Almost everything we buy today comes with
an instruction manual. Even coffee at the local drive-in comes with a
warning such as “Caution contents may be hot!” Whether or not we decide
to read the manual is up to us, but at least it’s there if we need it.
Wouldn’t it be great if life came with
an instruction manual? Well, actually, it does. It’s called the Bible.
Whether or not we read it is our choice, but God has made it readily
available to us.
Proverbs 2:1 says about God’s words: “If
you accept my words and store up my commands within you, turning your
ear to wisdom and applying your heart to understanding … then you
will … find the knowledge of God” (NIV).
The study note for this verse from the Fire Bible: Global Study Edition explains it this way:
“Only by putting God’s word into our
minds will we learn to live wisely and righteously in our relationship
with God. We can become victorious over sin with God’s commands in our
hearts (Ps. 119:11); and Christ’s word remaining with in us (Jn. 15:7;
Jas. 1:21).”
But why the Bible? Why read it every day
instead of the latest great book on the market or the newest how-to
manual by the most popular speaker on television? Why is it important
to consistently study the Bible?
Because there is only one book like the Bible. There are
many books on many subjects, many speakers and many TV personalities,
but there is no other book like the Bible. It is unique because of its producer, its permanence, its power and its promise.
Its producer. In the first
chapter alone of Genesis the phrase “and God said” is recorded nine
times. The same statement of authority appears 23 times in Malachi.
Isaiah claimed divine inspiration 40 times, and Jeremiah includes at
least 100 instances of “thus says the Lord.”
In the first five books of the Bible,
called the Pentateuch, there are 560 references to God speaking.
Throughout the Old Testament God speaks 3,800 times. It is a book
written by God. It is unique because it is God’s book.
Its permanence. No other book has
been as ridiculed, banned and burned as the Bible. But it has survived
the worst that men can do. The Roman Emperor Diocletian in A.D. 303
passed an imperial edict banning the Bible from the face of the earth,
but less than 25 years later Constantine became emperor, became a
Christian and ordered 50 hand-written copies of the Bible to be
produced.
General Franco of Spain ground 10,000 Bibles to dust.
William French philosopher Voltaire, a strict atheist, stood on his
front porch and proclaimed that the Bible would be extinct in 100
years. About 100 years later the Geneva Bible Society bought his house
and used it to distribute Bibles from the same front porch.
Men have tried to destroy it, but the Bible is unique because it has outlasted them all.
Its power. Something happens to
us when we read the Bible. It is the Word of God. The eternal Word
became the incarnate Word, the incarnate Word became the spoken Word,
and the spoken Word became the written Word.
Hebrews 4:12 states: “For the word of
God is living and active. Sharper than any double-edged sword, it
penetrates even to dividing soul and spirit, joints and marrow; it
judges the thoughts and attitudes of the heart.”
Your strength and power to live a
victorious, fulfilled life depends exclusively on how much of the Bible
you plant in your heart and mind. If you let it, the Bible will work in
your heart. Descriptions of God’s Word as a book of power include:
- Jeremiah 5:14: the Word is like a devouring flame
- Jeremiah 23:29: the Word is like a crushing hammer
- Ezekiel 37:7: the Word is like a life-giving force
- Romans 1:16: the Word is like a saving power
- Ephesians 6:17: the Word is like a defensive weapon
- Hebrews 4:12: the Word is like a probing instrument.
The Word is quick, alive and
life-giving. To the degree that you make it a part of you, you too will
be alive: “Man does not live on bread alone but on every word that
comes from the mouth of the Lord” (Deut. 8:3). The Bible is both a
shield and a sword, a shield for defense and a sword for the attack.
In the book of Joshua we are instructed:
“Do not let this Book of the Law depart from your mouth; meditate on it
day and night, so that you may be careful to do everything written in
it. Then you will be prosperous and successful.” (1:8) The Bible is
unique because it imparts strength to the reader.
Its promise. The Bible itself
states that it has been written about Jesus, as Psalm 40:7-8 reveals:
“Then I said, ‘Here I am, I have come—it is written about me in the
scroll. I desire to do your will, O my God; your law is within my
heart.’”
There is an overriding, continual,
central theme in the Bible: the birth, life, crucifixion, resurrection
and imminent return of Jesus, and the relationship He desires with you
and me.
This theme is discussed in the article “The Inspiration and Authority of Scripture” in the Fire Bible: Global Study Edition, the name for the international language editions of the Full Life Study Bible, one of the few Pentecostal study Bibles on the market:
“The inspired Word of God is the
expression of God’s wisdom and character and is, therefore, able to
give ultimate wisdom and spiritual life through faith in Christ (Mt.
4:4; Jn. 6:63; 2 Ti. 3:15; 1 Pe. 2:2).
“The Bible is God’s unfailing, true
witness to his saving activity for humanity, which he accomplished
through Jesus Christ. For this reason, Scripture is incomparable (i.e.,
it has no equal in literature or message) and forever finished; its
truths and authority relate to and apply to all things of this world
and life. No human words or declarations of religious institutions are
equal to the Bible’s authority.”
The Bible is unique in its promise to
reveal to us the heart, person and character of God and how we are to
live in our relationship with Him.
That is exactly the instruction manual
we need for our lives today. We need God’s Word to be alive and working
in us, guiding, directing and helping us daily.
This first month of the year is the perfect time to set your goal of making God’s Word part of your life every day in 2010!