There are so many different areas of study that people investigate from the Bible: Eschatology, Numerology, Apologetics, Inductive method, SOAP (Scripture, Observation, Application, Prayer), Verse mapping, Devotional, etc..
They are all designed to help us understand the road we must travel, but do they really get us where we need to be?
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Now don’t get me wrong- there is nothing bad about trying to understand the Bible, but studying about the End Times or researching how numbers can hide or show us important relationships may end up inhibiting our ability to be saved.
You know, there is an old saying about how it’s not the destination but the journey; however, my thoughts are that when we are talking about salvation, when on that journey we need to remember that what really matters is where we end up.
And that, I hope we can all agree on, is to be in God’s presence forever.
From what I have seen over the past three decades of being in the company of believers, of which there are so many different beliefs, too many people are way too focused on things that are not really helping them get any closer to God.
For instance, let’s take those who are deeply into Eschatology. They want to know when it will happen, and will there be a pre- or a mid- or a post-tribulation. They seem to either forget or ignore the fact that Yeshua, himself, said that God isn’t even letting him in on when that will happen (Matthew 24:35-37 and Mark 13:32).
Hey, people- if God won’t let his own son know when the hammer is going to fall, why does anyone think that God will let them figure it out?
Didn’t God tell us about the secret things that belong only to him?
If you forgot what he said, it is in Deuteronomy 29:29 :
Things which are hidden belong to Adonai our God. But the things that have been revealed belong to us and our children forever, so that we can observe all the words of this Torah.
So what we are to know, he has already told us, and that is all we really need to know; for example, people want to know how to be saved and God told us all he requires of us in Micah 6:8.
So go ahead and jump right in to all these different fields of study, because if you remember that they are good to know things, but not what you need to be saved, then you probably will remain on the right track.
All I want to do today is give a warning: what God wants us to know he has already told us, and if you go looking for something you will usually be able to find it, but it may not be the right thing.
I think we all, at one time or another, have a thought about God or something we read in the Bible, so we go to the Bible to see it we are right. Now doing that, in and of itself, isn’t wrong as long as you remain open to the possibility that you may not be right. What I have seen, way too often, is that what happens is that people pull things out of context to make what they want something to mean appear to be true.
There is a difference between looking in the Bible to determine if what you think is correct and taking Bible verses out of context and reordering them to make it appear that what you think is correct.
All the knowledge in the world won’t get us where we need to be, but simply doing what God said he wants us to do will. And all you need to know in order to do what God wants you to do is in the Torah.
I have nothing against questioning because the truth can stand up to questioning, and without questioning we never really learn or advance our understanding.
My concern is when people want to know what God knows, absolutely needing to know what, when, where, how and why about everything.
The Book of Kohelet (Ecclesiastes) is such a “downer” because that poor guy was so disheartened that he saw everything in life as useless. The truth is he felt that way because he wanted to know what God knows, and he finally figured out that he can never know the what-when-where-how-why of everything, and that the best we can do is enjoy what we have.
Faith is accepting like a child (Matthew 18:3), and the way to do that, if you ask me, is to read the Bible so you can tell what God wants you to do (that’s in the Torah), to know right from wrong, to accept that what God says is all you need to know, to keep your eyes on the prize and not be misled by seeking knowledge that doesn’t help you get to where you want to be.
Yes, it is a thin line we walk on when we want to know everything we can about God and what he wants us to do, and about all the other things in the Bible that are interesting but don’t really direct us towards salvation.
Always read and study what is in the Bible, and pray for discernment to know what knowledge leads you towards salvation and what knowledge leads you nowhere.
Thank you for being here and please remember to comment and share these messages with everyone you know, even non-believers. Hey, after all, you never know how fertile the soil is until you plant a seed in it.
That’s it for this week so l’hitraot and (an early) Shabbat Shalom!