Monday, May 30, 2011

Monday's Meditation: Discovering Our Personal Canon

There are sixty-six books in the Bible and that’s too many for me.

Just because we can carry a Bible in one hand we are tempted to think it is only one book--when in fact we carry around an entire library. iPhone apps distill the collected wisdom of centuries into a tap and touch guided tour while we wait for an elevator. Sixty-six books, forty-plus authors, three continents and at least 1,500 years: how many gigabytes do you need for that?

The reason this collection is too big is not because of some flaw in how the Bible has been safeguarded and delivered to us today. The problem is me. I cannot take in the bedazzling array of God’s creativity in the written word. Let me flash my orthodox credentials for a moment: of course, all sixty-six books are inspired by the Spirit of God. I trust the inspired judgment of the church fathers in setting the canon with these very books and not some others.

I am aware of through-the-Bible-in-a-year reading plans, but I find myself hanging out again and again in the same neighborhoods of the scripture. How about you? Again and again I return to the epic life stories in Genesis, but wouldn’t be caught dead hanging out with those wild-west Judges just a few books over. My heart is moved by the Psalms but I feel scolded by the Proverbs. I could read the gospels every day but when I read Paul I find myself asking, “Who made you the boss of me?” And don’t get me started on Revelation--I read it late one night and didn’t sleep for a week.

There was a time when I would feel guilty about playing favorites in the Bible. But perhaps my heart is pre-disposed to receive certain input more easily that others.

Let me be clear: it’s all the word of God. We should do our best to receive it all. We should not gainsay the books that do not yield their fruit as easily. We should desire to drink from every fountain he provides, yet we should not feel guilty if our hearts come again and again to a familiar spring.

Quite the opposite: we should ask the Spirit to reveal what this tells us about ourselves. Here are some questions to help us hear his voice in the Bible:
  • What books of the Bible speak to me most clearly?
  • What does this say about me--how am I postured to receive his instruction?
  • Has the Bible changed for me over the years? Are the words which spoke to me in my youth the same ones that speak to me now?
  • Are there treasures undiscovered in the books I read again and again?
  • Are there treasures undiscovered in the books I rarely read?
These questions (and others like them) will lead us into discovery of his written word--and ourselves.

7 comments:

  1. I've found that certain books connect with me at certain seasons of my life. I'm not into Paul as much these days, though there was a time when I felt like I needed his epistles so badly. There certainly is a lot to learn by thinking of which books connect with us the best.

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  2. I have camped out in the Pauline corpus for some time but I get the feeling that I may be giving the gospels more attention soon. Also, over the last year or so, I've sense a need to read more OT.

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  3. Ed: About seasons of life: the scripture is so true to life experience that it rings more and more true in my ears the older I get.

    Brian: In my twenties it seemed like I only read Paul. Now, in my fifties, I can read the gospel accounts again and again. Truly, it's a book for a whole lifetime!

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  4. Paul must be for us 20 somethings :) This was a good word- I'm always amazed at how different parts of His Word (and character) come alive to me as things happen in life that leave me in urgent need of them. How He leads me to a spot I haven't thought about since I read it 5 years ago, and brings me to camp in it for months. So thankful for that.

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  5. Paul must be for us 20 somethings :) This was a good word- I'm always amazed at how different parts of His Word (and character) come alive to me as things happen in life that leave me in urgent need of them. How He leads me to a spot I haven't thought about since I read it 5 years ago, and brings me to camp in it for months. So thankful for that.

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  6. I have camped out in the Pauline corpus for some time but I get the feeling that I may be giving the gospels more attention soon. Also, over the last year or so, I've sense a need to read more OT.

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  7. All the books in the bible are like a web to me. You can read about one subject and find a greater understanding by reading all the books on that one subject. Even though they are written hundreds of years apart, they line up and teach us in greater detail.

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