Psalm 119:7 (NIV)
7 I will praise you with an upright heart as I learn your
righteous laws.
David wanted to refine his religious beliefs in that as
he grew in his true understanding he would be able to praise God with an
upright heart.
A book titled The Year of Living Biblically: One Man's
Humble Quest to Follow the Bible as Literally as Possible came out a few years
ago. It was written by a non-Christian named A. J. Jacobs. It is a funny book,
and he is a great writer. He spent an entire year committed to obeying Bible
commands as literally as he could.
He lives in New York. He grew a beard, dressed like
Moses, and started to eat kosher. The Bible in the Old Testament commands
stoning Sabbath-breakers, so he would prowl around Central Park, looking for
offenders. He did not want to get arrested, so he would stealthily pelt them
with tiny pebbles from behind and then look the other way. Of course, it is
absurd, and that is the point of the book.
He writes, "Millions of people say they take the
Bible literally. A 2004 Newsweek poll put it at 55 percent, but my suspicion
was that almost everyone's literalism consisted of picking and choosing. People
plucked out the parts that fit their agenda." Part of what he intends to
show is no one can take the Bible literally.
Of course, many people do pick and choose, so his
critique is fair. It is a humorous book, but he is dead wrong. He missed the
whole point of the Bible. If, like he did, you treat the Bible naively, like a
list of disconnected rules as though it was an owner's manual, you are not
taking the Bible literally. You have to know the whole story.
In April 1945, the German army surrendered to the Allies.
The war continued. Japan still fought, even though Germany had surrendered. At
this point, Allied soldiers who had been fighting against Germany began
rebuilding Germany, all during the same war.
Imagine somebody looking back on World War II and saying,
"That's odd. Sometimes Allied soldiers attacked Germans, and sometimes
they helped Germans. I guess they randomly picked and chose what they wanted to
do." But that is not literalism; that is "stupid-ism." That sort
of conclusion comes from misunderstanding the story.
[John Ortberg, from the sermon "The Bible
Alone"]
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