Tag Archives: bible

On styles of worship

Whether your traditions be old or new,
they can’t be the centre of worship.
It shouldn’t make-or-break faith for you,
although you may still prefer it.

Your God isn’t the God of the Bible,
if your theology requires your culture.
For God’s word is ever applicable;
to the past, the present, and future.

Be careful about what means you use,
not everything is truly neutral.
Don’t gather for an experience,
but to grow by all that’s truthful.

If it’s used to shape your emotions,
doing so apart from God’s living truth,
it’s replaced God in your devotions,
and become an idol under his roof.

At the end of first John we read just this:
“Little children, keep yourselves from idols;”
Don’t put your brother’s faith at risk;
Seek God, not by style, but by Bible.

A Checklist for Listening to Sermons

I have seen a few sermon guides and check-lists, but on the basis that there can never be too many of the same thing, I’ve taken it upon myself to write my own from the perspective of an ordinary member of a congregation.  Please add your thoughts to the comments – it remains a fairly rough draft and a collection of initial thoughts. — Vincent

What

Y/N

Details
The message came from the text Do you think another preacher, given the same Bible text, would be likely to find the same central theme and application? If the message doesn’t logically and necessarily follow from the text then it’s not a Biblical message, and although something is being preached – it’s not the Bible. It is a very great calling for someone to open God’s Word to his people, yet if he substitutes his own thoughts and ideas for God’s revealed truth, he greatly errs and comes under condemnation.
The passage was put in its redemptive historical context Biblical passages must be read with the correct redemptive historical context, which means that you need to understand the stage of God’s unfolding plan of salvation they refer to as well as the historical political situation on the ground. At a minimum, you need to know whether the Scripture points forward to Christ yet to come, presents Christ incarnate, or is in the context of Christ ascended.
The surrounding material was included in the context Texts in general are not standalone – they relate in some way to what comes before, and what follows after. The preacher should be connecting the text with this specific context so that its place in the argument or history is not misunderstood. For example, the Law of Ex 20ff given at Mount Sinai was given following God saving his people from the Egyptians, and is in the context of them being called to follow his covenant as his people. Without this context, it is easy to misunderstand the purpose of the Law and think that the Law was given in order to win God’s salvation by keeping it.
The people involved were clearly noted It’s easy to take a passage which promises something to a certain person or group of people in a specific situation and preach it as if it is a promise to us today. The same is true of laws. A faithful preacher will tell you who is writing or speaking, who they are writing or speaking to, and as the message develops show the ways in which they are similar to us and the ways in which they differ.
The preaching pointed to Christ through the passage Christ assures us that the Scriptures point to him; and so, a faithful exposition of Scripture should also point to Christ. As Christians we need to hear Christian sermons, not just historical discourses. Because we are to be built up into Christ, it’s essential that we learn what the Scripture has to do with God’s great plan of Salvation in Christ.
The preaching took proper account of the rest of the Bible Scripture is the only infallible basis for interpreting Scripture, and that means that when one place explains another, the explanation must be accepted and followed in preaching. In particular, we read the promises and warnings of the Old Testament through their interpretation in the New Testament. For example, a preacher who (from the Old Testament) states Christians must offer animal sacrifices, or a 10% tithe, has failed to take account of the New Testament’s teaching on the Temple, worship, and the law and has thus arrived at misleading and dangerous conclusions.
I learned what the passage means for me The preacher needs to, at some point, be crystal clear about how this passage applies to you. Do you, or do you not, have to keep the command which is given within it? Is the promise given a promise to you, or is it not? Is the example drawn from the life of a person intended by God as something for you to emulate, or is it not? In particular, Old Testament passages need to be interpreted through the Cross.
The Grace of God was presented as Grace God’s Grace, his unmerited favour towards man, is a very important part of the Bible – particularly as it concerns the Work of Christ. However, it is possible to preach Grace in a way that it is made conditional and thus no longer graceful. If the preacher makes it seem that you have to do something in order to benefit from or retain God’s Grace, then he has presented it as something you work for rather than a gift from God. Where God’s grace is proclaimed, it must be left as it comes from the Scripture – as an unmerited gift from God. No limitation or qualification may be added. Where applications are given it should be clear enough that they are a response to, not a qualification for, God’s Grace.
I heard that my problem is sin It is easy to preach a thousand reasons for God’s grace towards mankind as we see it unfold through the Scriptures, but a faithful preacher will show that all valid reasons address only one problem – the sin from which we need to be saved. Likewise, the big problem the preacher should be addressing should not be poor financial management, bad diet, or how to raise smarter children. Scripture is very clear that our problem is sin, not foolishness, bad luck, poor advice, bad company, or past mistakes!
The demands of the law were joined to God’s Grace If the preacher told you things you have to do, did he also reassure you that despite your failing to do it – past, present and future, you are still and will remain righteous before God through faith and by Christ’s perfect obedience on your behalf? Or, were you left with the impression that if you failed to do as you were urged you would fall from peace with God and be once again destined to hell?
Obedience was motivated by grace not threat If the preacher told you things you have to do, did he urge you primarily because of what Christ did for you? Were you told to love your neighbour because Christ first loved you, and because of who you are already in Christ – or were you told to love your neighbour because otherwise you risk the punishment of God?
Where my sin was exposed, God’s grace in Christ was applied If certain sins were declared and boldly labelled as sins, that’s great. But, that’s never the end of the story. In-so-much as a preacher shows that we are guilty of sin and calls on us to repent and live amended lives, he must also declare to us the forgiveness we have in Christ for that same sin – past, present and future. It is a very poor handling of Scripture to leave a person for whom Christ died feeling helpless, guilty and afraid to approach Holy God.

