214-351-1901
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As a mother comforts her child, so will I comfort you;
and you will be comforted over Jerusalem.”
Isaiah 66:13
WORDS OF HOPE
Do you ever read a passage in the Bible and think, Whoa! Wait a minute! The above words from Isaiah are such a passage for me. Let’s just say that mothering was not my mom’s forte. Comforting her child seemed never to be at the forefront of her thinking or actions. So, to read in the Bible that I will be comforted by God in the same way that my mother comforted me could have left me saying, “I don’t think so!” Instead, however, it led me to reflecting on how I read the Bible and what questions we all should be asking as we approach this text.
Do we, or should we, read it literally or as a metaphor? As a work of God or of man? As a manual that dictates our way of living or that challenges it? Do we read the Bible looking for it to tell us in absolute terms how we are to think and act or as a vehicle that enlightens us and makes us responsible for our thoughts and actions?
I’m not sure when, where, or how I came to my personal way of reading the Bible, but it goes way back, back to those days when I was looking for the comfort that I did not receive from my mother. We were not a family that went to church, so I had no Sunday School classes or any other means that introduced me to the Bible. I suspect that I first checked one out from the public library in fifth or sixth grade. I had no informed context with which to read this lofty tome, so the meaning I made at that time was simply adolescent interpretations for my own purposes and intentions.
Fifty years later, I have no recollection of what passages I read or what meaning or wisdom I found back then, but whatever it was, it was enough to pique my interest, to keep reading for all these years. And even with a half a century more knowledge and understanding, I don’t think my approach to reading the Bible has changed much. I still approach the text searching for it to speak to my personal experience in that moment. Where my personal growth has come is in learning how to read in such I way that I feel that I have the freedom, and perhaps the right and responsibility, to accept or reject ideas and attitudes in the words without that bringing into question my faithfulness as a Christian.
Let’s face it, if you look long and hard enough you can find passages in the Bible to support almost any kind of thinking and behavior. Consider the various passages on slavery, the roles and treatment of women, owning material possessions, judgement…and the list goes on. The reality is that those with good intentions will use their reading of the Bible to do good things and those with evil intentions will use its words to justify their evil deeds.
Coming to the words of the Bible with a sense of curiosity, an open mind, and a willingness to grow and be challenged and changed is how I believe this book is intended to be read. Every time we pick up the Bible and search its pages, it is a new book offering new meaning and new possibilities to us.
PRAYER
Creator of knowledge, wisdom, freedom, and love, guide my study and prayer. Lead me to those words that my heart and mind need today and help me to do good things with my understanding. Amen
DEVOTION AUTHOR
Kris Baker
Order of St. Francis and St. Clare
Cathedral of Hope
Proclaiming Christ Through Faith, Hope and Love
5910 Cedar Springs Road | Dallas, TX | 75235
214-351-1901
info@cathedralofhope.com