
Feasts of Faith: Reflections on
the Major Feast Days

A Light to the Gentiles: Reflections on the Gospel of Luke
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In the Gospel of St. Matthew, we hear Jesus quote the
ancient scripture from the prophesies of Isaiah and from that moment on,
He began to preach this message: “Repent for the kingdom of heaven is
close at hand,” (4:12-17). Those particular words have stirred up some
anxiety and fear in the hearts of people without warrant for many years.
Jesus was not threatening us, nor should we interpret this statement,
as do some of our fellow Christians, as being just a precautionary admonition,
“repent or else,” because the scriptures are filled with “or elses. “It
was not necessary for Jesus to come and to utter another one. What He
was saying is, in effect, prepare yourself for it because there is no
way that you can enter into that kingdom so long as you bear in your conscience
the brands of sin and guilt for having transgressed the commandments of
God.
Now Jesus, though He is the Son of God, was steeped in scripture.
All throughout the testaments of the four evangelists, we find Jesus quoting
the scriptures and it is necessary for us to learn from His example that
it is necessary for us to be able to understand scripture, not merely
to memorize chapter and verse, for Jesus simply stated: “The prophet Isaiah
said,” and He knew that the people to whom He was speaking understood
because they knew the scriptures. It is necessary however for us to know
the spirit of scripture, its teachings, its intent.
There are many ways to read the Bible. There are those who read
it as history and they enjoy it purely from that perspective. There are
those who read it as a study of personalities and they enjoy trying to
understand the motivations of some of the great characters that we find
in both the Old and the New Testaments. Others read the scriptures more
for inspiration than for information, however. I think that Christians
must read it for both purposes, to be informed to be sure, but more so
to be inspired. We should never read the scriptures with the intent that
we are going to arm ourselves with sufficient information to be able to
argue down all our fellow Christians who have made it a practice to memorize
chapter and verse for that very purpose, but rather we should come to
understand personally the content, the spirit and the nature of scripture
and we should become intimately familiar with our Bible. We need to turn
to it devoutly and on a regular basis for information and inspiration.
I’ve had a certain Bible for less than four years, so that makes
it new, but it’s well used. My fingerprints can be found throughout it.
You can see all kinds of bookmarks, scraps of paper, Icons, anything that
I might lay my hands on at a particular time to mark certain pages that
I might want to read again at a later time. But more than that, this Bible
belongs to me and I belong to it and if you were to go through my Bible
you would find all sorts of colored lines and markings so that whenever
I feel like just sitting and turning the pages, certain passages jump
out at me to refresh me anew. Turn any page and you will find such inspiring
statements as: “I am the Way, the Truth and the Life. No one can come
to the Father except through me. If you know me, you know my Father also.
From this moment you know him and have seen him,” (St. John, 14:6-7).
When the Bible becomes intimately a part of us it becomes ours. It is
no desecration to mark it so that we might have landmarks to turn to as
we seek inspiration and information. What God has made clean you have
no right to call profane,” (Acts: 10:14).
I read my Bible regularly and I find that it is a great source
of strength for me. Whenever I am troubled, or frustrated, or confused,
whenever I am upset or at odds with myself I turn to my friend, the Bible,
and rediscover my source of strength ,...“and what we ask God is that
through perfect wisdom and spiritual understanding you should reach the
fullest knowledge of His Will,” (Col., 1:9). Now at some time in the past
I underscored that line because it meant something to me. Had I not underscored
it I could have leaped through this Bible and the words on the page would
have jumped up at me as a crowded mass having no meaning, but because
this Bible is mine and I belong to it and we are intimate friends, its
wisdom is there for me to tap whenever I need it. “It is all to bind you
together in love and to stir your minds so that your understanding may
come to full development until you really know God’s secret in which all
the jewels of wisdom and knowledge are hidden, (Col. 2:2).
Get to know your Bible, make it an intimate part of you, make it
your friend and it will be a source of wisdom, of understanding, of comfort,
of peace of heart. At first when you approach the Bible, if you have never
really read it before, you might approach it as others have told you.
You might open to Genesis, chapter I and try to struggle through to the
last page of Revelations. You’ll get through maybe three chapters and
you’ll give up in utter frustration. I’ve never read the Bible that way.
I’m past 60 years old. I’ve been reading the Bible since I was a young
adult and I’ve never read the Bible from beginning to end. Now that may
sound like a strange admission to you. I’ve read the whole Bible but the
Bible was not written in the order it is published, therefore there are
times when I need certain information or certain inspiration that I won’t
find in Genesis that I can only find in the book of Ecclesiastes, so why
not start there? Or if I am seeking information on Abraham and Sarah and
I happen to be hung up in the book of Psalms at that time, then what’s
to stop me from going back to the beginning to find the information that
I am looking for?
One should read the Bible as one goes to water. We drink it when
thirsty, bath in it when we need cleansing or refreshing, use it to launder
our garments, nourish our plants, gardens and lawns with it, swim in it,
mix it, boil it, freeze it, all according to our need. But above all,
we should know it so well that we can say “My Bible, My Friend”, with
conviction.
“. . .make it your friend and it will be a source of wisdom,
of understanding, of comfort,
of peace of heart.”
Editor’s
Note:
To
get into the “habit” of reading Scripture, why not start with the daily
liturgical readings of our Holy Church, as found in our monthly “Daily
Devotions.”
From Word
Magazine
Publication of the Antiochian Orthodox
Christian Archdiocese of North America
September 1987
p. 19
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