My son is always very excited to get his hands on my Bible.
It’s not that we’ve instilled in him a thirst for the word
of God. He’s not seeking truth or relationship with God. We haven’t yet explained
to him that the ESV is THE hippest Bible to read. He’s not looking at the
colorful maps in the back or the red letters in the gospels or my notes and
scribbles throughout.
He’s looking for page 683, where it says, in big letters
“ISAIAH”.
He’s looking for his name.
We’ve told him that he is named after the prophet Isaiah
because the name means “God is Salvation” and we found out about him at a time
in our life that we needed to be reminded of the power and hope and salvation
of God.
We’ve told him that the prophet Isaiah saw a vision of the
almighty God on a heavenly throne surrounded by angels singing His praises and
he went on to preach to God’s people.
But our son isn’t looking for Isaiah the prophet; he’s
looking for himself in the Bible.
Usually my reaction, watching him eagerly flip through the
pages, is to think, that my son is cute. It’s cute to see him excited to read
the Bible, cute to see his childish glee over seeing his name in print, cute to
see the simple way he’s missing the grand issues of the universe while focusing
on the novelty of his own name.
On some level I look on these moments as a parent with some
knowing condescension. I know the Bible
contains more than my son’s name. It’s
cute, but it's ignorance. I’m ok with him being ignorant and petty at this
point in his life. He just turned eight.
I know that he’s missing things that I hope he’ll find out later.
These moments when Isaiah is looking at my Bible also make
me think a little about myself. I love him and he’s cute, even though he’s
foolish and essentially selfish, and I wonder if that’s how God sees me.
Isaiah reads the Bible looking for the word “Isaiah”. He
doesn’t know any better. He doesn’t know that it contains the revelation of God
I read the Bible looking for myself. But I should know
better.
I read my favorite passages over and over looking for themes
that matter to me.
I look for verses that I can apply directly to myself,
looking for me.
I tend to stick to the passages about God being our Father and
adopting us, the passages about walking with him, passages about being known by
a loving God, stuff like that.
None of these passages that I focus on are bad theology
exactly; none of them are taken far out of context, but I’m [often] not reading
the Bible to find God, I’m reading it to find me.
“Oh look! I’m a child of God!!”
“Oh look! I’m heard when I pray!”
“oh look, God still loves me even though I just sinned!”
“Oh look! I’m growing through my trials”
My son reads the Bible to find ‘Isaiah’.
I read the Bible to find myself.
I’d wager that this isn’t unique to me.
Some people read the Bible to find the Apostle Paul.
Some people read the Bible to find John Calvin.
Some people read the Bible to find Adam Smith.
Some people read the Bible to find Gandhi.
Some people read the Bible to find various ancient saints
and intellectuals.
I think it’s ok sometimes.
Those goals aren’t inherently bad.
But the Bible is the revelation from God to man.
As Rich Mullins said, “I don’t think you read the Bible to
know truth, I think you read it to find God.”
Reading the Bible is a way to find God, but it’s hard to do
that if you’re not looking for him, if you’re actively looking for someone
else.
I’d like to think that God finds us cute when he sees us
doing this, a little foolish and ignorant, but cute.
I'd like to think that he knows we'll grow out of looking for ourselves once we realize there he's greater than us.
I’d like to think that, but maybe that’s just the way I’m reading it.
1 comment:
The observations and realizations you have through Isaiah make me hope I get to be a dad someday!
Thank you for sharing, giving me a chance to realize I haven't tapped into my desire to explore the Bible. I am prone to explore other things in life until I'm burnt out or hurting, then return to God to be filled back up - checking into my favorite passages or books along the way. Seems like a habit that would be hard to break on my own, though.
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