… 23 For you have been born again, but not to a life that will quickly end. Your new life will last forever because it comes from the eternal, living word of God. 24 As the Scriptures say, “People are like grass; their beauty is like a flower in the field. The grass withers and the flower fades. 25 But the word of the Lord remains forever.” And that word is the Good News that was preached to you.”

All of Psalm 119 is essentially a love letter to the word of God. Verse 105 reminds us, “Your Word is a lamp for my feet, a light on my path.” It guides us in the way that we should go.

Puritan Writer Thomas Brooks said "The Word of the Lord is a light to guide you, a counselor to counsel you, a comforter to comfort you, a staff to support you, a sword to defend you, and a physician to cure you. The Word is a mine to enrich you, a robe to clothe you, and a crown to crown you.

John Flavel echoes Brooks writing that "The Scriptures teach us the best way of living, the noblest way of suffering and the most comfortable way of dying.

Brian Edwards - Philosophy and religion may reform, but only the Bible can transform.

The word of God is life and light to the darkness in and around us.

HIDDEN TREASURE

In Matthew 13 there are a series of rapid-fire parables concerning the Kingdom of God.

In verse 44 Jesus says, “44 The kingdom of heaven is like treasure hidden in a field, which a man found and covered up. Then in his joy he goes and sells all that he has and buys that field.”

Some of the early church Fathers have used this parable to discuss the word of God. Here’s what Iraneaus says, “If anyone, therefore, reads the Scriptures with attention, he will find in them an account of Christ, and a foreshadowing of the new calling… For Christ is the treasure that was hid in the field, that is, in this world (for “the field is the world”); but the treasure hid in the Scriptures is Christ, since He was pointed out by means of types and parables… When [the law] is read by the Christians, it is a treasure, hid indeed in a field, but brought to light by the cross of Christ.”

Scripture is the visible, it is the earthly, that reveals the invisible, the heavenly. In reading scripture, we see Christ in all of it.

All of scripture Reveals Christ.

And all of scripture is fulfilled in Christ.

On the road to Emmaus, after His resurrection, Jesus appeared to two disciples. Luke 24 says, “27 And beginning with Moses and all the Prophets, he interpreted to them in all the Scriptures the things concerning himself… 31 And their eyes were opened, and they recognized him. And he vanished from their sight. 32 They said to each other, “Did not our hearts burn within us while he talked to us on the road, while he opened to us the Scriptures?”

Christ revealed how all of scripture pointed to him - in other words, Christ dug to find the treasure. And it made the disciples' hearts burn.

The Bible is not an end in and of itself, it is the means to the end. It points to the living God who has the power over sin and death, who has conquered the grave, and who leads us into His holy presence. Scripture leads us to experience Christ.

The Bible is wisdom literature that guides you to an end goal of being rescued – salvation through trusting in the Messiah, Christ Jesus.

It all leads to Jesus.

A RESCUE STORY

So what is the Bible?

Now that we’ve started with the more complex answer, the simpler answer is that it’s a story. Two-thirds of the Bible is in narrative form. It’s a collection of stories, that’s what the word bible literally means. It’s a collection, a library of scrolls, of books, of stories that tell us one big important story. The greatest story ever told.

It is a collection of stories produced over a thousand years by 40 different authors in three languages telling one unified story.

Our common misconception of the Bible is that each book is its own thing. Their own story. Like potted plants, they stand alone, beautiful, each in their own way, but separate.

We need to see it as more connected. Now, we shouldn’t go around searching for Jesus in every story as some modern pastors might suggest. Every story is connected. Each story informs the larger narrative and is informed by the overarching storyline. It all leads to Jesus. But you can’t always put your finger on Him. The Bible isn’t a “Where’s Waldo?” book. That’s not how it works.

The more accurate way to think of the Bible is as a single, interconnected organism like a grove of aspen trees. Aspen trees are all one organism. Every tree spurts out of a single unified roots system. Each tree looks distinct and unique, but they are genetically identical. They are all the same tree.

The Bible is a collection of stories that are all telling the same story. It’s one story. Each book is inextricably interwoven together like a system of Aspen roots. Each book nourishing and being nourished by the next book.

And so, the Bible is carefully crafted Jewish, meditation literature with every word placed intentionally to convey a specific message to tell one unified story – to bring order out of chaos.

It is a story, meant to be read forwards and backwards, inside and out. It’s meant to be chewed on, meditated on, and mined over the course of a lifetime to tease out the treasure in the field – the pearl of greatest price.

The Bible is by and large a rescue story of a God who fiercely loves His creation, enduring and suffering greatly in His faithful pursuit of people.

So why do we read it?

WHY READ THE BIBLE?

Well, why do we gather as a community? Why do we pray? Why do we forego our appetites? Why do we serve the needy?

We do all these things because we are so enamored with the magnificent, living God of whom all of life points to – Jesus, the Christ, the Son of the living God.

We believe with every fiber of our being that Jesus the Anointed One is alone worthy of our lives and our worship. And, it is because we want to know Christ - We want to see him clearer, we want to experience Him and search for him like buried treasure - that we read scripture.

I read it because I'm a disciple of Jesus.

Jesus loved Scripture.

A disciple of Jesus should love the Scriptures. We should be thirsty for the word of God.

We need it like the body needs water.

We don’t just drink water when we experience thirst. We don’t just treat water as a life saving mechanism as a last resort. We drink it throughout the day so that we don’t become thirsty.

Why do we treat the word of God differently? Why does it so often become a last resort?

We need it.

STATISTICALLY SIGNIFICANT

It has the power to change lives.

It has the power to affect us in profound ways.

Studies that have been done show us the astonishing effects engaging with the word of God has on your life. If you were to read the Bible in a meaningful way four times a week or more, feelings of loneliness drop 30%. Anger issues drop 32%. Bitterness in relationships drops 40%. Alcoholism drops 57%. Sex outside of marriage drops 68%. Feeling spiritually stagnant drops 60%. Viewing pornography drops 61%.

Sharing your faith skyrockets 200%. Discipling others 230%.

“The more Christians read or listen to the Scriptures, the more bold they will be in sharing their faith and growing in their faith. Your lives will begin to have a profound impact on those immediately around you. There will be fewer times of stagnation in your spiritual growth. You will become viral in your faith.”

