All posts tagged false prophets

Lesson 30: How Does God Operate Through Words? Part 4

Bob suggests we’ll always have false prophets, because we’ll always have people looking for religious interpretations that support their preconceived ideas and prejudices. I think we are bound to have more, because of the way modern media uses words.

We are leaving the age of the printing press when people saw books as “hard copy’ to be copy-written and treasured in their original versions. In those days the Bible was sacred “text” with authorized versions. We expected our clergy to be learned as they studied and sought the one and only true meaning for us. We respected the authority of the Bible and the authority of the clergy.

That is all gone with the new electronic media. I think it is one of the issues involved in my friend’s comment about how two good people can read the same Bible passage on homosexuality and get two very different interpretations. It is probably not accident that almost all of the leadership of those opposed to the ELCA sexuality study and calling for leaving the community are elderly authority figures, most of them already retired.

Today the electronic text is fluid, constantly being updated. Scholars deconstruct the original to seek many meanings. The question has become what do you get out of the text, not what is the author’s intent or some authority’s interpretation. Social networking has become simply telling a group of friends what you are doing, thinking, and feeling now and then reporting the same in maybe six hours. Everything is focused on how the text works for you, how you shape words.

So too people in our day read side by side many translations of the Bible. It is compared to and weighed against other sacred texts as readers pick and choose what works for them. The Bible is now an open book that is read in light of our situations rather than the ancient one.

That makes it very important to consider how God’s Word shapes people in these times. In some ways we have more similarities to the early Christians than to those since the printing press. All is more fluid and diverse. I think that means the Church should be emphasizing community not institution, stories not doctrines, and love not law.

If history is now regarded not as objective fact but the living memory of a people through sacred story, as everyone seems to know except elderly history teachers, then we should be gathering community to tell stories that teach love. We should be telling the story about God coming to save this world from her self- destructive ways. The Bible is primary story, stories about how God has come from the time of Abraham through the present to shape and change hearts and minds. We should be telling the Gospel as a story about Jesus living and dying for humanity rather than examining it as a doctrine. I think our role has become telling the story accurately and allowing people to respond. We are less and less called to tell people how they should interpret the story and especially how they should act in response. Quite frankly, those who have been doing this lately have shown themselves to be not qualified.

Christian life is best described as faith, hope, and love: a faith that trusts God’s story of salvation, a hope that accepts His promise to bring that salvation into our hearts now and to the whole world in the future, and a love that returns good for evil as a means to participate in that story.

Lesson 29: How Does God Operate Through Words? Part 3

Two weeks ago I suggested present day false prophets are either liars or bull-shitters. Bob added a third category- the truly stupid. Last week Myron agreed that “an informed consumer” is our best hope in overcoming these “wolves in sheep’s clothing” and
“money-grubbing televangelist charlatans”. Obviously, the three of us do not like false prophets.

One of the first responses to the abuses of New Testament prophecy was the establishment of the canon, those scriptures considered sacred enough to serve as standards for judging which prophets spoke the Gospel. It was always understood that the canon (Bible) could not stand alone. It had too many differing perspectives and covered a development over several centuries. So a learned clergy, a basic creed, and the baptized community served as interpreters of the canon. This was so successful that New Testament prophets disappeared.

They have reappeared in our time as certain “anointed” Christian celebrities who claim God speaks directly through them. These modern false prophets get around the previous standards by pretending the every word of the Bible has equal weigh. That enables them to cut and paste to fit their agenda.

If you listen to them you soon discover they seldom use the Bible, even though they presented themselves as the true “Bible-believers”. Just about the only passages they quote are Daniel 9: 25-27 and Malachi 3: 8-18. The first has been used only a little over 150 years to design a predetermined timetable for world events. It is imposed on the Book of Revelation to support the state of Israel, the restoration of the temple and animal sacrifice, and nuclear war. The second is used as the basis of the “seed money” law of creation that is really about contributions to their ministries insuring rewards from God. Any quick reading of either of these passage shows they have absolutely nothing to do with these misuses.

Bob is right; we shall always have false prophets among us. However, I think they are much more dangerous in our Electronic Age. The media gives them an exposure that has led even thoughtful Christians to believe their programs have a biblical basis. And then to top it off, the White House and Pentagon invite them to represent all Christians. In religion as in entertainment, the hollow and shallow celebrity is used for profit.

I think one simple step would go a long way in creating an “informed consumer”- recognize that the Gospel serves as the standard for reading the rest of the Bible. This was one of Martin Luther’s primary answers to the problem. Notice the false prophets among us are continually citing Old Testament passages. One way to expose them is to begin by judging all by the four gospels.

A good example is the position of women. The four gospels present women as the mother of Jesus, the first to recognize her birth is not a scandal; the first to anoint him Messiah, the first to receive a Resurrection Appearance, the first missionary, the first to teach Jesus to include the Gentiles, one of the first to confess him Messiah, the only ones brave enough to be at Golgotha and the burial, the first to visit the tomb on Easter. If we started and ended with the gospels, we’d have none of the nonsense about women being quiet in church and allowing men to rule the house.