Here is another case study in the constant misuse of the Bible by Rick Warren. It is symptomatic of much of what I find coming out of Saddleback Church and Pastors.com, and thus, the throngs that follow his approach to Scripture.
Here, Warren suggests that Jesus’ command to “Come to Me, all who are weary and heavy-laden, and I will give you rest,” is really a suggestion to emotionally, intellectually and psychologically weary church leaders who need to spend more time with Christ. Based on this verse, church leaders (and really any stressed out person), need to focus their energies on what they are gifted to do and not on the thousands of issues that sap time and energy away from those ministries and tasks that we could be most effective in doing.
Agreed. The principles are good ones. I concur. We pastors do need to examine our lives, giftedness, experiences and abilities and focus our energies on what is most important and on those things we can best contribute. We do need to spend more time with Christ and not necessarily with more church meetings or longer hours at the office.
But is that what Jesus meant in Matthew 11:28? Did he really intend for us to see “rest” as trimming our schedules and priorities. This is the kind of use of the Bible that does not let God speak, but in reality trivializes the Scriptures.
Glance through the context of Jesus’ comments in Matthew 11 and you will find him most concerned with salvific issues – eternal rest. Jesus is promising a rest that is accompanied by the strain of a yoke (11:29). He is promising eternal life to the lost who find themselves under the pharisaically misplaced burden of the law upon a society who needed the joy of the law’s fulfillment in Christ. I didn’t see that within a few miles of Warren’s take on this passage.
This passage is precisely the passage I heard Rick Warren preach some years ago at a visit to Saddleback. He encouraged his audience to build “margin” into their lives and used this text as the basis for it. Some may think I am nitpicking. I don’t think so. What disturbs me most about the Warren movement is the lack of respect for the Bible. I know, I know, he uses more verses than most preachers when he writes and preaches. That’s the problem. He uses so many to say some good things, but in doing so, misses the point of the very passages to which he is appealing. In my estimation, it is epidemic in his ministry. My comments are not new news to anyone. But this is a blog – my personal blog and every now and then a rant is in order. This is at least one for this week.
Read Rick’s quick article and you will see how to say some good things and still miss God’s intention all in the same breath. May God help us pastors this week to be faithful with our own use of the Bible.
As a hungry Christian, wanting to please my Lord, i find the differing views amongst various denominations and Christian Leaders are disconcerting to say the least. How am i, and ordinary housewife who loves Jesus, supposed to learn when those much more knowledgeable and experienced cannot agree amongst themselves? I thank God for Jesus,
and simply hang on to Him, pleading for Him to feed me Himself. He must be so sad that His beloved Church is in such confusion. I love Him, and He loves me… Jesus is my cornerstone, my Rock and my best friend. Perhaps a childlike faith is essential in these latter days, as Jesus said it was in His day!! If so, i’m doing OK.
Enid,
I appreciate your comments. Any ordinary Christian can learn and sometimes learn well from examining some of the disagreements Christian leaders do have. I’m not talking about simply being disagreeable, but examining the details of the disagreement and the Scriptures involved. Acts 17:11 is a good model.
I hope you are in a good church that takes the opportunity to teach its members on the basics (and beyond) of good principles of biblical interpretation.
Part of holding on to Jesus, is making sure we do in the right way. Any reading of any of Paul’s epistles will demonstrate him dealing with disagreements with leaders. It is part of the battle for truth in which we all find ourselves.
I am simply pleading for a more a more faithful treatment of God’s word so God’s people won’t be so confused about what God intened for us to hear from Him.