Here’s the sad truth. Every statistic has another side. For those who read the Bible three times a week or less, statistics show basically the same effect on their personal lives as those who do not engage at all.

You can’t think you’re doing what you’re supposed to. You can believe you are justified before God. You feel good about yourself and still experience no lasting fruit, no life, no power. Just one day less a week and you can think you’re being a “good Christian,” but your life look no different than people who aren’t Christians at all.

Four times a week or more. That’s more often than not.

There’s something about “more often than not” that demonstrates what you’re after.

More often than not demonstrates a pursuit, a saturation point that pours and overflows and produces lasting fruit in your life.

God wants to change you. He will shape you into His image as you engage and obey His word. He is faithful.

THE WORD OF LIFE

The enduring claim is that these words have meaning and implications for the biggest questions in life as a whole and for your life today.

This all somehow matters.

Ricky Gervais, some of you know him as the creator of The Office, he’s a British comedian and has been an outspoken voice against the Bible. He even has whole comedy routines where he reads the Bible in front of thousands of people just to add his witty banter as commentary over the story.

I once heard him say in an interview, “Why would you only read one book? Read another book!” That’s his advice to us. Expand your horizons. Get out more. Read more books. Don’t just read one book. For the rest of your life. Heh, what a fool you would be to do something like that…

Where else should I go? To whom shall we go? What other book is there? Please name it if you know it. These are the words of eternal life (John 6:60-71).

In them there is life. If there is life, there will be love and joy and a heart to obey the word.

Give yourself to this word so that your words become the word of God for others and reveal to them their own spiritual condition.

The key verse we will return to week after week is Hebrews 4:12, “12 For the word of God is living and active, sharper than any two-edged sword, piercing to the division of soul and of spirit, of joints and of marrow, and discerning the thoughts and intentions of the heart.”

“The word of God is not a dead word or an ineffective word. It has life in it. And because it has life in it, it produces effects.”

It reveals to us our true selves.

“Are we spiritual or are we natural? Are we born of God and spiritually alive, or are we deceiving ourselves and spiritually dead? Are the "thoughts and intentions of our heart" spiritual thoughts and intentions or only natural thoughts and intentions. Only the "word of God" can "judge the thoughts and intentions of the heart" Is there marrow and life in our bones? Or are we only a "skeleton" with no living marrow? Is there "spirit," or only "soul"?”

“The word of God pierces deep enough to show us the truth of our thoughts and our motives and our selves.”

OUTRO

I want you to fall in love with the word of God.

I want you to be saturated with it.

I want you to feast on the faithfulness of God by meditating and chewing on these words that you may say in the end, “103 How sweet are your words to my taste, sweeter than honey to my mouth!” (Psalm 119:103)

This story will work on you over time. It will affect the way that you live. It will affect the way that you see yourself. And it will change the world we live in.

Resources (*the views expressed within the following content are solely the author's and may not necessarily reflect the opinions and beliefs of Mountainside Church):

https://research.lifeway.com/2021/01/20/9-tangible-benefits-of-bible-reading-for-your-church/

https://www.reformationbiblecollege.org/blog/the-five-solas#:~:text=The%20Reformation%20doctrine%20of%20sola%20Scriptura%2C%20or%20the%20Reformation%20doctrine,norm%20of%20faith%20and%20practice.

https://maninthemirror.org/2021/04/20/the-four-voices-in-your-head/

https://www.desiringgod.org/articles/pierced-by-the-word-of-god

https://www.preceptaustin.org/hebrews_412#4:12

Movement | Inviting Our Neighbors to Join Us - James 2:14-26 | August 4


GENERATED TRANSCRIPT

Well, good morning, everyone. I'm here to preach my second sermon ever, so I'm very excited about that. I think I've got Josh beat by one sermon still. We've been going over the mission statement, and I'm going to read it over here. Then we'll get into it. We want to be a place where heaven meets earth by proclaiming the universal reign of God, embodying Jesus to our community, and inviting our neighbors to join us in becoming real people who are part of a real family and who worship the real God. I'm going to talk about the second half of the mission statement today. So, thanks, Zach, for that. I assume you wanted me to freak out partway through my sermon writing, which I did. And yeah, that's the part about inviting your neighbors to join us in becoming real people who are part of a real family and who worship the real God.

What I didn't remember, to be fair, is that Zach actually preached about "real people, real family, real God" in January, and I just wasn't here. That was partly on me. Thankfully, Zach, Josh, and Jake covered a lot of ground in the last four weeks, which gave me a lot of material to work off of as I was preparing. To start, I want to talk about becoming real people. As I'm discussing that, I want you to think back to Zach's sermon about heaven meeting earth and the concept of the temple being a place where heaven meets earth. God is now expanding that through the Temple of His people, as we're called a temple of the Holy Spirit in the New Testament.

Just like with that week, I want to go back to Genesis 2 to get started. In Genesis 1:26-28, it says, Then God said, 'Let us make mankind in our image, according to our likeness, and let them rule over the fish of the sea, and over the birds of the sky, and over the livestock, and over all the earth, and over every crawling thing that crawls on the earth.' So God created mankind in His own image. In the image of God, He created him; male and female, He created them. God blessed them, and God said to them, 'Be fruitful and multiply and fill the earth and subdue it, and rule over the fish of the sea and over the birds of the sky and over every living thing that moves on the earth.' This is probably a very familiar passage to most of you. A couple of things I want to call out here to discuss the concept of becoming real people. First, the term "image." The word translated as "image" here is the same word often translated as "idol" throughout the Old Testament.

Part of the reason for this is that when the people around the Israelites—and occasionally the Israelites themselves—made idols, those idols were supposed to be the image of their god. More specifically, they would place an idol in a temple. If we go back to thinking about how the temple is a place where heaven meets earth, the image or the idol was to represent and, in many people's minds, actually was the presence of whatever god was being worshiped in that temple. So when God tells the Israelites (and by extension, us) not to make any image or idol for ourselves, part of the reason is that He already did. There was no idol in the Israelites' tabernacle or temple because they themselves were meant to be the image bearers of God.

