DEEPER CHANGE

NEW RELEASE - From the "Deeper" series: Discover the one to spiritual formation and lasting changhe

Paperback 

or Kindle

Say yes to Students of Jesus in your inbox:

 

SEARCH THIS SITE:

Archive
Navigation

Entries in Questions (1)

The Answers Await The Right Questions.

It's a really old joke:

Once there was a boy sitting on a porch, with a dog next to him. A salesman approached the porch and asked the boy, “Does your dog bite?”

“Nope,” said the boy.

The salesman stepped on the porch to ring the doorbell and the dog viciously bit his leg. “I thought you said your dog didn’t bite!” screamed the salesman.

“My dog doesn’t bite,” said the boy. “But that’s not my dog.”

Sometimes asking the right question can make all the difference.

One of the great obstacles in becoming a follower of Jesus is learning to ask the right questions. The disciples wanted to know who among them was the greatest. The Pharisees wanted to know by what authority Jesus did his powerful works. Pontius Pilate wanted to know, “What is truth?” even as Truth Himself stood facing him. It’s clear they all missed the point. We can, too.

The questions we bring to Jesus can make a big difference in our journey of transformation. We live in a religious culture that craves correct answers, but what if we place correct answers above a relationship with God? There’s nothing wrong with correct answers: we won’t get very far believing that two plus two equals twenty-two--but you can do the math all day long and still not know God.

“There is today no lack of Bible teachers to set forth correctly the principles and doctrines of Christ . . . strangely unaware that there is in their ministry no manifest Presence, nor anything unusual in their personal lives.”  ~ A.W. Tozer
What Tozer wrote in the early 1960’s is even more acute today. We come to God with our list of questions, eager to hear the answers we think are important. We have insisted that God speak to our values rather than hearing what is on his heart. Knowledge is easier to grasp. We long to master a subject, and in so doing have made Jesus the subject and ourselves the master.
As a result we have valued knowledge over experience and relationship. Yet there is a kind of knowledge that comes only from experience. It’s the difference between studying the physics of a curve ball and learning to hit one. For many Western Christians it is easier to relate to a book (the Bible) than to experience relationship with the Lord Himself. One reason we reduce evangelism to the narrow message of “Jesus died for your sins” is that it does not require relationship with Jesus. The Great Commission (to be a disciple and make disciples) is not academic, it is relational--toward God and then toward others.
Do we really want to know Jesus, or simply know about him? How long would it take to know him? Consider these amazing words from the Apostle Paul, who had walked with Jesus for decades when he wrote:
I consider everything a loss compared to the surpassing greatness of knowing Christ Jesus my Lord, for whose sake I have lost all things. I consider them rubbish, that I may gain Christ . . . I want to know Christ and the power of his resurrection and the fellowship of sharing in his sufferings, becoming like him in his death, and so, somehow, to attain to the resurrection from the dead.” Philippians 3: 8 & 10 (I omitted verse 9 in order to emphasize Paul’s point.)
Paul still desired to know Jesus more and more after two decades--how much more is there for me to experience? Paul was not hungry for doctrine about Jesus. He wanted Jesus.
Jesus understood the powerful attraction of religious doctrine when he said, “You diligently study the Scriptures because you think that by them you possess eternal life. These are the Scriptures that testify about me.” He spoke to religiously-minded people and concluded, “yet you refuse to come to me to have life.” (John 5: 39 - 40) Correct doctrine is important, but it is not the reality. Correct doctrine is a useful map, but we should never mistake it for the actual territory it describes. It is the doorstep, not the door. The menu, not the meal. It is the skeleton, not the living body.
The first and greatest commandment is to love the Lord. Love is relational and experiential--and yes, love depends upon the truth as well. We can take a lesson from our own children: we want them to love and trust us, but we do not require that they understand us in every respect. Even when they repeat our words back to us it does not guarantee that they understand what we've said. In many cases the understanding will come years, even decades, after we are gone.
What questions do we bring to the Lord? What questions do we bring to the scripture? The answer waits upon the right questions.