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Andy Stanley’s tweet about the Bible is seductive and harmful: Can One's Personal Experience Supersede Scripture?
Christian Post ^ | 03/21/2022 | Mark Creech

Posted on 03/21/2022 8:37:27 PM PDT by SeekAndFind

The recent now-deleted tweet by Andy Stanley, son of famed pastor emeritus Charles Stanley of the First Baptist Church, Atlanta, reads:

“The Christian faith doesn’t rise and fall on the accuracy of 66 ancient documents. It rises and falls on the identity of a single individual: Jesus of Nazareth.”

Stanley’s tweet was taken from a sermon he preached on March 6 at Browns Bridge Church in Cumming, Georgia.

When first reading the tweet on social media, I was saddened and sickened. This kind of statement was all too familiar to me. I had often heard it made by the moderates and liberals who were in control of the Southern Baptist Convention back in the '80s. I had defended the faith against this kind of approach to the Scriptures in the Baptist Associations where I had served — a time when my support for the Bible as divine and totally without error was in the minority and marginalized.

This kind of doctrinal error is what conservatives worked and sacrificed to save the Southern Baptist Convention from and succeeded. Moreover, other denominations that embraced what Stanley was teaching ended up on the trash heap of spiritual impotence or blatant apostasy.

It was, therefore, quite painful for me to hear a prominent preacher with the considerable influence of Stanley, one who has affirmed his own belief in inerrancy, declare something so contrary to that affirmation.

Unfortunately, Andy Stanley’s view of the Bible is not uncommon today in many seminaries and various mainline denominations that were once faithful. It holds if one argues for the highest view of Scripture as the Church did in the past, then one is in danger of a form of idolatry, elevating the Bible above Jesus, and therefore, guilty of the sin of Bible worship. In other words, you can make the Bible even more important than Jesus. You can give the Bible a prominence the Lord himself didn’t give it.

This is a seductive and harmful argument for those who may not know any better. It’s really a departure from the doctrine handed down by the Church, which has always maintained Christ, the Living Word, so identified himself with the Written Word, the Holy Scriptures, that no teacher can diminish the authority of one without also equally diminishing the authority of the other.

No one ever held a higher view of Scripture than Jesus did. In fact, over and again, Jesus encouraged everyone to judge his entire person and work by what the Scriptures said. In the Sermon on the Mount, Jesus declared he didn’t come to oppose or supersede the Scriptures, but to fulfill them exactly — completely — to fulfill every “jot and tittle” (Mt. 5:17-20).

Years ago, after leaving the pastorate to become the Christian Action League’s executive director, I joined a church where a man came before the congregation as a pastoral candidate. First, the candidate made a general statement about his doctrinal beliefs and church polity and then fielded questions from the audience.

One statement the candidate made was a red flag for me. He said he believed Southern Baptists had elevated the Bible above Jesus. So, before the entire church, I asked him to please explain what he meant.

To the point of embarrassment, the candidate kept avoiding a direct answer to the question by talking about things that weren’t pertinent. When he finally got around to addressing it, he did so in vague generalities, which essentially amounted to no answer at all.

At last, I sought to pin him down and asked: “Please tell us plainly. Do you believe the Bible is the infallible and inerrant Word of God? Yes or No?” His response was honest, but revealing when he replied, “No, I don’t.”

At this point, the candidate became very angry and began to attack my person with insults, declaring he believed the Bible as much as me. I responded that not only did he not believe the Bible as much as me, but he didn’t believe it as much as the people in that church. I then said to him, “You believe the Bible contains the Word of God, but you don’t believe it’s all the Word of God. Correct?” He acknowledged my assessment of his beliefs was accurate.

“Well, I agree with the candidate,” one lady said as she jumped to her feet to defend him. “He’s right! I think our denomination has wrongly given more prominence to the Scriptures than to Jesus.” To which I replied to her, “Please tell me how any of us can know anything authoritative about Jesus outside of the Bible?”

The candidate then replied, “I know! By experience!”

“Experience?” I responded. “And by what standard shall we measure the reality or truth of one’s experience without a Bible that does not err, and is authoritative in everything?” I asked. “How can we tell whether our experience is from God or the devil? Are we to believe our experience can never lead us astray — that our experience will never lead us to a counterfeit Christ?”

No one said anything further and the candidate withdrew his name for consideration, saying he could never be in a church with someone like me. Others, however, argued that I had just saved the church from many troubles and possible failure.

The crux of the matter is abundantly clear for those willing to think and look to the Scriptures. What Andy Stanley espouses is not what Jesus believed and taught about Scriptural authority. Let’s not forget Jesus Himself submitted to the Scriptures. Our Lord so identified Himself and his ministry with Scripture that he affirmed to the degree that one accepts the Scriptures is the degree to which one may know Him.

It should trouble us greatly anytime someone holds a different view of the Written Word than the one held by the Living Word, the Lord Jesus Christ. It ultimately leads to making our own opinions, beliefs and experiences the authority rather than God’s revelation. Such only leads to error, compromise, and a falling away from the faith.


Rev. Mark H. Creech is Executive Director of the Christian Action League of North Carolina, Inc. He was a pastor for twenty years before taking this position, having served five different Southern Baptist churches in North Carolina and one Independent Baptist in upstate New York.