God created this temple in Eden in the form of a garden. The reason I say that is we see garden imagery carried out in the instructions for building the tabernacle and later the temple. These were calling back to the Garden of Eden with the imagery displayed in their decorations. God places His image in the garden, in that temple. Mankind is meant to be fruitful and multiply, taking God's presence and expanding it out into the rest of creation as God's representatives on Earth. This brings me to the language of "rule." Back in that time, many kings in the nations around the Israelites would have called themselves the image of God. That was something reserved just for the king in many of those cultures—a bit of a power grab, maybe a little egotistical. This teaching from God was quite subversive because He said all mankind was God's image and was supposed to rule the earth as God's sub-regents (a fancy word that means sub-rulers).

In the words of a Bible Project video I like, "The task that once belonged to elite kings now belongs to every human: to rule the earth." What does that ruling look like according to the passage? In Genesis 2, we see, The Lord God took the man and put him in the garden of Eden to work it and take care of it. It looks like gardening. Of course, it's not only gardening; I may be a bit biased, but gardening is surely part of it. We can extrapolate that it's about taking creation forward. God repeatedly says it was good, good, good, very good. He doesn't necessarily say it was perfect. Perhaps I'm extrapolating here a little, but I picture a world of great unrealized potential, much raw material. God starts this project of taming the raw world with the Garden of Eden, putting mankind in it, and saying, "Be fruitful and multiply and fill the earth." At that point, they were just in this little garden, so they were to fill the earth and subdue it, taking God's presence and expanding it out, carrying this project forward as His sub-rulers, making this beautiful world with Him.

The word "work" in The Lord God took the man and put him in the garden of Eden to work it and take care of it often translates to "serve" throughout the Old Testament. For example, Jacob loved Rachel and said, 'I will serve you seven years for your younger daughter, Rachel.' Exodus 8:1 says, Then the Lord said to Moses, 'Go into Pharaoh and say to him, "Thus says the Lord, 'Let my people go, that they may serve me.'" Numbers 8:15 says, After that, the Levites will go in to serve at the tent of meeting, when you have cleansed them and offered them as a wave offering, and so on. It's not always translated that way; it's often translated as "work" or "till" and "cultivate." Some translations use "cultivate" in Genesis 2:15, which is totally appropriate for gardening. What I want to point out, and something for you to bookmark as we move forward, is that the word used to describe work— the purpose that God created mankind for and put them in the garden for—has a strong connotation of service.

What happens next? Humankind says, "This is awesome; God's given us this great world," and they do exactly what He said. They're fruitful, they multiply, they take the project of creation out, they make everything better, and whatever they touch prospers. Oh wait, no—they actually start to be ruled by the very beasts they were meant to rule over and act like beasts themselves. An example of this is a theme that runs throughout the Old and New Testaments. They were tricked by a beast. They let themselves be controlled, in a sense, by the serpent. Instead of doing what they rightfully should have done and saying, "Hey, you're out of line; we rule over you, not the other way around," they failed to exercise their given authority.

That God tells Cain that sin is crouching at his door, waiting to devour him, right? Obvious beast imagery, like a bear or a lion waiting. I guess bears aren't really ambush predators, but you get what I'm saying. A lion, we'll say, waiting to devour him. We see this imagery carried throughout the Bible quite quickly with Cain's descendants. It's also very prevalent in Daniel, Revelation, and elsewhere. Obviously, humans didn't rule the way God intended them to, and we're going to jump forward a bit for the sake of time. We're going to talk about God's solution to that problem. He had to send a representative who would carry out the human role the way they were designed to do it. The way He did that was by Himself taking flesh, incarnating, and dwelling among us in the Son—one of the members of the Trinity, Jesus. He came and showed us what it means to truly rule as a human.

He comes and preaches the Good News of the Kingdom, saying in Matthew and elsewhere, "The kingdom of God is at hand." The implication, and what we learn, is that He is that King. He is the ruler, the Son of Man, who is to be seated at the right hand of God in that co-ruling throne created for mankind. But He's a King who's enthroned not by a violent military victory—at least not His own violent military victory, though you could argue something like that happened to Him. He's actually enthroned on the cross. Throughout the New Testament, His crucifixion is His coronation. He rules by service, by the washing of feet; those who will be greatest in the kingdom of heaven will be servants. He shows us what it means to rule as God designed us to rule: to serve. So, remember that word: to work it and care for it, to serve and care for it. Not that we exist to serve creation—let's not get weird with it—but you get what I'm saying, I hope.

He is the first human to overcome the beast. He does it not by a violent military victory but by submitting to a humiliating, violent death on a cross and overcoming through life and love, by resurrection. He shows the beast—the beast of sin and the beast that humans become when they submit to sin—to be the toothless thing it really is in comparison with the power of God's love. So, zooming in on this, we see that in Christ, we are part of a new humanity. Jesus is the first of a new humanity. Colossians 1:15-20 talks about this: He is the image of the invisible God, the firstborn of all creation. For by Him all things were created in heaven and on earth, visible and invisible, whether thrones or dominions or rulers or authorities—all things were created through Him and for Him. He is before all things, and in Him all things hold together. He is the head of the body, the church. He is the beginning, the firstborn from the dead, that in everything He might be preeminent.

What I want to focus on here is the language of Jesus being the firstborn. It says He's the firstborn of all creation. Does that mean He's the first created being? No, that's heresy. The Bible addresses that. He's not a created being; He's a member of the Trinity, eternally coexistent with the Father and the Spirit. John 1 is one place you can look for that, and it's elsewhere as well. So, it's not talking about that. He's not the first created being; He's the firstborn of all creation. So, what does that mean? At the end of this passage, it says He's the firstborn from the dead. He is the first of the new humanity, the first real person, as we're using the language in the mission statement. In Him, we are becoming real people as well.

We're talking about a way of living that's totally counter to the way of the world. It's not an easy way; it's extremely difficult. But there's no more beautiful way for a human to live than by following the way of Jesus. It is, in fact, the only way that counters the ways of this world, choosing love instead of power. To truly rule as a human, to be real people, is to live in a serving, self-sacrificial, loving way. We're talking about a love that is willful—not willful in a negative sense, but a love of the will, not just emotional. It's a love that allows us to rule the world as Jesus does, as servant kings, sub-rulers to God, humbly serving and gardening the world, building beauty and wholeness. After the Fall, it includes justice and reconciliation, rebuilding, and bringing healing to the world we have broken.

