Ray C. Stedman
In a world generously supplied with con-artists, pitchmen,
wordy politicians, and outright liars, it is a great relief to
know there is a place where one can always hear the truth---the
truth plainly and simply put, without fear or favor. That place
is the book of God, the Bible. God is a Realist. He deals with
everything and everyone exactly the way they are, and he knows
what that is because he made everything and everyone. It is impossible
for him to tell a lie, because he himself is Truth! He deceives
no one and no one deceives him, for apart from him there is no
reality.
It is only to be expected, therefore, that the Book that comes
from him, though it comes through many different humans writing
and speaking over many centuries, should nevertheless be characterized
by truth. Jesus affirmed it as such. He prayed for his disciples,
saying to the Father,
"Sanctify them by the truth; your word is truth." (John 17:17).
The truth is not always easy for us to hear. Sometimes it pierces
me and convicts me. Sometimes I wish I could evade it, and then
I am reminded that it was sent to heal me. Often it encourages
me and enheartens me. Sometimes it restores me when nothing else
can do so. It confronts me with paradoxes of revelation which
intrigue me and challenge me. It exposes the secular illusions
of the day and reveals the destructive ends to which they lead.
It deals honestly with uncomfortable concepts and opposes the
strangleholds of tradition, correcting them with the authority
of God.
I have learned to appreciate the Bible most because it brings
me face-to-face with my God! Or at least the relationship is so
real and personal that it seems to be a face-to-face encounter.
My heavenly Father becomes more real and close than any earthly
father. I can all but see my Lord and Savior standing beside me
and talking to me as I read his words in the gospels. Sometimes
the words of Scripture become so vivid and luminous that I feel
like kneeling or even falling on my face before the majesty of
God. No other book has such power to transport me beyond earth
to heavenly places.
I am often made aware of the power of the Bible in other people's
lives, as well. I see it awaken a response in many readers to
seize and possess for themselves the promises of God. I have watched
it repattern the minds of an entire congregation to view life
biblically and realistically. For many, the Bible has unfolded
to them the meaning of their humanity and clarified the way it
was meant to function. It awakens compassion and delivers from
selfishness. It arouses a sense of true worship, grounded in the
truth and issuing from the spirit within. No wonder Jeremiah could
say,
"When your words came, I ate them; they were my joy and my heart's delight, for I bear your name, O Lord God Almighty." (15:16).
Pasted in the front of my Bible are the words of Henry Van Dyke which I often pray:
Grant us the knowledge that we need,
To solve the questions of the mind.
Light Thou our candles, while we read,
To keep our hearts from going blind.
Enlarge our vision to behold,
The wonders Thou hast wrought of old!"