I have been slowly making my way through Eric Metaxas’
biography Bonhoeffer: Pastor, Martyr,
Prophet, Spy: A Righteous Gentile vs. the Third Reich (Nashville: Thomas
Nelson, 2010). I was especially touched by a letter the conservative Bonhoeffer
wrote to his theologically liberal brother-in-law in 1936.
“First of all I will confess quite simply—I believe that the
Bible alone is the answer to all our questions, and that we need only to ask
repeatedly and a little humbly, in order to receive this answer. One cannot
simply read the Bible, like other
books. One must be prepared really to enquire of it. Only thus will it reveal
itself. Only if we expect from it the ultimate answer, shall we receive it.
That is because in the Bible God speaks to us. And one cannot simply think
about God in one’s own strength, one has to enquire of him. Only if we seek
him, will he answer us. Of course, it is also possible to read the Bible like
any other book, that is to say from the point of view of textual criticism,
etc.; there is nothing to be said against that. Only that that is not the
method which will reveal to us the heart of the Bible, but only the surface,
just as we do not grasp the words of someone we love by talking them to bits,
but by simply receiving them, so that for days they go on lingering in our
minds, simply because they are the words of a person we love; and just as these
words reveal more and more of the person who said them as we go on, like Mary,
“pondering them in our heart,” so it will be with the words of the Bible. Only
if we will venture to enter into the words of the Bible, as though in them this
God were speaking to us who loves us and does not will to leave us alone with
our questions, only so shall we learn to rejoice in the Bible.”
No comments:
Post a Comment