Bible Facts and/or Truth
I am repeatedly fascinated by
the tension held between 'fact' and 'truth' in the Bible. By this I
mean that some things may not be 'factual', but could none-the-less be
'truth'. Why this tickles me is that it runs measurably counter to the
way I was raised to think. I used to think that if the bible is truth,
then what it says must also be unquestionably factual. If God is
perfect then inspiration is perfect and thus everything it says must be
fact.
It
was in this logic that I recently listened to a preacher/friend
interpret the bible story of the Rich Man and Lazarus - using metaphor
as literal fact, proving that hell is a place where the unjust are
eternally toasted and tormented. When I later mildly challenged his
presentation, he responded with the belief that Jesus would not have
told a story that wasn't factually accurate, right?
When
folks are taught to think about inspiration in this way the result is a
concocted interpretation of scripture that conforms to our need to fit
God into our finite controllable little boxes rather than entering into
a transcendent delight of worshipping the infinite, eternal, Creator
God. The scriptures do not present themselves as a book of facts, but
as a record of testimonies designed to lift us out of our limited
perceptions into the humbling eternal truth of God who is far beyond
even our wildest imaginations. Rather than grounding us in manageable
temporal realities, it invites us beyond what can be seen and
understood - into the realm of faith. The Bible, in many ways, is a
projective, a spiritual Rorschach of sorts, eliciting faith through our
life-long, daily interactions with it.
A
couple of examples from the gospels may suffice to further agitate this
notion. John the Baptist was imagined, by some, to have literally been
Elijah - returned in the flesh - as Malachi promised. Jesus responded
to the queries about his cousin with these words,
"if you are willing to accept it, my cousin John is Elijah".
If
we are willing to accept it? Was John or was John not Elijah? At least
that is how I once responded to the text. Uncomfortably, in 'fact',
John the Baptist was not Elijah. Yet, in 'truth' he was. Don't you just
love a 'yes and no' answer?
From
another perspective, Jesus tells us that we can be factually guilty,
yet simultaneously innocent. In Matthew 12, the disciples of Jesus were
accused of breaking the Sabbath. Jesus never denies this as factual.
Rather, he pointed the Pharisees back to the scriptures, to David who
in 'fact' broke the law, but was in 'truth' innocent.
He
then spoke of the priests who in 'fact' broke the Sabbath law, but were
also, in 'truth', innocent. Here the facts pointed to guilt, yet the
truth pointed to innocence. Why? Well, of course, they used the law lawfully (1 Tim 1:8
). The
law is not about the law. It was given to lead us to Christ, the
compassionate one. Mercy trumps all other purposes for the law.
I
used to be a formidably proud, narrow-minded legalist. I perceived
scripture as merely two-dimensional. I needed to understand everything
on that plane of plain facts. I wanted it all to make sense
if it was going to be a part of my life. I spent most of my time trying
to make everything manageable within my reality. Such an approach
seemed unarguably reasonable. I could only imagine a God who spoke in
eternally confirmable facts. I couldn't imagine God making divine
accommodations for finite human minds. There wasn't any lisp, as John
Calvin once wrote. As a result, there wasn't any room for the
unexplainable - no opportunity for the Spirit - thus no transformation
in my life.
When
we insist on extracting only 'facts' from scripture rather than
allowing the Spirit to use the scriptures to lead us to Jesus - the
'Truth' - we get bogged down and 'heavy laden'. There isn't
any rest in a penchant for proving everything. Our rest comes in
trusting in Christ alone, who is - in fact - the Truth. We need every
letter of the law to lead us to Jesus, who gifts us with the Spirit,
who, in turn, helps us to live out the spirit of the law - which is to
be like Jesus.