BONUS: Not essential, but highly commended

I heard the preacher explain every non-obvious part of the passage There may not always be time for the preacher to explain everything, but it is highly desirable for him to do so whenever possible. It’s good to have the whole passage opened to you, as you may not hear this specific text again for another three years – or even longer, depending on how readings are chosen. God placed those words in the Scripture for a reason, and he placed the preacher there to help you understand them. Further, to make such a demand of a preacher means that he cannot readily skip over something he doesn’t want to tell you – but must rather set out the full counsel of God without omission.
I understood the sermon If most people in the congregation cannot understand most of what the preacher is saying, then he may as well not preach most of the time. It’s important to show depth as well as breadth in preaching, and it is okay for some people to fail to grasp some parts at some times, but feeling lost should not be the norm!
I learned something Conversely, a preacher should have sufficient understanding of his congregation to be able to teach most people something in each sermon. It may be just some historical context, or a Biblical connection they had not heard before; it may even be the proclamation of God’s grace to those who had forgotten it – but in general people shouldn’t be leaving with no more understanding of the passage than they had when they arrived.
I’ve been left with something to do Ideally, you shouldn’t be left with only knowledge. Knowledge of God should be reflected in living in the light of this knowledge, and result in a real difference to your life. Indeed, the work of the Holy Spirit is to build us up into the image of Christ, and so it is proper to expect this through the faithful preaching of the Word. Whether explicitly or implicitly, you should know there’s something you should do, shouldn’t do, or do differently.

Note: this does not mean the preacher should be creating laws and rules for you, but rather encouraging you in the application of Scripture to your life!

I know how the preacher got to the understanding he presented As you grow in Scriptural knowledge, you should also be becoming more confident in your ability to read the Scripture and understand it on your own. A faithful preacher who models the right way to read and expound the text teaches you how to do this for yourself. It is tremendously unhelpful for a preacher to make a big leap – even if it is a proper interpretation – without explaining why and how he did it. Such an approach leaves the congregation feeling unable to read the Scripture for themselves, and leaves the preacher at risk of making dubious connections he couldn’t defend.
The preacher models living in the light of Scripture in his own life, and in what he approves You should not be confronted with plain hypocrisy by a preacher. Every preacher sins and fails to keep God’s word, but it is not okay for him to act as if he doesn’t – or to approve of sin in others as if it didn’t matter. If he will not repent and cling to Christ for forgiveness, what hope does he have of exhorting you to do so? If, outside the pulpit, all kinds of sin are fine by him, why should you listen to him inside the pulpit?

