ON READING THE BIBLE
John 5:39-47
"You search the scriptures because you think that in them you have
eternal life; and it is they that testify on my behalf. Yet you refuse to come to me to have
life."
I recently gave a talk at the Hermanus
United Church on Israel and the Church in which I also spoke about the current
situation in the conflict between the State of Israel and the
Palestinians. In the course of my talk I
referred many times to the Bible, especially to the great prophets of Israel
like Amos, Hosea, Jeremiah and Isaiah, the teaching of Jesus about God's
kingdom, and St. Paul's writings about Israel and the Church. Afterwards, someone in the congregation said
that he totally disagreed with what I had to say and, moreover, I had not quoted
Scripture! When asked what Scriptures he
had in mind, he referred to those in which God commands Joshua and the tribes
of Israel to go into the land of Canaan and slaughter all its inhabitants,
taking possession of their land, their livestock, their vineyards, even taking
some into slavery and women to be their possession. It is all summed up in a passage in Joshua
(11:16-23), only one of several scattered about in that OT book. Let me read a few verses which will give you
an idea of what Joshua believed God had told him to do:
"So Joshua
took all that land...He took all their kings, struck them down, and put them to
death. Joshua made war a long time with
all those kings. There was not a town
that made peace with the Israelites...for it was the Lord's doing to harden
their hearts so that they would come against Israel in battle, in order that
they might be utterly destroyed, and might receive no mercy, but be
exterminated, just as the Lord had commanded Moses."
My critic at the United Church evidently
also said that if only the Israelites back then had really obeyed God and
killed all the Canaanites when they had the opportunity, there would be no
problem today. There would be no
Palestinians left in the land!
There are many who claim to be Christian
around the world today who think the same, and not a few Israelis! This is how they read the Bible. God commanded Israel to slaughter their
enemies on the basis that they were also God's enemies! God even hardened the Canaanites hearts in
order that they would be utterly destroyed -- no mercy, only extermination! So
God had no hesitation in ordering war, pillage, butchering, raping the
Canaanites. God is a tribal God of a war-like
clan hell-bent on grabbing someone else's land and possessions.
So it is understandable that many people
dismiss the OT and its portrait of God. And
because many Christians claim that every word in the Bible, every story from
the creation narratives to the end of history, is inspired by God they must
believe that it is all literally true. It
must be so because it says so in the Bible!
No wonder many people reject not just some parts of the OT, but the
Bible as a whole and think it
reprehensible that children are taught such stories in Sunday School. And I would do the same if it were not for
the fact that I do not regard the Bible in that way, and neither do any Bible
scholars I know. In any case, such an understanding of God is contrary to
everything that we know about the God revealed in Jesus.
History is generally
written by the winners. In older
histories of the British Empire its generals are all portrayed as if they were
not just heroes but also saints, and Britain was fulfilling a divinely
appointed role.. Was not the expansion
of the British Empire blessed by God, no matter how many people were
slaughtered in the process and how much land was stolen! Did not chaplains bless those going into
battle, praying that God would give them victory, and quoting passages from the
Bible to justify what they were doing? God
was the tribal God of the British and therefore they could do no wrong. Hopefully we all recognise that this is
nonsense. You can still read that
account of history in the old history books, but we can no longer take them at
face value. They are interpretations of
history and not very reliable when it comes to the facts. And that is also true of the story of the
conquest of Canaan by the Israelites. In
any case, they never did succeed in the way that the story is told in Joshua,
in fact there are other accounts in the Old Testament itself that paint a
different picture. Not only that, but
there are many passages in the OT that portray a very different understanding
of God, not God as the tribal deity of the warring Israelites, but God as the
creator and redeemer of all peoples and nations, the God who calls Israel to be
a light to the nations, to do justice and seek peace, to be compassionate, in
fact, the God Jesus called his Father.
The bottom line is
that the Bible is a dangerous book in the hands of those who do not know how to
read and understand it, and especially dangerous in the hands of those who use
it to serve their own purposes, including killing enemies and stealing their
land. You can, in fact, find a proof
text for just about anything in the pages of the Bible if you really want to. So beware the Bible if you think that every
word is divinely inspired and must be taken literally as the truth. How
much damage that idea has that done to people and nations over the centuries,
and how many people have lost faith in God because of it! The tragedy is that in trying to defend the
Bible as divinely inspired and without fault, people lose sight of what the
Bible really is about, and the truth to which it bears witness. "You
search the scriptures because you think that in them you have eternal life; and
it is they that testify on my behalf.
Yet you refuse to come to me to have life."
So none of what I have said means that we
should not read the Bible, or take it seriously. What it means is that we have
to learn how to read the Bible, understand how it came to be, and what it is
all about, just as we have to learn how to read Shakespeare or poetry,
newspaper reports about Oscar Pretorius or the Rugby cup final and, not least, the small print in our
insurance policies. I have a great love
for the Bible otherwise I would not be here today doing what I am. But I also know that it is not always easy to
understand and that you can't just take it at face value. It is comprised of many types of literature
including myth and poetry, tribal oral stories as well as majestic hymns of
praise and heartfelt cries of pain and suffering, of people of faith struggling
with doubt and seeking to be faithful to God's call to do justice, love mercy
and walk humbly. I am not saying that
only scholars can understand it, after all there are accounts of people who have picked
up the Bible and found both redemption and comfort. But generally-speaking you can't just plunge
into its pages and expect to know what is going on.
With all this in
mind that Bernhard and I have been talking about the need for a series of
workshops here at Volmoed on "reading and understanding the Bible
today." If you think this is a good
idea and would like to participate some time during next year, let us
know. This does not mean that you have
to wait for next year to read the Bible.
But I suggest you jump over Joshua and other bits where God seems to be
acting like a tyrant, not because they are not there for a purpose, but read the
gospels instead. Not the bad news of a
God who does not love our enemies and wants us to slaughter them, but the God
of Jesus who tells us to love our enemies because he is their God also. After all, did not Jesus himself tell us to
be careful in searching the Scriptures because we think that in them we have
eternal life, and refuse to turn to him who is the One in whom we find life?
John de Gruchy
23 October 2014
Wonderful! And I will definitely attend the Bible Studies....
ReplyDeleteGreat idea! I want to come too.
ReplyDelete