Jake talked last week about becoming like Jesus and doing what Jesus did, how that's part of discipleship. That's exactly what we're talking about here: becoming little Christs, spreading light and love around the world. But we're not just a bunch of individuals doing this on our own. It's not just me and God. The Bible teaches that we're saved into a community, into a family—the realest family we could ever be a part of: the family of God. So, we're not just doing this individually; we're part of this family that's more real than even our biological families. Jesus shows this, for example, in Mark 3:31-35, where it says that Jesus' mother and brothers arrived. Standing outside, they sent someone in to call Him. A crowd was sitting around Him, and they told Him, "Your mother and brothers are outside looking for you." He asked, "Who are my mother and my brothers?"

Then he looked at those seated in a circle around him and said, "Here are my mother and my brothers. Whoever does God's will is my brother and sister and mother." Now, Jesus did love his mother and brothers, guys. One proof text for that is when He entrusted His mother to John while He was on the cross. Right? So, He's not saying that our biological families aren't important. What He is saying, though, is that our true family is the family of God. Hopefully, our biological families are part of that family as well. I'm blessed to have that be true for me. But that's not always the case, right? Sometimes you might experience division between you and your family because you're a believer and they're not. But Jesus frames His movement in terms of family, and it shows us the kind of love and loyalty He expects within the church.

At that time, the family was the core social unit. It wasn't like how we think of it today, where we might imagine a husband, wife, and kids. It was actually your patrilineal family, meaning the family line through your father. Your closest social relations would be your brothers and sisters, as well as your father. And I guess your mother, though the emphasis was particularly on brothers and sisters. That's one reason why it's particularly important that throughout the New Testament, Paul and others frequently describe believers as brothers and sisters. They're constantly saying "brothers and sisters," "beloved brother," and using other similar language. This emphasizes that the closest social bond among humanity is the brotherhood and sisterhood of believers. That's what we're saved into when we're saved into the family of Christ.

This idea challenges the way of the world, depending on where you are. For us here in America, it challenges our individualism. We have a tendency to make decisions based on looking out for number one, as they say—making decisions based on our own individual freedom. But what we're actually called to do is, as was customary in that world and time, look out for our brothers and sisters in all our decision-making. In everything we do, we put the group first. This is called a strong group culture or strong group mentality, where you're not putting the individual first, nor your individual freedom, rights, likes, or desires. You're putting your brothers and sisters before yourself.

This also challenges the tribalism we see in our culture and in many cultures around the world. We adhere to social tribes of some kind, and this sorting might happen differently in various parts of the world. Sometimes we put that even before our loyalty to our brothers and sisters. This is addressed in the New Testament, for example, in Galatians 3:26-28. Although I belatedly realized I should have had a slide for it, it says: "So in Christ Jesus, you are all children of God through faith, for all of you who were baptized into Christ have clothed yourselves with Christ. There is neither Jew nor Gentile, neither slave nor free, nor is there male and female, for you are all one in Christ Jesus."

Paul addresses some of the major social dividing lines in his culture and even within the church at that time. The division between Jew and Greek, in particular, is a major theme in several New Testament books. These divisions weren't just between non-Christian Jews and non-Christian Greeks but between Jewish Christians and Gentile Christians who were clashing within the church. Paul says, "Hey, you all are family. Whatever ethnic or religious background you come from, it doesn't matter. Whatever tribe you're part of in this world, it does not reach the level of importance that the family of God should hold in your social sorting." In our time, we might say, "There is neither Republican nor Democrat, Israeli nor Palestinian, rural nor urban," etc. We could come up with many different divisions that people put weight on in our world, different tribes that people join, sometimes even before their faith. That's flagrant idolatry. We're called to look beyond that and have our first loyalty to the family of God, not to any tribe or kingdom of this world.

Now, moving on to the next phrase: "worshiping a real God." What does it mean to worship? The phrase doesn't say "our real God"; it says "The Real God." There's only one. The immediate inclination is to contrast the term "real" with "false," right? Other religions worship false gods, or people worship themselves, which is a form of a false god. People worship sex, power, money, or leisure—all false gods of this world. Yes, part of worshiping the real God means we worship the one true God and not a false god. But we need to understand what it means to worship. Often, without really thinking about it, we equate worship with belief. We implicitly change the term "worship" to "believe in the real God." While belief is part of it, let's talk about what belief really means.

Partway through 2021, I started memorizing the book of James. I highly recommend scripture memorization for many reasons. It's a great spiritual practice, and I'd love to talk about that more, but that's not the focus here. What I do want to point out is that as you memorize, you end up meditating. You say the words repeatedly and think about them. As I memorized this book, I repeatedly meditated on a passage in chapter 2, repeating it over 100 times since 2021. I've probably meditated on it even more as it becomes part of my mental background understanding of the world. That's one of the benefits of Scripture memorization. The passage, James 2:14-26, says:

"What good is it, my brothers, if someone says he has faith but does not have works? Can that faith save him? If a brother or sister is poorly clothed and lacking in daily food, and one of you says to them, 'Go in peace, be warmed and filled,' without giving them the things needed for the body, what good is that? So also faith by itself, if it does not have works, is dead. But someone will say, 'You have faith and I have works.' Show me your faith apart from your works, and I will show you my faith by my works. You believe that God is one; you do well. Even the demons believe—and shudder! Do you want to be shown, you foolish person, that faith apart from works is useless? Was not Abraham our father justified by works when he offered up his son Isaac on the altar? You see that faith was active along with his works, and faith was completed by his works; and the Scripture was fulfilled that says, 'Abraham believed God, and it was counted to him as righteousness'—and he was called a friend of God. You see that a person is justified by works and not by faith alone. And in the same way, was not also Rahab the prostitute justified by works when she received the messengers and sent them out by another way? For as the body apart from the spirit is dead, so also faith apart from works is dead."

This passage has been somewhat controversial in the history of theology. Martin Luther famously struggled with the book of James, feeling it conflicted with the doctrine of salvation by faith alone. While I'm not here to delve into the history or the conclusion of that debate, what I want to focus on is the relationship between faith and works. The text emphasizes that true faith is not just intellectual assent but is demonstrated through action. It's a living, active faith that naturally produces works. Faith and works are not separate entities but are deeply intertwined. As James points out, even demons believe in the existence of God, but that belief does not lead to righteous action. True faith, then, goes beyond mere belief; it manifests in how we live our lives and how we treat others.