 

Further, a preacher undermines everything he says and does if his open living shows him rejecting the Scripture itself. This is also true of those who preach despite not meeting the Scriptural requirements of preachers. For example, it is not possible for a woman to insist upon a natural reading of a point of Scriptural doctrine if by the act of public preaching she is deliberately ignoring another natural reading of a point of Scriptural doctrine.

 

When was the Bible written?

For most books, the question “when was it written?” is a simple one. Usually, it will be a time not long before it was first published, and over a duration not longer than a few years. Of course, there are the occasional works published from lost manuscripts which may have been written a long time earlier, and then there are compilations and anthologies which might contain works written over a hundred years or more by different authors.

Applying this question to the Bible is a little more complex, not least because the Bible is not just one book but rather sixty-six books bound together as one. This collection of books does not have a single date or period during which it was written, but a wide range of dates according to the different parts. Complicating the matter still further, none of the sixty-six books have a copyright notice to guide us, and very few books of the Bible contain an explicit statement of the date at which they were written.

How can we know when the Bible was written?

  • By looking at historical narratives (it cannot be earlier than something it describes in the historical sections)
  • By looking at the interdependence of books (if one book clearly quotes another, then the one quoted must necessarily be earlier than the one which quotes)
  • By examining the historical evidence (if a physical manuscript is dated to a certain age, then the contents must be at least that old)
  • By reconstructing the historical timeline from dates (if a book describes a 400 year period between two events, then books written at the time of the first are 400 years earlier than those written at the time of the second)
  • By correlation with non-Biblical sources (if a book dates itself by the reign of a given ruler and this ruler’s dates are known from other sources, this helps date the book)

What are invalid ways to date the Bible?

  • Assuming that anything described in a prophesy must have happened before the book was written (it’s wrong to say that a book which speaks of a future invasion must have been written afterwards – because that forgets that God, who knows the future, is the ultimate author of scripture)
  • Finding a small detail and moving forwards the whole date of a book (e.g. the manuscripts were copied and used actively throughout their history; so if a city had changed its name, sometimes the copyists would ‘translate’ the old name into the new one just as modern English Bibles often use modern units for ancient measures, that we might understand the original meaning)
  • Setting dates according to a lack of external evidence (if you can’t find archaeological remnants of Moses’ camp in the desert, it just means you don’t have archaeological evidence – not that the date of the accounts of these events should not include the time spent in the desert)

This much being said, and hopefully the difficulties in some cases being understood, the following rough chronology sets out the generally agreed upon date ranges for authorship of most of the books of the Bible amongst those who hold approximately to the rules set out above. I’ve left the time ranges large to reflect the difficulties in finding exact dates. The bottom of the table contains the whole of the New Testament, however the books are not listed in full due to the large number written in the period immediately following the death and resurrection of Christ.

Rough Chronology of Biblical Authorship

Rough Chronology of Biblical Authorship

(Click on the image to download a PDF version)
Should you disagree with some of the assignments, that’s fine. The aim of the chart is to give a big-picture idea of the time periods involved rather than to go into detail about each individual book.

Feel free to add your thoughts in the comments!

God’s Grace in Genesis 3:15-16

And I will put enmity between thee and the woman, and between thy seed and her seed; it shall bruise thy head, and thou shalt bruise his heel.

Unto the woman he said, I will greatly multiply thy sorrow and thy conception; in sorrow thou shalt bring forth children; and thy desire shall be to thy husband, and he shall rule over thee.

Our first-father Adam and his wife (to be called Eve), have eaten of the fruit of the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil. Thus sinning, they are cast from the presence of God and fall under his curse. Yet, amongst the terrible pronouncements God makes against them, there are these words of hope. The offspring of the woman is to bruise the head of the serpent – a promise often seen as the first reference to the Gospel in the Bible.

