10 Reasons Why Reading The Bible Makes Us More Progressive
November 13, 2013 By
In a piece I published yesterday, (Study Shows: Reading Your Bible Often Makes You More Liberal),
we took a look at a study I read the other day which showed the more
often people read their Bible, the more liberal/progressive they become.
(In yesterday’s article I used the term “liberal” but in today’s I’m
using the term “progressive” since that’s what I identify as). Looking
back on my own journey out of fundamentalist thinking and into a
Christianity that is life-giving instead of life-sucking for me, this
trajectory of moving away from the hard right the more I read my Bible,
has been a daily reality.
From getting to know so many of your
stories, it sounds like many of you have experienced similar paradigm
shifts of predictable right-to-left movement the more you embraced the
Bible as well.
(Quick point of order: I’m not
saying that reading your Bible will make you all the way left, because
certainly I am not on many issues. The argument is simply that for those
of us on the hard right, when we read our Bibles more often, it tends
to move us in a leftward motion on certain issues.)
The question becomes, why?
For those family and friends still stuck
in a paradigm we have already left, when we move ever so slightly out
of the far-right corner of the field we are assumed to be not taking the
Bible seriously, accused of being “relativists”, and other assumptions
are made as to why we are changing. The ironic truth however, is that so
many of us have arrived at being Christian progressives not because we
decided to set half the Bible aside, and not because we decided to stop
taking the Bible seriously, but as a gradual process that resulted from
taking the Bible more seriously and deciding to try to follow those often neglected parts.
We became Christian progressives because
we read our Bibles, not because we put them away. It’s okay if you’re
not here yet or if you ever will be, but it’s important to understand
the truth about how and why we arrived here.
While this isn’t all comprehensive, based upon my own experience, here’s my list:
10 reasons why I think reading your Bible more frequently will make you a more Progressive Christian:
1. The more I read my Bible, the more I realize that I don’t have it all together.
Growing up I was frequently reminded
that the Bible, through the Holy Spirit will convict us of sin… and you
know what, it’s true. The more I get to know my Bible the more I realize
how deeply flawed I am… which makes me see others more compassionately,
because I am reminded that they are just like me. The more I see others
as being just like me, the more progressive I become because I move in a
trajectory of love, tolerance, and am way less likely to pronounce
judgment on someone else than I was before. (Obviously, I still struggle
with Mark Driscoll, but I am working on it.)
2. The more I read my Bible, the more I develop humility.
The Apostle Paul says that we should
view our sins as being worse than anyone else, and that we should view
ourselves as walking examples of how patient God is with people who
can’t get it together. When I am honest about my life, that is
absolutely true. I am a walking example of someone who knows how to test
God’s patience, and my sins are just as bad as whatever yours might be.
This realization made it too difficult to stay in my old paradigm; yes,
I want to spend my life inviting people to experience Jesus (in that
regard, I am completely still an “evangelical”), but I want to do it in a
new way– a more humble way. I’m not always there (see #1) but I
desperately want to get there.
3. The more I read my Bible, the more I discover that justice for the poor and oppressed is at the heart of it.
I wasn’t all that concerned about the
poor and oppressed until I opened my Bible… and discovered that commands
to care for them are all over the place from the Old Testament, all the
way through the New Testament. I tried to escape it and explain it
away, but I can’t– God wants us to care for, serve, and love these
people.
4. The more I read my Bible, the more I realize “redistribution of wealth” wasn’t Obama’s idea– it was God’s.
That redistribution of wealth stuff?
Yeah, it’s in the Bible and was actually God’s idea. In the Old
Testament we have years of Jubilee, restrictions on gleaning your garden
more than once, a command from God that there should be “no poor among
you”, and prophets who came to denounce the nation when the rich grew
richer and the poor grew poorer. Let’s not give Obama the credit– God
thought of it first.
5. The more I read my Bible, the more I realize that the early Christians actually practiced this re-distribution of wealth.
Those early Christians? Well, for a time
they actually practiced some radical economic principles. And, guess
what? The book of Acts tells us that there weren’t any poor people among
them. They rejected individual ownership, gave their wealth to
leadership who in turn, redistributed it according to need. There
weren’t any mandatory drug testing programs, just assistance according
to need. While this still seems too radical for me, it moves me in a
right to left trajectory as I read it.
6. The more I read my Bible the more I realize Jesus taught we need to pay our taxes.
After reading 4 and 5, some are probably
saying “yeah, but that was never supposed to be the government’s job”.
Well, in the life of Jesus we see him tell someone that he should “sell
everything and give it to the poor”, and to yet another we see that
Jesus commands us to pay our taxes. So, it looks like we’re not getting
off the hook either way– we need to pay our taxes AND give private
charity. It’s not an either or proposition. I’m not a fan of that
either, but it’s in the Bible.
7. The more I read my Bible, the more I realize that God wants us to be people who are quick to show mercy.
The prophet Micah says that “loving mercy” is actually something God “requires” of us. Jesus tells us that justice and
mercy are the “more important” parts of God’s law. This means that when
it comes to issues of justice, economics, poverty, the death penalty,
etc., I have become more quick to take the default position that sides
with radical mercy.
8. The more I read my Bible, the more I realize that God cares how we treat immigrants.
Whenever God lists out a group of people
that he wants his people to take care of, immigrants make the cut. The
more I read about God’s heart for the immigrant, the more I realize that
I might be held accountable for how I treat them, and how I talk about
them.
9. The more I read my Bible, the more I realize that God will hold us accountable for how we care for the environment.
The more I read my Bible, the more I see
that God’s original mandate for humanity, was to care for creation– we
were designed for and given the task of being environmental
conservationists. In the end? Well, we see that God is going to judge
quite harshly those who refused:
“The nations raged, but your wrath came,
and the time for the dead to be judged, and for rewarding your
servants, the prophets and saints, and those who fear your name, both
small and great, and for destroying the destroyers of the earth” (Rev 11:18)
Not sure how to escape it– God wants me to care for and protect the environment, so I will.
10. The more I read my Bible,
the more I realize that God isn’t judging us by whether or not we get
all of our doctrine right– he’s judging us by whether or not we get the
“love one another” part right.
This aspect wasn’t a major player in my
faith before, but the more I read the Bible the more I realize that God
is less concerned with us all sharing the same doctrine but is heavily
concerned with whether or not we love each other. In fact, Jesus said
this would be the calling card of his followers, and how others would
realize we’re actually following Jesus– that we love one another. The
more I read my Bible, the more I want to defer my position or preference
and instead side with what is in the best interest of others– because
that’s the loving thing to do.
These are the 10 reasons why reading my
Bible more made a more Progressive Christian. How has reading your Bible
more often changed your worldview? Has your experience been similar or
different?
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