What I want to talk about is what faith and belief look like. The word "belief" and "faith" are actually the same word in Greek, "pisteuo." It's translated as "belief" often, for example, "Whosoever believes in Him will not perish but have everlasting life" is probably the most famous use of the word. The way I've come to understand this passage, partly through memorization and other things that have happened in my life, is this: you believe what you do. Now, that probably needs a little explanation, so I'll attempt it. Your actions reveal what you actually believe.

If I sin, let's say I lie on my timesheet at work, and maybe I justify it by thinking, "They're not paying me enough to live here in Boone. I have to buy groceries and pay my rent, so I don't know what else to do." I have all the reasons that make me feel I need to commit this fraud and steal from my employer. What I'm actually saying, though I might not intellectually believe this, is that my way—this sin I'm about to commit—is better for me and more justified than God's way, which He commands. Whether I intellectually believe that or not, I'm showing by my actions what I actually believe when I commit that sin. This applies to any sin we commit; we're showing a lack of faith. When we sin, we're demonstrating that we believe something contradictory to God's word.

On the other hand, let's say someone sins against you, offends you, or mistreats you, and you want to get them back, to give them what they deserve. But instead, you treat them with kindness and turn the other cheek. You may not even believe it's going to work, but by obeying Jesus' command, you show that you have faith in His way. Even if intellectually you're thinking, "This will just mean they mistreat me more," you're demonstrating your belief in Jesus by your actions. When the world offers you the power to force others to submit to what you think is right, even if it's for a good cause, but you choose not to use that power, you're refusing the corrupting grasp of power and following the way of the servant King. You're showing that you believe in Jesus, even if it doesn't make sense to you. That's what I'm trying to convey here.

Maybe a quiz will help get my point across. Raise your hand if you believe in chairs. Come on, hands up; play along with me here. Keep your hand raised if you believe in them enough to sit on them. Good, everybody has faith in chairs, right? Now, raise your hand if you believe it's important to wear a seatbelt when you ride in the car. Good. Keep it raised if you always or usually wear a seatbelt. Good, James, I see you're not lying. Now, here's the real test. Raise your hand if you believe flossing is good for your gum health. Raise your hand if you floss every day. Some of you have dead faith in dental floss.

That's my point: when you're worshiping a real God, it means more than just believing the right things about God or believing in the right God. It's more than that; it's giving Him the respect of taking what He says seriously. It's seeking to live more like Jesus, who showed us not only who God is but also what it means to be a real human. He showed us the real God and what real humanity is like, inviting us to be part of this real eternal family. So, it's a faith that's revealed by action, as the passage about Abraham says: his faith was revealed by his works. That action is following the way of Jesus.

Some of you might have noticed that I skipped a part of the mission statement. Did anyone notice? Yes, why did I skip "inviting your neighbors to join us"? Good job, Julie. I didn't skip it because I don't want to talk about it, but I wanted to set the stage for what we're inviting people into. What I want to say about this is, how could we not invite people into this? We've been brought into the greatest story ever told, and it's ongoing. We're invited to be active participants in it. How could we not be active participants in this? What else is there even to do with our lives? How can we keep it to ourselves?

Josh and Jake already talked quite a bit about how we do this. Josh talked about proclaiming the universal reign of God—the Kingdom of God. It's something we do in both word and deed, telling people with our mouths the good news of the Kingdom and living as Kingdom people by Kingdom principles. This includes helping your neighbor, sacrificing yourself when there's no obvious benefit to you, like Elizabeth, who spends a lot of her time with the Jewish community in Boone, being a light among them. It's like Rebecca opening her home to both us and those outside the family, inviting people in, even though she has the best reason to be closed off.

Jake expanded on that, talking about living incarnationally, embodying Christ, and being His hands and feet to the world around us. Just like Jesus, we enter into people's lives, living incarnationally, and being like Him, doing what He did. We're to be salt and light in this world, filling it with beauty, striving for wholeness, justice, and reconciliation.

That's kind of the how in very short of this. And yeah, I guess to end, I just want to tell a personal story from when I was a kid. It might sound like it's going in a weird direction at first, but bear with me. When I was 12, I read Matthew 12, where Jesus talks about the unforgivable sin—blasphemy against the Holy Spirit. I quickly began to wonder what that could be and soon started to obsess over it. Before long, I thought I'd committed it, and though I didn't, I was, of course, very distraught.

This is actually fairly common, as I've learned through the popularization of the internet, and perhaps it has happened to some of you. But at the time, I figured this meant I was going to hell, which was probably my worst fear. Part of what I realized and feared was that somehow, even as a 12-year-old, I recognized that I had my whole life ahead of me, and it wasn't even worth living if I wasn't going to serve Jesus. So, I decided that even if I was going to hell, I would spend my life telling other people about Jesus. In hindsight, that was probably a pretty good realization for a 12-year-old, but I'm not saying this to toot my own horn.

Pretty quickly, I became distracted by dreams of being a Navy SEAL, and a lot of weeds grew up in my heart over the years—things God later had to pluck out. For a long time, I didn't rightly prioritize telling other people about Jesus. Thankfully, God held on to me despite my stupidity over those years and eventually renewed my heart, for which I'm grateful.

But I think what I want to point out is that 12-year-old me grasped something crucial that I had to relearn later. It's the idea that my life would be wasted if I didn't spend it following Jesus and inviting others to do the same. That's true for all of us. This is the mission God has given us, and really, why do anything else but worship God, glorify Him, and invite others to do the same? So, to paraphrase John Piper, let's not waste our lives. Let's be a part of God's mission.

Movement | Embodying Jesus to Our Community - John 1:14 | July 28


GENERATED TRANSCRIPT

Well, good morning. After Zach talking now on the microphone, it sounds really loud. But I'm really glad to be here with you guys. Continuing this talk of vision casting of mission, it's something that I'm really passionate about, about talking about what is to come. How can we join together in the mission of Christ as a body? Listening to Zach and Josh talk about what it means for us as a church, what our goals are, and how we are going to accomplish what God has called us to do is really exciting. So to get to be a part of talking about this with you guys, as a church, is really exciting to me.

Before we dive in, I'm going to read our mission statement, and then we'll dive into embodying Christ. Our mission as Mountainside Community Church is to be a place where heaven meets earth, by proclaiming the universal reign of God and embodying Jesus to our communities, inviting our neighbors to join us in becoming real people who are part of a real family, who worship a real God. Today, we're going to be talking about embodying Christ to our communities, and we're going to break it up into two ideas or two parts. We're going to talk about the reality of what it means to embody Christ and our response. What is the reality? What does it truly mean to be the body of Christ?

