Don’t Twist That Book!

Did Jesus really say that?

Recently I was scrolling through the channels to find some cure for my mental lethargy when I encountered a popular TV preacher.  This fellow is often enlightening and always entertaining so I stopped to listen. His topic was the strategic thinking of Christ and how we often view life’s events like isolated incidents, while the Lord sees the whole.  I was encouraged by the message in spite of the fact that he was dressed like a senator from the Star Wars movies. Then he jumped the shark. He quoted Philippians 2:5 where it says, “Have this mind in you, which was also in Christ Jesus,” and proceeded to tell us to think like Jesus and get the big picture.

I changed the channel.

If you know your Bible, you’ll know that Philippians 2 deals with humility and service.  The reference above deals specifically with Christ leaving His Glory to come among us to die for us.  There are other examples of humility there; but my topic is not Philippians or humility, but how we use scripture.   You cannot take a statement from its context and use it elsewhere unless the speaker/writer does it or it is done by another biblical writer.

Think about this.  A dad takes his children to the local kids’ game and pizza place for a special treat because he got a big raise.  Once inside and ready to play games, he says, “I love you and want you to have all you want.”  The kids have a great time and remember the special day the rest of their lives.  Months later, the kids decide to apply Dad’s promise at the grocery store, get their own cart and load it with chocolate, candy, and soft drinks.  When they get to the checkout counter, they are disappointed when neither mom nor dad will pay for all their goodies. “You promised, Dad!” they protest. “Don’t you love us anymore”?

Christians and pastors do the same thing all the time. They take a scripture out of its context, apply it where the Lord never did, and run around saying how the Lord spoke to them.  Only the Lord has enough patience to deal with it.  Kids might make the mistake in my illustration, but they should soon grow mature enough to sense that something larger is going on.  That mature discernment is missing in many of our churches because preachers like my brother above need scripture to reinforce their point.

His point was valid and preachers are allowed to draw conclusions, so he probably didn’t need to misapply the verse he did.  But folks, those conclusions need to be judged by scripture; and we cannot begin to do that when we don’t teach how to read it and apply it in the first place.

This world is a treacherous place, physically and spiritually, and it is not getting better.  The Bible has the answers and wisdom we need, if we read it to find out what the Lord said, rather than to find something we want.