© Jenny Rollo

The second verse again brings great hope. Despite the fact that God is casting out man from the garden, he still gracefully guides man and woman into a relationship based upon his intention. Eve had fallen into the temptation and then misled Adam who had listened to her (I Timothy 2:13-14), but God now reverses this by re-establishing the role of man as regarding woman (Genesis 2:18). Whilst they go out into the world as a people who have rejected God, yet God has not left them without his guidance. See how the woman is addressed in her sin, for not only is she restored to her place within mankind but also given a manner by which she might redeem herself, by childbirth (I Timothy 2:15). Even in the punishment that God gives is there also the seed of hope.

What a wonderful testimony to the mercy of God it is that even in our darkest hour he acts to give us hope for the future and help in the present time! Indeed, the whole curse which God places upon the creation from that time onward is an act of loving-kindness, that he might save man (Romans 8:18-21).

For all have sinned and fallen short of the glory of God

For all have sinned and fallen short of the Glory of God and are justified freely by his grace

For all have sinned and fallen short of the Glory of God and are justified freely by his grace. Romans 3:23+

If you only understand one thing from the Bible, this should be it. We stand guilty before God – when we measure ourselves against his law we all fall flat. The good news then is that God justifies us (counts us sinless before him) by faith in the blood of Jesus Christ who died for our sins. This is the only way to be saved – because it does not matter how good we think we have been, we are still unrighteous and condemned to hell if measured by our deeds.

Romans 3:21-25
But now the righteousness of God has been manifested apart from the law, although the Law and the Prophets bear witness to it— the righteousness of God through faith in Jesus Christ for all who believe. For there is no distinction: for all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God, and are justified by his grace as a gift, through the redemption that is in Christ Jesus, whom God put forward as a propitiation by his blood, to be received by faith.

Diwali and the Christian

In him was life, and the life was the light of men

Diwali (divali/deepavali), known as the ‘festival of lights’ is a central festival of the Hindu religion. It is centered around the concept of the atman, an inner light which is beyond the physical body and mind. Awareness of this inner light brings about peace, transcendence, and an awakening to an unchanging infinite non-bodily nature. This ‘inner light’ is celebrated over a period of five days during which lamps and lights are prominently featured.

This festival is a deeply integrated part of Indian and Hindu culture, both in India and overseas. The prominence given to it within the community means that Christians with a Hindu background need to ask themselves important questions about the compatibility of their participation with Christianity.

It’s important to note that within Christianity there is also a belief in a light which can legitimately be said to bring peace, dispel darkness, give guidance, and bring a knowledge of the mysteries of the infinite etc.. This light is an essential part of the Christian faith. It is this light we read of when Simeon picks up the infant Jesus and declares him to be “a light to enlighten the Gentiles” (Luke 2:32), and the same light we see set out at the beginning of John’s Gospel. It’s the account found in John 1:1-14 which we’ll discuss today – and we’ll do so with special reference to Diwali and the Atman:

In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God. He was in the beginning with God. All things were made through him, and without him was not any thing made that was made. In him was life, and the life was the light of men. (John 1:1-4)
In words echoing the start of Genesis (Genesis 1:1-3), we see the Word, Christ, from the creation of the world – through whom all things were made. This same Christ is God, and within him alone is life. This life, which is within Christ alone, is the only light for mankind. So, the light of Christianity is not an internal light, but an external light; it is not of one’s own being, but of God’s own being.

The light shines in the darkness, and the darkness has not overcome it. (John 1:5)
We are in darkness, and it is the light which shines into the darkness; thus we do not find the light within ourselves, for it comes from God and is of God where it shines into our darkness.

