“I’ve told people for years Matthew
22:31 is the verse that kept me from becoming a neo-orthodox; a modernist,”
explains Preacher Richard Jordan. “The verse says, ‘But as touching the
resurrection of the dead, have ye not read that which was spoken unto you by
God . . .’
“That means that what they were
reading was the inspired Word; it was the Word of God given by inspiration,
spoken by God. It also means it was the preserved inspired Word of God because
they didn’t have original manuscripts. All this original manuscript stuff . .
. listen, in the Bible original manuscripts didn’t have the kind of
status they have in evangelical theology.
“You don’t find God’s Word by
trying to find the original manuscripts. These guys had God’s Word preserved
and you know what? The w-o-r-d-s they were reading weren’t exactly like the ones
Moses wrote because there had been 1,500 years of language development. You
ever thought about that?
“And yet Jesus said, ‘What you’re
reading is what God said.’ And if God had lived in the 1st Century
where Jesus was, that’s the way He would have said exactly what He said to
Moses back there. That’s some book you got there, folks.
“I Thessalonians 2:13 says, ‘For
this cause also thank we God without ceasing, because, when ye received the
word of God which ye heard of us, ye received it not as the word of men, but as
it is in truth, the word of God, which effectually worketh
also in you that believe.’
“So when you believe over here,
God’s Word goes into you and begins to work IN YOU. But when we say God’s Word
is in you, we don’t mean that you eat that paper and ink right there.
“We mean His breath that He put in
this, you take that breath out of here and He puts in you! It requires the
conscious positive choice of faith, but that conscious positive choice of faith
can become far more natural than you let it become. It doesn’t have to be the
kind of thing where you go walk into the wall and get a bloody nose. You can
mind the things of the Spirit.
*****
“So-called Bible
scholars don't see it for what it is but one of the greatest chapters in the Bible
about the process of inspiration is Jeremiah 36.
“God tells Jerry, ‘Take thee a roll
of a book, and write therein all the words that I have spoken unto thee against
Israel, and against Judah, and against all the nations, from the day I spake
unto thee, from the days of Josiah, even unto this day.’
“God’s saying, ‘Go get you a book,
Jerry, roll it out, and write down all the words,’ ” explains Jordan. “That
term ‘word’ occurs 17 times in the chapter. What he’s writing down here is not
just a bunch of thoughts; it’s some words.
“Where did Jerry get the words
from? God spoke them to him. What’s inspiration? How’d the Scripture come?
Given by God speaking some w-o-r-d-s. So Jeremiah starts writing them down.
“Verse 4 says, ‘Then Jeremiah
called Baruch the son of Neriah: and Baruch wrote from the mouth of Jeremiah
all the words of the LORD, which he had spoken unto him, upon a roll of a book.’
“Notice the Words of God came from
the mouth of Jeremiah and Baruch writes them down. Did you know Jeremiah didn’t
write the book that’s got his name on it? Who wrote the book? Baruch was the
scribe.
“Did you ever read in Romans 16:22
where he says Tertius wrote this book? It says, ‘I Tertius, who wrote this
epistle, salute you in the Lord.’ You say, ‘I thought Paul wrote it?’ Well, God
through Jeremiah spoke the words; it’s given by inspiration and then it’s
written down by Baruch.
“The words are the
issue; not the process. The words put on the page are the issue. How they got
there is inspiration. God spoke them and they wrote them down. Now they are
recorded. Theologians get so bound up with how did the words get there and was
it mechanical. They got there pretty simple.
“Read Jeremiah 36. God spoke them,
the dude wrote them down. Inspiration has to do with God’s breath. He speaks
and then they’re written down; they’re given by inspiration. Go to verse 11:
‘When Michaiah the son of Gemariah, the son of Shaphan, had heard out of the
book all the words of the LORD.’
“They got a book and it’s got all
the words of the Lord in it. The issue now is going to be the book because the
book is going to preserve the words that they can take around.
“You see the king down in this
chapter cutting the pages out with a pen knife and throwing them in the fire
because the issue is the words on the page. What’s in the words on the page?
The breath of God. Can you get the idea why the word of God is powerful? Why it
can work in you is because it’s literally the breath of God and it’s the
physical, tangible form in which you get that spiritual reality that is God’s
Word.
“That’s why Jesus said in John
6:63, ‘The words I speak unto you are spirit and life.’ Verse 18 says,
‘Then Baruch answered them, He pronounced all these words unto me with his
mouth, and I wrote them with ink in the book.’
“Any questions?! That’s pretty easy!
One of the most fascinating things is what happens next. The king takes the
thing, cuts it with a penknife, and ‘cast it into the fire that was on the
hearth, until all the roll was consumed in the fire that was on the hearth.’
He’s saying, ‘Look, here’s what you do with God’s Word; I don’t believe it,’
and burns it up.
“That guy had an original
manuscript! Just like Moses did when he came down off the mountain. Mo had one
that was written with the very FINGER of Almighty God! You know what he did
with it? He broke them. You know what God did? He re-wrote them.
“Verse 32 says, ‘Then took Jeremiah
another roll, and gave it to Baruch the scribe, the son of Neriah; who wrote
therein from the mouth of Jeremiah all the words of the book which Jehoiakim
king of Judah had burned in the fire: and there were added besides unto them
many like words.’
“He didn’t just reproduce it; he
put more in it than was in the original! Did you ever hear anybody complain,
‘Well, when you read a quote in the New Testament it’s never like a quote in
the Old Testament. It’s always got different things in it; can’t be the Word of
God. Now which one’s right?
“I read in Acts 15 when he quotes
Amos 9 but what it says in Acts 15 isn’t back there in Amos 9. The passage
says, [14] Simeon hath declared how God at the first did visit the
Gentiles, to take out of them a people for his name.
[15] And to this agree the words of the prophets; as it is written.’
[15] And to this agree the words of the prophets; as it is written.’
“So which one is God’s Word? Both.
You know why? They’re both given by inspiration. Which one of those rolls that
Baruch wrote out were the Word of God? Both. Were they exactly the same? No.
God’s Word was still growing at that time.
“You can learn a lot about
theological arguments by reading your Bible. Weird stuff in this Book. My point
to you is the Word of God is where the power of God is."
(new article tomorrow)
(new article tomorrow)
No comments:
Post a Comment