3 THINGS THE BIBLE DOESN’T TEACH

by | May 25, 2016 | Christian Living in the Trenches | 8 comments

The late pastor Ron Dunn quipped, “Many people believe the Bible because they do not know what it says.” He referred to misconceptions some folks have about what it does and does not teach. What they think the Bible teaches, it doesn’t, or if they knew what it really taught, they’d be less inclined to acknowledge it and commit to it.
Here are a few things some Christians believe that don’t stem from God’s Word.

1. “My day will go better if I start with prayer and Bible reading.” 
Obviously, we need the soul-food ingested during time alone with God. What God’s Spirit teaches us during a quiet time may sustain us throughout the day and inform decisions we make. But it’s a mistake to think that circumstances and relationships and ministry efforts will automatically flow smoothly because we had our devotions.
 
The Lord’s promise of nearness to the broken-hearted and those crushed in spirit implies that our hearts will break and life will sometimes crush us, no matter how we start our day (Ps. 34:18). The next verse adds, “Many are the afflictions of the righteous.” Personally, some of my worst bouts with depression or most disturbing relational conflicts came on the heels of unhurried time alone with God. This false belief needs a heavy dose of realism concerning what it means to live in a fallen world.
 
If I spend time alone with the Lord because I think it will provide smoother sailing, my motivation is wrong. I’d be a pragmatist, choosing time with Him not because I love Him, but because such time works better for me.
 
2. “I must discover my spiritual gift before I start serving the Lord in my church and community.”
Spiritual gifts are God-given capacities for service that honor Him and meet the needs of people around us. We exercise some gifts in public venues; others are more relational and behind the scenes. But to wait until we have a class on gifts, or take a spiritual gifts inventory, to help us identify how God has put us together to minister, is putting the proverbial cart before the horse.
Spiritual gifts typically emerge from activity.
We reach out to folks in need or volunteer in Sunday School or help plan a retreat, and we discover that we’re good at it and receive intense satisfaction from the involvement. We obey the numerous “one another” commands in the New Testament and cultivate a servant heart toward program needs in the church.
Learning about gifts and gaining a cognitive grasp of what each one means may be helpful, but only when we get busy can we identify where and how we can best serve God, the church, and community. Only through activity do we determine where we are and aren’t useful, do we discover our passion and sense the thrilling conviction, “I was made for this!”

3. “Depression and a predilection for discouragement stem from weak faith and hinder fruitfulness in ministry.”
It’s difficult to reconcile this belief with what we know from biblical teaching and from church history. God chooses to use weak and unqualified people so He, rather than they, get the glory (1 Cor. 1:26-29; 2 Cor. 4:7). Paul cited the paradox that God’s power and grace excel in and through people who are weak and needy (2 Cor. 12:9-10).
Charles Spurgeon, well-known pastor in London during the second half of the 19th century, experienced repeated bouts with debilitating depression. At age 24 he wrote, “My spirits were sunken so low that I could weep by the hour, yet I knew not what I wept for.” During a separate incident he added, “As well fight with the mist as with this all-beclouding hopelessness.” Yet he kept preaching and writing. Publishers still distribute his devotional books and sermons.
David Brainerd (1718-1747) was so melancholy that twenty-two times in his diary, he expressed a yearning for death. Yet before he succumbed to tuberculosis, he started a church among Indians in New Jersey that resulted in 130 converts. And the life and dairy of Brainerd has been in print since 1749, giving thousands of other servants the encouragement and strength to press on despite frailty.
Despondency prompts deep dependence on God.  He doesn’t use us in spite of our weakness, but because of it.
 (See Terry’s book, Serve Strong: Biblical Encouragement To Sustain God’s Servants, for these and other  stories of how God uses needy people for His glory.)
 
           What else do some Christians believe that isn’t in the Bible?

Please note: comments are closed after two weeks. You are welcome to contact me directly after that time if you would like to share your thoughts.

8 Comments

  1. Hello,
    I think the phrase “God will never give you more than you can bear” is usually taken out of context. That phrase comes from 1 Corinthians 10:13, where it is talking about resisting temptation.
    I think God allows painful, hard times in the lives of his servants, to mold and refine us and so that we would be dependent completely on HIM, and not our own strength. I cringe a little when I hear this phrase spoken when someone is going through a hard time. It is assuming that the person is strong enough in God’s eyes and therefore can handle whatever situation they are going through. The focus is on one’s effort and strength, not on utter dependence and reliance upon Christ’s strength to carry a person through a difficult time.

    • Hi Stephanie I happen to agree with everything you wrote in your reply to my post! I do NOT assume folks are strong enough on their own…their strength comes from Christ and daily dependence n Him. I thank you for adding an example and reply to my closing question. Have a great day Terry Powell on 6-1-16

    • I thought I was the only one that felt this Stephanie Edger. When I read the prior verses and the verses after, in context, I agree with you on the meaning of, God does not give us more then we can bare.

  2. Thanks, Terry, for this excellent blog. I especially resonated with the comments concerning spiritual gifting and depression. Just this morning, after teaching a Perspectives class, I had a conversation about spiritual gifts with a student.
    Depression is another one that I know all too well. Thanks for speaking directly about it! There are so many hurting people who hurt because of the insensitive and ill-advised comments made by well-meaning people. “Just get over it” and “Your sinning against God” aren’t the things to say to someone hurting!
    Thanks,
    Bob Hay, M.Div ’90

    • Thanks much for your note, Bob. In caSE YOU AREN’T AWARE OF IT, MY WEBSITE (www.terrydpowell.com), UNDER resources. HAS A SECTION ON “Depression and Faith” containing short articles I’ve written., poems, and a link to the audio of my chapel testimony (30 mins) given at CIU Sept 2014. Keep on serving strong! Terry (oops–caps not intentional)

  3. Great article.

  4. Thanks for a great post. How about adding to your list above, “Christian growth means that life will get better, in other words, an upward trajectory toward increased happiness and an ever closer walk with God.” This is a subtle, non-monetary prosperity gospel. However, consider the apostle Paul, whom we might call one of the most successful (I hesitate using that term) Christians in history, and what his life was like in his final years.

    • I like your comment, Don. Thanks for interacting with my post. Terry

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