There was a man sent from God, whose name was John. He came as a witness, to bear witness about the light, that all might believe through him. He was not the light, but came to bear witness about the light. (John 1:6-8)
See how even when God has acted in a man to bear witness about the light, still he is not the light? The light is not a part of man, the light is not a part of his being, the light cannot ever be found from within. The light which shines into the darkness is the light of God, Jesus Christ – a light for man not a part of man.

The true light, which enlightens everyone, was coming into the world. (John 1:9)
Again, how can the light come into the world, if the light here discussed is akin to the atman? This claimed atman is a part of a man’s own being and self, which needs to be discovered – it is not the external light of God but an internal light of man. Clearly, atman cannot be the true light – and as the true light is the true God; then atman is a false god – an idol – and thus the festival is a festival of idolatry.

He was in the world, and the world was made through him, yet the world did not know him. He came to his own, and his own people did not receive him. (John 1:10-11)
That so many will spend so much effort in the worship of this false God, atman, the impostor pretending to be the light which enlightens man, pretending to be God, should not be a surprise. John 3:19 explains “the light has come into the world, and people loved the darkness rather than the light because their deeds were evil.” Our evil deeds are great; consider we are even conceived in sin and raised in iniquity (Psalm 51:5), each one of us knowing the revelation of God (Romans 1:19) yet turning away from him to worship false gods and idols (Romans 1:25). Although God made us, we refuse to acknowledge him as the one God.

Note this well:

  1. Christ is the only true light that shines into our darkness
  2. This same Christ who is the true light of the world is also fully God
  3. Sinful and wicked man created a lie that the true light is the atman, a part of man’s own being
  4. Thus, the lie puts man in the place of God – the archetype of all idolatry

But to all who did receive him, who believed in his name, he gave the right to become children of God, who were born, not of blood nor of the will of the flesh nor of the will of man, but of God. (John 1:12-13)
Regard the great grace of God, his immense mercy to mankind – for he has torn a people for himself, ripped us from the darkness of hell by the blood of Jesus Christ. It is Christ who is the light of the world, the same Christ who alone is the way, and the truth, and the life (John 14:6).

And the Word became flesh and dwelt among us, and we have seen his glory, glory as of the only Son from the Father, full of grace and truth. (John 1:14)
This very Christ, the only Son from the Father, who became man and took on our human flesh, also died for our sins and was raised again in glory. He alone is our light – and no other. Brothers, let us take great care never to give to any other the honour and glory which belongs to God alone. It is clearly the worship of a false God to celebrate, remember, parade, praise, or display this inner light of Atman to which Diwali refers.

Don’t Waste Your Life (John Piper)

Don't waste your life, John Piper, product image from Christian Audio

Don't waste your life, John Piper

John Piper presents a breathtaking combination of personal reflection, exhortation, and well-considered theology which places this work in the same group as Baxter’s The Reformed Pastor. Best of all, it is available as a free audiobook download during the month of November.

Free Audiobook
Product Page

Whilst it goes without saying that the quality of the audiobook from Hovel Audio and the narration by Lloyd James is outstanding, what really stands out is John Piper’s ability to tackle difficult topics in a way which is well supported by scripture and in such a way that they their application flows naturally from the text. The book as a whole will be a great help in reconsidering quite how we live our lives, in particular in terms of what we value, our priorities and how we think about our time here on earth under the rule of Almighty God.

Do feel free to share your reflections on the book through the comments!

Why does Limited Atonement bother people?

Shimron Lim shared this great lyrical theology video on the Limited Atonement / Peculiar Redemption. It’s certainly a fun way to review the doctrine!

These are my own thoughts on the topic:
I think the problem many have here is upside-down and inside-out theology. Upside-down because we view things as if being elect is the norm, and inside-out because we view things from the perspective of what glorifies man not what glorifies God.

First, we are always tempted to think that God condemns us to hell, but that’s not actually true. We have all condemned ourselves to hell. That is the fitting end to the story, for we all get what we deserve. It doesn’t matter what we do or who we are, hell is the very greatest gift we deserve from God. God is most greatly glorified by his righteous judgment here. We are to be in great awe of God in this, that he judges us flawlessly with perfection and power exceedingly far beyond human frailty. Great and glorious is our God who will not let the wicked go unpunished: that we are wicked makes God no less great or glorious.