What I have here is the reality that you and I, the church of Mountainside, as part of the global church, are the very presence of Christ on earth. We're going to break down what that means. Our response is to take up that calling of embodying Christ so that our communities and the very cosmos would know the eternal reign of our King.

A quick caveat, I am still learning. I am super excited to share what I have learned, but we as a church get to go on this journey together, figuring out what it means to embody Jesus. If there are things that I say you're like, "No, I don't know about that," then let's talk about it. I think that's what the church is for. A lot of these ideas are foundational and perhaps very familiar. If we go through and you finish thinking, "Oh, I knew all that," well, that's great. I am seeing this with new eyes, it feels like. I think we're going to be talking about some very foundational or familiar ideas. My prayer is that God allows us to see more of his character.

Before we dive in, we are just going to pray really as a group together. So Father, we just want to see you rightly. We want to know what it means that we are your body here on Earth. As we study your word and as we go out this week, when we meditate on truths, would your spirit be revealing who you are to us?

One of the foundational verses for the idea of embodiment or embodying Christ in our communities comes from John 1. As the body of Christ, we're going to actually stand up and read John 1 and 14 together. This isn't the totality of it, but we're just going to read what's on the screen together. Ready? "In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God. And the Word became flesh and dwelt among us." Before we sit down, if you are interested and want to grab a Bible, they are at the end there. I made it easier for you guys to walk over there and get them because you're already standing. If you don't, that's fine as well. We are going to be taking a good trip through Scripture together.

I remember the first time that I learned what "dwelt" meant. Zach talked about it two weeks ago, that it means tenting or tabernacling. It was Christmas 2019, and my mom had my family doing a talent show. It was high stakes. My cousin moved an Oreo from his forehead to his mouth, so it was a big deal. I was in college at the time, and I was studying Arabic. I thought, you know, I'll read John 1:14 in Arabic to my family. I thought that was going to be nerdy and cool. I'm in my room studying, and I come across a word that I don't really know. I didn't know many of them, to be honest, but this one I really didn't know. I Google translated it, and it came up "camping." I thought, that's weird because I don't know where camping is in John. I don't have a framework for camping in the Bible. We know that the Israelites camped in the wilderness, but I did a bit of digging, and it turned out the word was related to "tent." Then it clicked in my mind.

This was before the Bible Project. I don't know if any of you know the Bible Project. Seeing something like this, where my mind realized that John was talking about the tabernacle without having the Bible Project to help me get there, it was like an epiphany. It made me really excited to see Scripture come alive in this way. What we see now, what Zach really identified, was that when Jesus came and dwelt among us, he was meant to be the fulfillment of the tabernacle. For many of us, this passage is familiar. We've memorized it, studied it, and written it on home decor during the Christmas season. It's a foundational verse to being a Christian. It's central to this idea of living incarnationally or embodying Christ in our communities. It's the very reason we are Christians. We believe that this man from Nazareth, born of the Virgin Mary, was the very image and being of Yahweh made flesh. That idea alone, the unseeable God becomes seen, is truly enough for us to end on today.

That being said, we're going to continue to press into this mystery of why God would do this. Why is God a God in pursuit of humanity, of men and women, me and you? John's writing is not written in a vacuum, but it is drenched in the language of the Hebrew Scriptures. We're going to look at a few of those scriptures today to help fill out our framework for what John was calling Christ, the tenting of God among us. We're going to start, as Maria von Trapp would say for those of you who are fans, at the very beginning, in Genesis 1.

In Genesis 1, it says this: "Then God said, Let us make man in our image, after our likeness. And let them have dominion over the fish of the sea, and over the birds of the heavens, and over the livestock, and over all the earth, and over every creeping thing that creeps on the earth." Then God created man in his own image, in the image of God he created him; male and female he created them. And God blessed them. And God said to them, Be fruitful and multiply, fill the earth and subdue it. The image of God is manifest in humanity with the mandate to fill the earth with the image of God. It is a humanity blessed and sent to rule and reign over the earth, perpetuating and advancing the image and nature of God.

As our topic this week is embodying Jesus to our communities, we start at the very beginning to see what was the original design. We find that it was humans ruling and reigning in the image of God, ruling over the whole earth. This is crucial to understanding Christ and our role in the current historical moment. While we don't necessarily see the tabernacle in the image here, the narrative is rife with imagery. Humans are created as the very image of God. In the lines and pages following, we see that Adam and Eve, instead of ruling in accordance with God, step outside of God's design and decide to grasp after power in their own way, leading to a fracturing of the design that God had.

But the story continues. Even then, God is not done with humanity or his vision and call for humanity to be his image. The story picks up with Abraham, and that's where we'll pick up the story. God says to Abraham, "I will make of you a great nation, and I will bless you and make your name great, so that you will be a blessing. In you all the families of the earth shall be blessed." This blessing is repeated to Isaac and then to Jacob. It's repeated all throughout the rest of Genesis. It's this idea that through the offspring of Abraham, all the families of the earth were going to be blessed. The descendants of Abraham are going to be a family, a nation that carries out the original call to Adam and Eve, to be the image of God that fills the earth.

The story really gets exciting for what we're talking about today. It picks up in Exodus. Israel has just fled from slavery and they're at the base of Mount Sinai, where God met Moses in the burning bush. They are meeting with God. The cloud of God, the glory of God, is on the mountain. God says to them, "And you, Israel, shall be to me a kingdom of priests and a holy nation." A little while later he says, "Let them make me a sanctuary that I may dwell in their midst." This is where the idea of "dwell" really picks up steam. God wants to move towards humanity and make His dwelling place among them.

God says that He will make Israel into a nation of priests. Israel will now be the group of people that intercede on behalf of humanity before God, and they will reveal God to humanity, and so on. It's interesting in this passage that God says that He will make His dwelling place in a tent. I want to make a note here that I think John was trying to articulate in his Gospel, and that is that God dwells in the same manner as humanity. Here in Exodus, what were the Israelites dwelling in? They were dwelling in tents. And so what did God choose to dwell in? He dwelt in a tent.

