How Should We Then Study the Bible?

And other responses to our April issue.

Abigail Erickson

In our April issue, Dru Johnson and Celina Durgin posed a provocative question: Is it time to quit “quiet time”? An overemphasis on personal Scripture study, they argued, has led to decreased biblical literacy. Rather than “microdosing” Scripture alone, Christians should be reading together, putting passages in context and asking each other questions.

Good riddance, some readers said. Quiet time has long been too legalistic, a box to check off the to-do list rather than an encounter with the living God. Others offered suggestions for engaging with the Word: Sunday school classes, post-sermon discussions over meals, and Bible commentaries in small groups, to name a few.

But do all kinds of Scripture study have to serve the same purpose? And must one mode be abandoned for another? Pete Deison, a pastor and former Dallas Seminary professor, emphasized the Holy Spirit’s ability to enlighten us above and beyond our exegetical understanding. Kelly Pelton of Kerrville, Texas, agreed:

The purpose of a daily quiet time has never been to attain Bible literacy; enjoying one’s relationship with God so as to be Spirit-led is the point. Transformation happens both in community study of the Bible and in solitude with God; both practices are indispensable.

Bob MacLeod of Orlando, Florida, who spent many years with Cru, has compassion for novice Bible readers:

In my writing, I find that I need to expand the context surrounding the specific verse or passage and cannot take for granted that the reader will be familiar with the passage or story at all. By weaving in context, I have made it an objective to increase the reader’s overall understanding of the Bible. I could wring my hands on this subject. But really, as the writers noted, this is an opportunity. Each new generation must own their own Bible. “So faith comes from hearing, and hearing through the word of Christ” (Rom. 10:17, ESV).

Kate Lucky senior editor, audience engagement

Why Does Creation Groan?

I tell those under my care [as a minister] that I believe that when we come to the end of things, we will see God accomplished something so beautiful, so incredible, so unimaginable through the suffering in the world that we will rejoice and be glad. Is this what I am talking about but have had no idea how to explain it other than it is a statement of faith based on the love and goodness of God?

Dolores Wiens St. George, UT

John R. Schneider’s conjecture that the suffering of animals may be purposive in a theological sense leads him to hope that there is a place for animals in the messianic heaven. Given the gravity and scale of their pain, however, and our divine grant of stewardship, it would be a mistake to let Schneider’s reflections divert us from the recognition that there is much we can and should do here and now to alleviate animal suffering. We now know that animals have an immense capacity to suffer, and so, as sensitive and compassionate beings, we should seek to alleviate their burdens to the greatest extent possible. It is possible to share in Schneider’s hope for an afterlife for animals while taking worldly steps to confront today’s wide-scale cruelties (such as factory farming, trophy hunting, puppy mills, or animal fighting).

Bernard Unti Germantown, MD

Perhaps the author is too quick to equate pain with “suffering.” I am a retired pastor and recently completed my 100th ultramarathon. Every athlete knows and even embraces physical suffering in training and competition. But physical suffering does not always result in emotional suffering. Animals can feel pain and thus suffer physically. But do they suffer emotionally? If not, is their “suffering” meaningfully or ethically different from that of an athlete? Yes, one is voluntary and the other isn’t. But we are also talking about different brain capacities and functions. If animals are genetically predisposed to experience pain more stoically and less emotionally, the questions addressed by the article are greatly relativized.

Mark Swanson Sedona, AZ

What Evangelicals Owe Haiti

In January, I was on a Zoom call with Haiti’s ambassador to the US and representatives from aid groups that work in Haiti. The meeting was part of the Haitian government’s efforts to combat gangs that have taken control of much of the country. Many people in the conversation came from evangelical backgrounds: nonprofit leaders, the ambassador, and the acting head of state. I wondered if this level of contact between Haiti’s national leaders and American evangelicals was unusual.

I know Haiti well, but what I found in the archives of periodicals and missions agencies surprised me. Nowhere had I learned that Methodist missionaries helped launch the country’s first public schools, or that American missionaries helped end the US occupation of Haiti, or that a Haitian diplomat was recruiting evangelicals to start missions even as his boss oversaw torture and executions.

Today, the US government is urging US citizens to leave Haiti for their safety. Some of my Haitian sources are trying to get out as well. The Haitian church is rugged and luminous. Still, I find myself wondering: Will that church, built on the hope of a broken world being put right, remain hopeful? Until we know, I’ll just keep asking questions. I’ve found that’s a pretty good way to hold out hope.

Andy Olsen senior editor

Also in this issue

What does it look like to love one’s neighbor across a shared history of slavery? Our cover story explores racial reconciliation through the lens of one specific relationship: family friends grappling with the discovery that one’s ancestor had enslaved the other’s. Also in this issue: honoring Tim Keller, what we get wrong about David and Goliath, Elisabeth Elliot’s unsentimental realism, and Christ-honoring masculinity.

Cover Story

Generations After Slavery, Georgia Neighbors Find Freedom and Repair in Christ

News

Church Shooting Victims to Receive $144.5 Million

The Hard Work of Healing

Is God Pleased by Our Worship?

The Christian Life Is Wishful Thinking

Testimony

I Loved Studying Math. I Needed God to Show Me Why.

In Search of Non-Toxic Male Sexuality

Left Behind at the Ballot Box

How Archaeology Affirmed the Historic Stature of a Biblical King

News

Belarusian Evangelicals Fear Growing Isolation

News

As Methodist Exits Hit 5,800, Some Churches Find Paths Blocked

News

Where Pro-Choice Groups Chose Vandalism

Excerpt

The Lord’s Supper Is a Multiethnic Love Feast

The Legacy of Tim Keller

The Shepherd Boy Who Wasn’t

News

Nondenominational Churches Are Growing and Multiplying in DC

50 Atheists Found Christ. This Researcher Found Out Why.

Review

Making Disciples Means Working for Justice

Review

Elisabeth Elliot Was a Flawed Figure God Used in Extraordinary Ways

New & Noteworthy Fiction

5 Books That Help Us Find Rest in Jesus

Excerpt

What Does It Profit a Christian to Protect an Institution but Lose Their Soul?

View issue

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Review

The Virgin Birth Is More Than an Incredible Occurrence

We’re eager to ask whether it could have happened. We shouldn’t forget to ask what it means.

The Nine Days of Filipino Christmas

Some Protestants observe the Catholic tradition of Simbang Gabi, predawn services in the days leading up to Christmas.

Why Armenian Christians Recall Noah’s Ark in December

The biblical account of the Flood resonates with a persecuted church born near Mount Ararat.

The Bulletin

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Join CT for a Live Book Awards Event

A conversation with Russell Moore, Book of the Year winner Gavin Ortlund, and Award of Merit winner Brad East.

Excerpt

There’s No Such Thing as a ‘Proper’ Christmas Carol

As we learn from the surprising journeys of several holiday classics, the term defies easy definition.

Advent Calls Us Out of Our Despair

Sitting in the dark helps us truly appreciate the light.

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