COMMENT
Mark How You Mark!
(Reflection - March 2005)
When
I was first courting Sis. Barbara McIver (now Booker)
in Toronto, Ontario, some years ago, I made the mistake of letting her
father, a gruff old Scotsman, see my well-marked Bible. At least he seemed
gruff and old to me, although Barbara assures me he was totally loving
and kind-hearted and no older than I am now. Of course, then I saw him
from a different perspective as the fellow who might be taking his beloved
daughter away from him.
I wasn’t exactly showing him
the marginal notes in my Bible for the purpose of currying his favor.
But I suppose I didn’t mind if he saw that I was putting quite a
bit of time and thought into Bible study. He took one look, and harrumphed:
“Let’s hope you are writing those thoughts in your mind,
and not just on the pages of your Bible.” Then he tromped off
to the kitchen, leaving me staring at my handiwork. After that, I pretty
much kept my Bible notes all to myself, or now they are hidden in my laptop.
Examining
our motive
So why do we (if we do) make notes in our Bibles? Hopefully, as an aid
to memory and not to be seen by men or women, or prospective fathers-in-law.
“Be careful not to do your
‘acts of righteousness’ before men, TO BE SEEN BY THEM. If
you do, you will have no reward from your Father in heaven…And when
you pray, do not be like the hypocrites, for they love to pray standing
in the synagogues and on the street corners TO BE SEEN BY MEN. I tell
you the truth, they have received their reward in full…And when
you make notes in the margins of your Bibles, be careful that such ‘study’
not become a fountain of pride, TO BE SEEN BY MEN, and marveled at by
them, thus ensnaring you in a web of self-righteousness and patting of
your own back. If so, then beware: for that will be your only reward.”
The first two verses above are Matthew
6:1 and 5; the last I just stuck in to see if you were paying attention.
It’s straight from the George Booker version.
If our Bible notes are only intended
as an aid to memory, then the next question is: “Do we use them
as such?” The point here is: what is our motivation for personal
Bible study? Is it to grow in grace and knowledge of our Lord Jesus Christ
(II Pet. 3:18)? Or is it to impress others? If it is the latter, then
beware those searing words of our Lord: “They already have their
reward!”
Writing
the word on our heart
Although we should never criticize anyone for studying his or her Bible,
we can surely exhort people to examine their reasons for doing so. The
very best is found in John 17:3: “Now this is eternal life:
that they may know you, the only true God, and Jesus Christ, whom you
have sent.”
Simply put, we are to be transformed
by the Word of God, coming to know God and His Son, and to reflect the
image of His Son so that we may belong to their eternal family.
Anything different, anything less
than that goal, is so much window-dressing and and self-deception. It
is whited sepulchers; it is washing the outside of the cup; it is tithing
of mint and anise and cumin. It is the hollow tinkling of a few coins
in God’s treasury, while selfishly thinking we can keep the rest
for ourselves.
George Booker, Austin, Texas
|