In the time of David and Solomon, I don't think it's a coincidence that it's only after David has built his house that God builds the temple. That's something we can think about and meditate on. Maybe that is just a coincidence, but as I read Scripture more and more, I find that, like Zach says, there really are no coincidences. Then Jesus comes on the scene as the image of the invisible God, and in what manner does He come? He comes as a man; He comes in the same manner.

Perhaps one of our first takeaways for living incarnationally is that we are, as the body of Christ, to be in the same manner as our community. If we're called to inner-city missions, then we live in the inner city. If we are called to the mountain climbing community, then we mountain climb. If we're called to be soccer moms, then we engage with the soccer mom community. We know this through Paul's writings too; as Christians, we are to seek to be like our communities in the same way that Christ became human to restore humanity.

We know that the tabernacle became the place where God dwelt, where the infinite God was among humans. Israel was meant to be a unique nation, a nation that pursued righteousness, right relationships, and hated injustice. Israel was meant to be a nation that protected the orphan and widow, the stranger and the foreigner. They were to be a nation that lived according to the wisdom of God, not grasping after their own knowledge of good and bad. But we know they did not do that. They oppressed the poor and the vulnerable. They made military alliances instead of trusting in God, and they failed to represent God to the world. They failed to intercede on the world's behalf before God.

So God hands them over to the consequences of their choices, which is exile. Even through exile, God was not done with His vision for humanity. God was still working to make a dwelling place among humanity. So we pick up the story in Ezekiel. Even in the moment Ezekiel is writing during exile, and it seems that all hope is lost, the prophets enter the scene and begin to describe that God is still in pursuit of man.

Here's what Ezekiel says. It's a long passage, so we're gonna read it together: "And I will vindicate the holiness of my great name," says God, "which has been profaned among the nations, which you have profaned among them. And the nations will know that I am the LORD, declares the Lord GOD, when through you, I vindicate my holiness before their eyes." Notice God's preoccupation with how the nations perceive Him. God's vision was always for all people to see the character and goodness of God. So God says to Israel, "I will take you from among the nations and gather you from all the countries and bring you into your own land. And I will sprinkle clean water on you," that's baptism imagery, "and you shall be clean from all your uncleannesses, and from all your idols I will cleanse you. I will give you a new heart and a new spirit I will put within you. I will remove the heart of stone from your flesh and give you a heart of flesh. And I will put my Spirit within you and cause you to walk in my statutes and be careful to obey my rules."

A little while later, he says, "And my dwelling place will be with them, and I will be their God, and they shall be my people. Then the nations will know that I am the LORD who sanctifies Israel, when my sanctuary is in their midst forevermore." What Ezekiel is looking forward to is the day in which God's presence is not distant from humanity but present within them. God is speaking to an exiled people, encouraging them that He has not abandoned them. He is working through history for the fulfillment of His ultimate plan. Here in Ezekiel, God says that He longs for His dwelling place to be with humanity forevermore.

This is where the narrative of the Hebrew Scriptures and the longing for the restoration of God's dwelling place among humanity intersect. Through the Hebrew Scriptures, we see that God is a God in pursuit of humanity. He made humans in His image to spread across the whole earth, to rule and reign with Him. The offspring of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob were to be a blessing to all the nations. God chose Israel to be a kingdom of priests where His glory would dwell. Even through exile, God still wanted to dwell with humanity.

This is the environment, the stage, in which Jesus actually enters the scene. Jesus is the ultimate fulfillment of the idea that God is in pursuit of humanity, God dwelling among us. Jesus takes it a step further. In John 14, He says to the disciples, "If you love Me, you will keep My commandments. And I will ask the Father, and He will give you another Helper, to be with you forever, for He dwells with you and will be in you. In that day, you will know that I am in My Father, and you in Me, and I in you." A little while later, He says that if we love and obey the instructions of the Father, then His home will be made with us. Jesus seems to be saying, not just "I will dwell among you," but now "I will dwell in you."

We actually see this displayed in Acts 2. The disciples are all gathered together after Jesus has ascended into the skies. They are praying together, and it says, "On the day of Pentecost, when it arrived, they were all together in one place. Suddenly there came from heaven a sound like a mighty rushing wind, and it filled the entire house where they were sitting." And divided tongues as of fire appeared to them and rested on each of them. They were filled with the Holy Spirit and began to speak in other tongues as the Spirit gave them utterance. This imagery here is replaying the moment where God's glory fell on the tabernacle and fell on the temple. It reveals that these disciples have now become the very temple of God.

Paul uses these words in Ephesians: "Christ Jesus Himself being the cornerstone, in whom the whole structure, being joined together, grows into a holy temple in the Lord. In Him, you also are being built together into a dwelling place for God by the Spirit." There is so much that we could say about this topic, specifically the idea that we are to embody Jesus by literally, perhaps in some symbolic and real sense, being His body. I would encourage you guys over the next week to really look into the rest of the New Testament to see where this theme comes alive. Look at the writings of Paul’s thoughts on the body of Christ, or Peter saying that we are a royal priesthood, quoting from Exodus.

I believe that the New Testament authors truly believed that the church had become, and still is, the physical manifestation, the very presence of Christ on earth. This is fully realized in Revelation when the reunification of heaven and earth is complete. It says that there is no more a temple in the city, for the presence of God dwelt there. "For its temple is the Lord God Almighty and the Lamb." This idea is fully realized in that future moment. But for now, we live in the present because that's where we are. So in the present, what is the reality? Where we are now, where has the story come to at this point?

I believe that the story of the Hebrew Scriptures is one where God desires to dwell with humanity. In Christ, the Hebrew Scriptures are fulfilled, and humanity has become the very dwelling place of God, the church. So not just all humanity, but the church has become the very dwelling place of God.

God doesn't just want to dwell with humanity but to make the church and humanity His dwelling place. The church has become the very presence of Christ on earth. As I read this and thought about it, I wondered, are we saying that we've become God? That would be like saying the tent of the tabernacle became God when God's glory dwelt there, which we know isn't true. This reality is worth meditating on. It's not a trite metaphor that we are the body of Christ; it's a deep and mysterious reality.

So then, what do we do if we are the presence of Christ on earth? How do we respond? How do we do this? I think there are two ways. We could probably talk about this for the rest of our lives, but today we're going to focus on two ways. The first one is that we become like Jesus. How do we become more like Jesus? Well, we grow. There’s this diagram that I borrowed from John Mark Comer, the growth diagram. Maybe many of you have seen this from his "Practicing the Way" or are familiar with it. There are several different aspects: teaching, practice, community, time, and experience, all under the tutelage of the Holy Spirit. We're going to break these down a bit, one by one, to think about how we can grow to become more like Jesus.