Unless we get this straight, we will have trouble seeing the glory of God in the particular redemption. Here too is God greatly glorified by his graceful purpose according to his will. God is not the ruler of the Church alone, but of all creation at every time and in every state – and so we see his glory all the more by his will being for both the elect and the reprobate. A ruler who rules just the subjects who obey him is not all-powerful: only a ruler who rules effectually over all his subjects without exception can be called All Mighty.

It is only when we see that Christ tears the elect from the depths of hell, that we see that it’s not Who the elect are that matters, nor does it matter the Number of the elect, nor indeed even the Fate of the elect. What matters is the glory of God in his decree to save. To God be all glory, power, and dominion, ever and forever.

What is sin?

When Paul talks about the origin of sin, he goes right back to the beginning of Genesis, to the account of the events which took place in the Garden of Eden (Romans 5:12). God had told Adam that he was not permitted to eat from the tree of the knowledge of good and evil (Genesis 2:17), a rule Adam broke (3:6). It was in this first sin that man fell from a perfect relationship with God into a state of separation. Indeed, no sooner had he eaten but he started to feel shame and fear of God – covering himself with fig leaves, and hiding from God as he approached (3:8). For his part, God ejected them both from the garden, sending them out into lives of hardship, and fixing a cherubim with a flaming sword to prevent their return (Genesis 3:24).

A Snake

At heart, sin is this state of separation from God – that which prevents us from approaching God without shame and fear; that which means we have no peace with God. When seen in this way, sin is not primarily a question of individual acts of disobedience, but is a state of mankind with its origin in our fall away from God in Adam.

From this corrupt foundation comes forth corrupt thoughts, words and actions. Whilst many of these specific sins are listed in the Bible, they all boil down to the breaking of one of the two great commandments:

[And he said to him,] “You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind. This is the great and first commandment. And a second is like it: You shall love your neighbor as yourself. On these two commandments depend all the Law and the Prophets.”
Matthew 22:37-40

So, whilst the essence of sin is our state of separation from God, the essence of individual sins is found in our rejection of the God we should love fully, and a failure in that mutual love for our neighbours which is the pure outworking of the love of God.
It is against this background that we read the judgement of mankind in John’s Gospel:

And this is the judgment: the light has come into the world, and people loved the darkness rather than the light because their deeds were evil.
John 3:19

Do you notice how closely our rejection of God is bound up in our evil deeds? It is because of our evil deeds that we reject the light of God; but yet it is because of the darkness of sin that we persist in the evil deeds. Paul describes this sorry states as living ‘in the flesh’, because our lives are governed according to that human flesh which fell in Adam. This life ‘in the flesh’ means to “carry out the desires of the body and the mind” (Ephesians 2:3), and graphically describes the way in which sins originate within us, according to our nature:

For while we were living in the flesh, our sinful passions, aroused by the law, were at work in our members to bear fruit for death.
Romans 7:5

Christ also discusses sin using this concept, pointing out that the evil that defiles a person actually originates from within his heart rather than from some external influence (Mark 7:20-23). So, although we often like to think of sin being caused by society, yet the way Bible describes it, although sin may be a part of fallen society yet it springs from each corrupt individual.

And [Jesus] said, “What comes out of a person is what defiles him. For from within, out of the heart of man, come evil thoughts, sexual immorality, theft, murder, adultery, coveting, wickedness, deceit, sensuality, envy, slander, pride, foolishness. All these evil things come from within, and they defile a person.”
Mark 7:20-23

A Humble Petition for the Qu’ran in Churches

A Humble Petition for the Qu’ran in Churches*

[An open letter to the Archbishop of Canterbury]

To the Most Reverend and Right Honourable Lord Archbishop Doctor Rowan Williams, Archbishop of Canterbury, the undersigned offer obedient greeting.

