Originally Posted by
dwashbur
Agreed! A little example from my own life: I spent a total of 6 years basically cloistered while learning about the Bible and theology. Now, I wouldn't trade the knowledge I gained for anything, but when I got out of seminary I came to a startling realization: I couldn't speak English any more. This was driven home to me during a conversation with some people at my local church who were getting into the so-called "prosperity gospel." They were telling me about 3 John 2 and how it promises God's children prosperity. I started trying to explain how we need to understand the genres of the different biblical pericopes and see the difference between a salutation and an actual oracle.
They stared at me as if I had two heads.
A couple of weeks later, our pastor addressed the verse in one of his sermons. He said, "It's not a promise, it's a greeting." I saw lightbulbs come on over these people's heads. The difference between him and me was, he said it in English; I said it in Scholarese, a dialect that they didn't understand. The trouble was, that was now the only dialect I knew how to speak.
That was in 1982. Ever since, I have been on a personal campaign to take all that cool stuff I learned - much of which was wrong, as it turned out - and translate it into terms that real people can understand. As I have done that, and keep studying the Scriptures, I have come to a startling realization:
The more I learn, the less I know for sure.
I have narrowed my sure knowledge down to two facts: God exists, and Jesus rose from the dead. I hold on to those two facts when things get difficult (like they are right now), and when I need to understand the implications of them, I basically look up and say "Okay, now what?"
I can testify that I have a lot fewer ulcers with this approach. And just about every time I do that, He teaches me something new that reaffirms his love for me and the fact that nothing can snatch me out of His hand. The older I get, the more I find that those things are sufficient for me.