In Matthew 28, Jesus instructs His disciples to teach future disciples how to observe His instructions. Learning at the feet of Jesus through sermons, podcasts, books, etc., is critical to our growth and becoming more like Jesus. In the New Testament, Jesus gives long speeches and parables to instruct His disciples on how to act more like Him and how to operate in the kingdom of God.

That being said, in modernity, we're descendants of the philosopher Descartes, who said, "I think, therefore I am." We tend to believe that sometimes, especially when it comes to Jesus: "I believe, therefore I am." Yet we know that even the demons believe in Jesus. So there must be something different about us as a body of people, as a group, as we embody Jesus to become more like Him. I think this is where practice comes in. We don't just learn but we actually implement; we practice. We have these holy habits that shape our lives.

We know we cannot just think "I'm a runner" and be a runner. Nor can we say "I want to be a runner" and be a runner. To truly be a runner, we have to run. Depending on how far we want to get into the culture, it can really transform our lives. It can transform the shoes we wear, the clothes we wear, what we eat, when we sleep. Our practices and our habits can shape our affections as we pursue what we love.

A modern philosopher and Christian thinker named James K.A. Smith talks a lot about these practices. His retort to Descartes is, "We don't think, therefore we are. Rather, we become what we love." Smith takes it a step further, saying our loves are shaped by our habits, or maybe our habits shape our loves. He uses the example of a teenage consumerist. What teenager watched a good lecture about being a consumer and then became a consumer? No one. It was through their habits, their daily life, what he calls cultural liturgies (aka habits), that the teenage consumerist is created. Whether that's watching television, looking at their phone, or seeing their friends wear new shoes, through the practices and habits that we have, our loves are shaped.

As believers, we know this to be true. It's why we value worship, why we value coming to church, reading scripture, fasting, praying, or practicing solitude. All of these things shape our affections for Christ. It's important to know that each of these practices is just that: a practice. Paul uses this idea of substance and shadows. The shadows reveal the outline of the substance, but the substance itself is Christ. As we engage in practices, it's important to always desire the deeper thing. As we fast, we should be fasting so that we might encounter Christ. As we read Scripture, we read Scripture so that we might see and understand who Christ is. The question we can ask with practices is: What habits are fueling or stirring my affections for Jesus? And what habits are robbing my affections for Jesus?

This leads us into the next idea: community. I won't belabor this point. I think our churches at Mountainside know and value community. We know that growth occurs through community. Brothers and sisters in Christ support us, call us out, help us see our blind spots so that we might look more like Jesus. You see the words "high control, low control." All that means is you and I can choose what teaching we listen to, what community we're a part of, or what practices we engage in. So we have some semblance of control over that. But there are also things that shape our growth that we don't have control over.

The next one, time, is something that I am passionate about and I think is important for us in our current age. I don't know each of your stories or backgrounds, but some of us likely came from a Christian tradition where the immediate and miraculous working of God was seen as His primary form of working, His Plan A, His primary form of growth and deliverance. Yet the sentiment that God's Plan A is outside of time, I'm not sure if that's a holistic view of the movement of God. We spent the first part of this sermon traversing literally thousands of years for God to accomplish His goal. I think that proves the point that God loves to work through time, bringing us individually, humanity, and the cosmos into looking more like God and being nearer to God. I'm not claiming that God does not intervene outside of time or doesn't work in the miraculous or the immediate, but I do think that God created us to be creatures who inhabit time, and we grow with Him through time.

Our current cultural moment seeks to war against time by making all things accessible now. Yet scripture appears to argue that God is willing to work over thousands of years to accomplish His mission. I wonder, could the same be true about how He moves in our lives? This understanding leaves us extending grace to ourselves and to each other as we each are growing more like Jesus through time.

In his book "How People Grow," Christian psychiatrist Dr. Henry Cloud describes his battle with depression. He often prayed and sought God's Plan A, what he thought would be immediate deliverance from depression. But it wasn't until many years had passed and he engaged with the community of God that he found he was no longer struggling with depression. For him, it was a big awakening to realizing God's movement through time.

The last idea here is experience. John Mark Comer uses the idea of the Hard Knocks of Life, but I’m not a millennial, so that didn’t really resonate with me. I think experiences, good and bad, shape us. They teach us to be resilient or teach us about who God is as we experience life. They have a massive impact on our psyche and spirit. Whether it’s our childhood family life or our adulthood experiences, what we experience shapes us. As Christians, we should seek to have tender hearts that work alongside the Holy Spirit, allowing those experiences to shape us into being more like Jesus.

So, if becoming more like Jesus is one way that we embody Jesus in our communities, perhaps the other way is doing what Jesus did.

Jesus prioritized people. He cared about their deeper needs and moved towards them. No longer was the dwelling place of God in an immovable temple. It was among the people, moving towards them, healing them, and calling them into the kingdom of God. As image-bearers from Genesis 1 and descendants of Abraham, we are called to bless all nations. In Christ, we have become a royal priesthood, meant to intercede on behalf of all people. We are called into a unique kingdom that elevates the lowly, seeks righteousness, and hates injustice. We have become the dwelling place of God, where people encounter God. Our body at Mountainside is part of a global, trans-temporal body that God's Spirit has chosen to dwell in. We prioritize people because that's what Jesus did and that's the character of God who dwells in us.

So, if prioritizing people is essential, how do we do this practically? Here are some intangible, perhaps more ethereal, ways to think about advancing the Kingdom of God in Boone, North Carolina. Whether it's wholeness, justice, beauty, or reconciliation, as Jesus sought wholeness, we too can work towards wholeness. He carried out merciful justice, cultivated beauty, and fostered reconciliation among people and between people and God.

This vision for a new humanity should inspire awe and wonder at the majesty of our King, the King who has made us His dwelling place. Father, there are mysteries we do not understand, that Your Spirit has been placed inside of us and is present among us as Mountainside and as part of the global church. How do You invite us to see You and Your character? Stir our hearts and affections for You. May we grow to become more like Jesus. Through our love for You, may people encounter You as they encounter us and see You for who You really are. Amen.