Your Grace will perhaps wonder, Most Reverend Lord, what this unusual action of writing a letter to yourself means, and not without reason. For nature has ordained that the unexpected should create not only wonder, but at times even a feeling of dumbfoundedness. Yet, we would have you to be entirely free and undisturbed in regard to this matter which we are laying before you. For we do not come to your Grace in regard to anything very troublesome, but to find help. For we are so sure that you are both a most pious lord and a most loving father that there is nothing we do not promise ourselves from you. And this fact itself shows, for we should never have ventured to write to your Grace unless we had had thorough confidence in it. We desire, therefore, humbly to beg you to listen to what we are going to disclose a little later, to hear it graciously, and to take it in good part. This is demanded both by the matter itself which drives us to this appeal and by the office which you fill as Archbishop of Canturbury.

The matter itself, to come to it at last, is this: Your Most Reverend Lordship knows how for a long time the heavenly teachings which God, the creator of all things, willed to have made plain unto the poor race of men by one no way inferior to himself, by his Son, in all things his equal, have, not without the utmost loss to the cause of salvation, been lying hidden through the ignorance, not to say evil intentions, of certain persons, and how rudely, when he had determined to recall and renew those teachings in our day by a sort of second revelation, certain persons attack or defend them. Therefore, Most Reverend and Right Honourable Lord Archbishop, we beseech you by our Lord Jesus Christ, not to join those who aim at putting under a bushel, nay, at extinguishing, the light that came into the world to illumine all men, and who call evil good and good evil, turning sweet into bitter and light into darkness, but rather to join those who have this one desire, that the whole concourse of Christians return to their head, which is Christ, and form one body in him, and having received the spirit of God, recognise the blessings bestowed upon them by God.

Yet, despite the great progress made in the past centuries, it is clear that some have taken things too far. Some have elevated the Bible to a God in itself. Forgetting that the Bible is mostly the response of past generations to God, they have treated the scriptures as if they were breathed out by God himself! Thankfully, in recent times, there has been a departure from this most foul idolatry and a return to a more balanced and man-centred theology. This being the case, and as it seems to be now well accepted within the Anglican Communion, we hope for no more than our concept of scriptures to be expanded in accordance with this realism. We must stop scriptural exclusivism and move away from the “the response of man to God in my book is right because I like the guys who wrote it” school of theology!

Now, let it not be denied that since the death and resurrection of our Lord most notable events have taken place, not least of which being the rise of the Islamic teachings comprised in the book known as the Qu’ran. Whilst we understand that some have been led away from what the Bible says by these teachings, others have benefited from reading them whilst remaining within the Christian faith. We note with interest the compatibility of professing them both has even been observed by Anglican clergy. The marked proliferation of the text shows the great demand that the soul has to read it, for our hearts keenly desire it. It gives clear instruction on the living of a life, clear traditions and rites to be observed, and a picture of the Trinity which is much simpler than the Biblical doctrine. So, on what basis can this text be withheld and suppressed any longer? On what basis may we continue to rule against it, given that it is but words and forms the implication of which depends so much upon personal interpretation?

The body of Christians today under your charge then are the subject of the most cruel persecution, the most inequitable suppression, the most illiberal dictatorial censorship. Despite gathering together for religious purposes on regular occasions, this text (which is undeniably religious in nature and held in very high esteem by many of the most learned men of our day) is not permitted as reading matter. Despite the commentary it offers upon the Bible, the novel interpretations of Biblical events, and the importance of all mankind uniting around a common understanding, our Churches stubbornly refuse to give place to the Qu’ran.

Unfairly banned from churches

We are aware that there is an argument amongst some fundamentalist parts of the Anglican Communion that claim the Qu’ran is not the work of God; however we as men are not able to rule on that as the Bible says nothing about the Qu’ran and indeed the Bible says “judge not”. Even if it is not the work of God, it must be allowed that we permit many works which are not of God to be read and used in our Churches, including hymnals, prayer books and notice sheets. On what basis can we allow ‘Jerusalem’ to be sung – which is neither the work of God nor resplendent with the name of Jesus – but not the Qu’ran, which at least some believe to be of God and does contain the name of Jesus in many places?

