If you want to write a bestselling Christian book, tell people about hidden truth that isn't in the Bible. Write about
your trip to heaven. Write about the personal information that Jesus channeled
to you during your time of listening. Give people something newer and fresher
than the dull pages of their dusty Bibles. A quick look at the top selling
books at Meijers or Walmart will confirm that these are the books that fly off
the shelves.
What does it say about Christianity that these are our
most popular books? I’m afraid it indicates that we are enamored with the novel. We are more interested in privileged information than in the public record of the Bible. Our attentions are more perked by fresh finds than old truths.
In the early days of the church, the Gnostics were a major problem. The word “Gnostic”
means “knowing ones.” The Gnostics taught that salvation came from receiving
hidden wisdom. They believed they had secret, insider knowledge that was only known by the privileged few. Men and women were drawn to Gnosticism because they were attracted to the
idea of getting the inside scoop. People in those days had the same tendencies
as people today.
In contrast to this,
I hope that you believe in the
sufficiency of Scripture. The sufficiency of Scripture means that the Bible
contains everything we need to know to be saved and to live the Christian life.
Everything that God meant to tell us for this age is written in the completed
pages of Scripture. It is the full measure of revealed truth that God intends
for humanity for this stage in redemptive history. Until Christ returns, it is
all that we need.
There are no
extra-biblical Easter eggs to go looking for. Scripture is enough.
Many of you will go camping this summer. If you go to a
store to be outfitted for your camping trip and they have a sign in the window claiming they carry "Everything
You Need!" then you shouldn't have to go to another store to buy something else
for your trip. If they can give you everything you need, then you would be
thoroughly equipped. If they didn’t have everything you need, then you wouldn’t
be thoroughly equipped. With that in mind, think about what Paul tells Timothy
in 2 Timothy 3:15-17:
…and how from infancy you have known the holy
Scriptures, which are able to make you wise for salvation through faith in
Christ Jesus. All Scripture is God-breathed and is useful for teaching,
rebuking, correcting and training in righteousness, so that the man of God may
be thoroughly equipped for every
good work.
Paul tells Timothy that Scripture is able to make him thoroughly equipped for every good work.
Timothy did not need revelation from another source to equip him thoroughly.
Neither do we.
The
sufficiency of Scripture does not
mean that the Bible tells us everything there is to know about how to build nuclear
reactors or how to remove someone’s appendix. However, it does mean that everything we need to know about God, salvation, and
the Christian life is found in Scripture. It means that we don’t have to look
to someone’s (very doubtful) trips to heaven for a secret glimpse behind the
curtain. It means that we don’t have to buy someone’s book to get their secret
knowledge. It means that we shouldn’t look for spiritual short-cuts. There are
no divinely inspired Cliff-Notes for Scripture. There are no deleted scenes. It
means that we don’t have to feel like “there’s gotta be something more.”
Satan will do anything he can to get us
away from the Word of God. If he can make something else seem more interesting,
more fresh, more authoritative, or easier... he will do it.
Years ago Rene Pache wrote this wisdom:
Years ago Rene Pache wrote this wisdom:
Why be tied
to a book out of the past when one can communicate every day with the living
God? But this is exactly the danger point. Apart from the constant control of
written revelation, we soon find ourselves engulfed in subjectivity . . . Let
each remind himself of the prohibition of taking anything away from Scripture
or adding anything to it (Deut. 4:2; Rev. 22:18-19). Almost every heresy and
sect has originated in a supposed revelation or a new experience on the part of
its founder, something outside the strictly biblical framework.
James Montgomenry Boice once warned that the great issue
of our day would not be the authority of Scripture, but its sufficiency. The alternative to the sufficiency of Scripture is the insufficiency of Scripture. Either you
believe that Scripture is enough, or you will turn to other experiences and
teachings to supplement it.
Remember, God is omniscient. When the Holy Spirit inspired the words of Scripture, He knew
exactly what we would need today—even in the 21st century. Our world didn’t catch Him by surprise.
Be satisfied with what God has chosen to
reveal. He could have revealed more, but He didn't. God has His reasons for
that.
My advice to you is to disregard books on
trips to heaven, special messages, and secret wisdom. Don't give it a market.
Don't be fascinated by novelty. Instead, appreciate all that God
has revealed in Scripture. Read it! Read all of it. Meditate on it. Appreciate the fact
that the Holy Spirit is with us to illuminate the truths that He had written
down long ago. He makes it come alive to us and shows us how it applies, in
glaring brilliance, to our lives today.
I hope you believe that Scripture is
enough. I hope you are satisfied with the sufficiency of Scripture.
Next up: The Perspicuity of Scripture
Others in this series: The Necessity of Scripture; The Authority of Scripture; The Inerrancy of Scripture;
Next up: The Perspicuity of Scripture
Others in this series: The Necessity of Scripture; The Authority of Scripture; The Inerrancy of Scripture;