Last week I was listening to the great Pastor Anthony Mangun online as he delivered a message to his congregation and he said (paraphrased): "I don't care how well you know the Bible, or how many scriptures you can quote if you don't have the joy of the Lord. It takes the Holy spirit to bring the Word to life!" That may not make sense to some, so I'm going to speak from my own experience for a moment, if that's ok (which I'm assuming it is, because I have the proverbial mic). I grew up in a Christian home, attending a Pentecostal church and a Christian school. Scripture was all around me every day. I heard it, read it, memorized it, studied it to the best of my ability and really thought that I had a handle on it. But I didn't have the Spirit of God inside me. I was barely skimming the surface of the meaning of the scriptures. This past January and February, Bryan and I took part in our church's annual Daniel's fast, and in doing this, we pledged to read our Bible's and pray and sincerely seek the Lord. During this time, I received the Holy Ghost, (if you don't know what that means, I'll cover that subject at a later date, so stay tuned!) and all at once, the scriptures made sense to me! It was like a light had been turned on. All I could think was, "I know I've read this before...how did I not see the meaning?" The answer, the difference, was the Holy Spirit.
I've been reading a lot recently to try to figure out how people can say that the Bible approves of certain issues that are going on in our society. Issues which I won't delve into in this post because I don't want to veer off track. But bloggers, authors, and reporters have been quoting scripture backing issues that are immoral and wrong, but are being praised and uplifted in the name of cultural progress. As I read the scriptures that they were quoting, I thought to myself, "Wow. They are so far off the mark that it's scary." People want to defend their decisions and their actions by taking tiny little snippets of the Bible and saying that they are justified. But, as the chiche'd phrase goes, "The Bible is not a bag of trail mix. You can't take the pieces that you like, and leave the pieces that you don't."
In studying and reading up on this subject, I came across a pretty good quote in a Yahoo! answers post. "In Matthew 4 and Genesis 3, you read Satan quoting scripture. The problem was in his application of the scripture he was quoting. He conveniently leaves out some important context. But unlike Satan, Jesus correctly applies it. It's interesting to note, just because someone quotes scripture, doesn't mean they're imparting truth correctly. Like the devil, they misapply it. But most fraudulent uses of scripture can be exposed by simply reading the context of the passage instead of small bits. It's the number one reason for countless misinterpretations." WHOA. This guy hit the nail on the head with that one!
Shakespeare, The Merchant of Venice
Now, I realize that Shakespeare isn't a religious icon by any means, but what he wrote is a very real truth. In the Gospels, there are accounts of Satan trying to tempt Jesus. During the time of a forty-day fast, Satan takes Jesus to the pinnacle of the Temple in the holy city and tells Jesus, "If You are the Son of God, throw Yourself down; for it is written 'He will give His angels charge over you'." (Matthew 4:6, Satan quoting Psalm 91:11). To which, Jesus shuts Satan down by quoting from Deuteronomy, "You shall not put the Lord your God to the test." Bazinga.
2 Corinthians 11:14 says that the devil masquerades as an angel of light. He can make himself look holy. He can make himself appear good. Why would Satan try to look holy? Imagine that you're walking down the street, and you are approached by a huge, scary man who wants you to follow him into an alley. Would you do it? I seriously hope that you're answer is 'no'. What if a well-dressed woman pushing a baby in a stroller asked you to help her look for her toddler? She would almost certainly win most people over, at first glance alone. Satan isn't going to appear to you as an obviously evil character, because most of us would run the other way! He's going to put up a facade, be a wolf in sheep's clothing, and deceive.
A person cannot impart truth by quoting scripture if they are leaving something out. I'm sure I could defend any lifestyle by pulling random verses out of context. I think that sometimes people want to treat the Bible as a book of a bunch of feel-good quotes that make everything feel warm and fuzzy and a-ok. But the Bible isn't just meant to be a comfort and an inspiration. It is meant to teach, to lead, to prod. It is an instruction manual on what to do, what not to do and how to live. Are there scriptures that sound like they are opposing each other? Yes, when taken out of context, there might be some confusion. But that's where the Holy Ghost steps in and says, "Here, let me turn the light on and clear this up."