The time for silence has passed, the time for speech is now. We can remain silent no longer in the face of this narrow-minded traditionalism. How can we, with one breath, declare the Creation narrative as a fiction created to explain complex matters to ignorant man, and then refuse place to the Qu’ran because some think it less than historically accurate? Let’s face it, modern Anglican theology will tolerate the denial of the substitutionary atonement, practicing of prayer for the dead in purgatory, pilgrimages to visit statues of dead Christians (and often non-Christians!), the parading around of baked goods as if they were God himself, and all manner of other concepts both Ancient and Modern. Why do we still cling to the sixteenth century concept of Religious Isolationism? If we can accept priests who think they are ‘of the order of Aaron’ and who try to break the body of God and offer up sacrifices on an altar, what is wrong with accepting the deeply edifying and morally instructive contents of the Qu’ran?

We further realise that some believe the Qu’ran to be contrary to the Christian faith. Those who allege such misunderstand our design entirely, for we hope it to be read not to be believed, but to be heard. What in Christianity is there that forbids a man’s ears from hearing words which are read? We are confident in the inherent goodness of man, and his ability to discern and choose what is right and good. In one God, in one faith, in one baptism we shall certainly be made one, for these are one. Do you not see that we can give place for the Qu’ran in this structure? A man will still acknowledge one God, one faith (for who can hold two simultaneously?), and one baptism. What more can we ask, and indeed what more should we ask? Let us drop all pretense, and embrace that which our brothers and sisters in Abraham have long recognised as an important text.

This is our humble proposal; it has long been the practice for the Old Testament texts to be read in Churches, and yet nobody really knows what they mean. They talk about stuff which has no relationship or direct application to our lives today. Who cares about the furnishings of an ancient tent, or the names of the sons of Levi? Rather, this has been time usually wasted in empty listening. A review of the New Testament shows that the important stuff from the Old Testament is generally mentioned there anyway, and so we think it no loss to discard the Old Testament. What merit is there in hearing tired stories of long dead people in an alien culture? This time now freed can be used for reading the Qu’ran, something much more educational and informative to the congregations. Many will never have heard from the Qu’ran before, and so this will be new and breathtaking – indeed it could well lead to a great increase in Church membership and collection plate revenues! Lest our proposal seems too extreme, let the Old Testament stories be retained in Sunday Schools, for that is where they are most useful anyway. We would not wish to deprive children of fun stories of brave men or big battles.

Further, through reading of the Qu’ran, we will be able to increase in the degree to which we understand our neighbours of the Islamic faith, and may even have the opportunity to make them Church members. As many worship on Friday afternoons, they may relish the chance to come to a Sunday morning service at which the Qu’ran is read and where they can pray in a devotional atmosphere. Needless to say, even these persons will increase the collections.

If, however, you cannot possibly be persuaded to grant it, we beseech you at least not to forbid it. We think you are brave enough to do right without fear of those who can even slay the body. And in fact you will have to refrain at least from interfering. For there is a report that most of the ecclesiastics have already departed from the heretical idea of the Bible being the inerrant word of God, and are already leading their congregations into a much more understanding and modern theology, more in agreement with how we suppose God wished us to understand him in our present culture. Accordingly, scorn our petition not as of little account; for if in our quest for a more complete religion we cast out the most important resource of the Qu’ran, all will suffer and we will be needlessly disunited from our brothers in Abraham.

The Most High God long preserve your Grace in prosperity and in the knowledge of God! We pray with all humility that you will take all we have said in a spirit of justice and kindness.

Your Most Reverend and Right Honourable Lord Archbishop Doctor’s most obedient servants;

THE UNDERSIGNED

*With apologies to Huldreich Zwingli, who unlike this letter, was entirely serious