Many churches in the U.S. draw
heavily from the values and methods of secular
businesses. When one pastor was confronted about
this fact he replied, "So what? A principle is a
principle and God created all of the principles."
His answer illustrates the degree to which
Enlightenment thought has shaped our understanding
of God and faith.
The worldview behind his statement is the same as
that held by deism -- God has created the cosmos
with certain knowable and immutable laws. Among them
are the laws of gravity, the laws of thermodynamics,
and the laws of mathematics. But modern people have
expanded the list to include other areas of life
such as leadership, relationships, and business. In
order to function properly, our task is to discover
these laws and translate them into applicable
principles. In this view God is the law-writer, the
principle-creator, the watchmaker.
The problem with the world, this view argues, is
that most people are not living by the right
principles. They are trying to run a diesel truck on
fruit juice -- it just won't work. Rather than
applying the principles of life derived from
scientists, political leaders, or Oprah Winfrey,
people should be living by God's principles. After
all, as the Creator of all things, he knows what's
best, right?
This understanding of God informs how many
contemporary Christians engage the Bible. They
believe the Scriptures are a divine instruction
manual for life; a resource to be culled for
principles that may then be applied to any challenge
or dilemma. I've heard church leaders joke that
B-I-B-L-E stands for "Basic Instructions Before
Leaving Earth," and others have called it the
"owner's manual" for a human being. We may chuckle
at these metaphors for the Bible, but behind them is
a very un-Christian understanding of God and
ironically an unbiblical one rooted in Enlightenment
thinking.
When the Bible is primarily seen as a depository of
divine principles for life, it fundamentally changes
the way we engage God and His Word. Rather than a
vehicle for knowing God and fostering our communion
with him, we search the Scriptures for applicable
principles that we may employ to control our world
and life. This is not Christianity; this is
Christian deism. In other words, we actually replace
a relationship with God for a relationship with the
Bible. If one has the repair manual, why bother with
the expense of a mechanic?
Tim Keller, in his book "Counterfeit
Gods," defined idols as "good things turned into
ultimate things." I wonder if this definition
applies to what some evangelicals have done to the
Bible. Rather than making the Bible the means by
which we discover and commune with God, they have
made the Bible an end in itself. It has come to
replace Jesus Christ as the Alpha and Omega, the
Beginning and the End of their faith.
I realize that in Christian traditions holding a
very high view of the Scriptures, like my own, it
may sound as if I am downgrading the importance of
the Bible. That is not the case. I believe it is
God's Word, inspired by Him, and the authority for
our faith and lives. Through it we discover who He
is -- and what greater gift can there be? And it
does contain many useful and applicable principles
for life and faith. But in our zeal to honor the
importance of the Bible and extol its usefulness, we
may unintentionally do the opposite. We may reduce
the Bible from God's revelation of Himself to merely
a revelation of divine principles for life. And we
are not the first to fall into this subtle trap.
The religious leaders in Jesus' time were expert
students of the Scriptures. They had memorized the
entire Hebrew Bible (the Old Testament). And they
had parsed every command, extracted every principle,
and delineated every instruction it contained. But
their mastery of Scripture had not resulted in
actually knowing God or recognizing his Son when he
stood right in front of them. Jesus said to these
leaders, "You search the Scriptures because you
think that in them you have eternal life; and it is
they that bear witness about me, yet you refuse to
come to me that you may have life."
This is the sinister shortcoming of faith built upon
principles, laws, and formulas. It causes us to
reduce faith to divine instructions or godly
self-help tips: five steps to a more godly marriage,
how to raise kids God's way, biblical laws of
leadership, managing your finances with kingdom
principles, etc. But discovering and applying these
principles does not actually require a relationship
with God. Instead, being a Christian simply means
you have exchanged a worldly set of life principles
for a new set taken from the Bible. But like an
atheist or deist, the Christian deist can put these
new principles into practice without God being
involved. God can be set aside while we remain in
control of our lives. He may be praised, thanked,
and worshipped for giving us his wise precepts for
life, but as with an absentee watchmaker, God's
present participation is altogether optional.
This posture is particularly tempting in affluent,
professional communities where people are accustomed
to off-the-shelf solutions and self-help manuals.
Their education and wealth mean they are used to
being in control of their lives, and a huge
publishing industry has ensured they maintain this
illusion. Many best sellers are self-help books
advocating principles to overcome nearly any problem.
While proven formulas might be expected for losing
weight or growing a vegetable garden, we tend to
apply scientific certainty to even the more
mysterious areas of life. Perusing the shelves at
the local bookstore can be a very comforting
exercise. Knowing that there is a solution to any
problem life throws at you provides a sense of
control -- it calms our fears. And if the answer
cannot be found at the bookstore, we know there is
always the pharmacy down the street.
This same trend is evident in many other areas of
contemporary Christian teaching. It is now possible
to have a "Christian" marriage, a "Christian"
business, and even a "Christian" nation without
Christ actually being present. The fact that we
employ principles derived from the Bible is enough
to convince us that they are -- and therefore we are
-- Christian.
This popular form of Christianity with its emphasis
on working principles and worshiping
the Bible rather than God, may be appealing because
it is far more predictable and manageable than an
actual relationship with God. Relationships,
whether human or divine, are messy, time consuming,
and often uncontrollable. But principles are
comprehensible and clinical. Perhaps
this explains why a 2005 study found that only 3
percent of pastors listed prayer as a priority in
their ministry. If he's already given you the watch,
why bother maintaining a relationship with the
watchmaker?