TOPICS: Evangelical Christian; Religion & Culture; Theology
KEYWORDS: andystanley; bible; scripture
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To: BiglyCommentary
Very true.

Anyone who has read the Bible cover-to-cover will learn that there is much in it that requires some deep digging to understand.

As Michael Heiser says (I paraphrase), context is everything...and context keeps getting more clearly defined as our understanding of ancient Jewish culture grows.

There is no doubt that the Bible is a miracle itself and supernatural, but there has been much misinterpretation and misunderstanding of it.

21 posted on 03/22/2022 2:17:23 AM PDT by RoosterRedux
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To: Cronos

Very thoughtful. It is what distinguishes Christianity, from say Mad Mo Religion, which has belief that the Koran exists in arabic in a pre existent, archetype form. Christianity believes that Jesus himself was ‘the Word’, not a book being the word. Paul makes it clear the bible was the result of God inspiring the creation of the text. But the text was not pre existent. So what does that mean for a Christian. Simply that the written word speaks about the Word but is not the Word. It is to be revered, but it is not the subject or relic to worshipped in and of itself.


22 posted on 03/22/2022 2:17:23 AM PDT by Long Jon No Silver
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To: Maudeen

This could be said of a few other preachers, including Raul Ries and Chuck Smith. Their sons are caricatures, not preachers. I have to believe it is all part of the falling away from the faith that the Bible speaks about in prophecy that we have been seeing for some time now.


23 posted on 03/22/2022 2:26:51 AM PDT by AmericanMermaid
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To: Long Jon No Silver
It is what distinguishes Christianity, from say Mad Mo Religion, which has belief that the Koran exists in arabic in a pre existent, archetype form.

Correct. The Koran in Islam takes the place of Jesus in Christianity

Sunni, Shia and Ibadi (but not Ismaili I think) believe that the Koran was not created but pre-existed before creation, so it takes the place of Jesus in their religion.

The correspondence for the Bible is the Hadith and Sirah

Simply that the written word speaks about the Word but is not the Word. It is to be revered, but it is not the subject or relic to worshipped in and of itself. -- yes!!

24 posted on 03/22/2022 2:34:57 AM PDT by Cronos
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To: RoosterRedux

Hezekiah 4:2 clearly warns us about believing whatever anyone says, just because they claim it’s in The Bible. LOL


25 posted on 03/22/2022 2:42:01 AM PDT by BiglyCommentary
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To: SeekAndFind

“Please tell me how any of us can know anything authoritative about Jesus outside of the Bible?”

THAT is the right question.

“By experience!”

And THAT is THE WRONG answer; “experience” could be something you had for lunch talking back to you.

No! The CORRECT answer is, “By The Holy Spirit.” For, although we DO experience Him, He is not “AN Experience”; He is the VERY Person of The Living God sent among us at Pentecost, and — God HELP US — how we have, in our fleshly fear, shunned, compartmentalized, muted, and diminished Him!

But God has not give us a Spirit that makes us timid cowards, but One of POWER, and of LOVE, and of erudite judgment!

ABSOLUTELY, The Scriptures are “The Chariot The Spirit Most Prefers to be carried in,” and the Holy Spirit WILL NOT EVER say ANYTHING that contradicts what is written (although it may clash with how some have interpreted what is written, but that’s different), but he is not confined to what is written. He is The Second Person of the Eternal, Immortal, Immutable, Infinite God, and He is not bounded by ANY THING; He establishes bounds for everything, but He, Himself remains boundless. What is written establishes The Foundation, and the Framework, and all that The Holy Spirit says will comport with, and affirm it, but He will also elaborate, furbish, embellish, and — yea — even complete it in due course.

HEAR HIM!


26 posted on 03/22/2022 2:44:30 AM PDT by HKMk23 (https://youtu.be/LTseTg48568)
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To: Cronos

Good stuff Cronos


27 posted on 03/22/2022 2:53:57 AM PDT by Long Jon No Silver
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To: BiglyCommentary
My favorite quote from the book of Hezekiah is 12:4...
If a man fails to clean his cat's litterbox daily, take him outside the gates of the city and stone him.
Anyone who understands context knows the real interpretation of this verse is "anyone who fails to clean the litterbox daily is probably stoned (i.e., smoking dope)."
28 posted on 03/22/2022 2:54:57 AM PDT by RoosterRedux
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To: HKMk23

Magnificent!


29 posted on 03/22/2022 2:55:46 AM PDT by Long Jon No Silver
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To: BiglyCommentary
The basic guidelines used by the early Church for accepting a book into the New Testament:
1. Was the book written by a prophet of God?
2. Was the writer confirmed by acts of God?
3. Does the message tell the truth about God?
4. Did it come with the power of God?
5. Was it accepted by God’s people?

Truth cannot contradict itself, so agreement with the other books of Scripture was only logical, as was historical accuracy - if the facts of a book were not accurate, it couldn’t have been from God.

30 posted on 03/22/2022 3:11:17 AM PDT by Psalm 73 ("You'll never hear surf music again" - J. Hendrix)
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To: BiglyCommentary

In Seminary, my favorite class was studying Hezekiah. Good stuff. 😉


31 posted on 03/22/2022 3:39:16 AM PDT by MayflowerMadam (When government fears the people, there is liberty.)
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To: Psalm 73
Truth cannot contradict itself

But what is truth? - (hmmm... heard that before...) Is it your interpretation of a verse or is it mine? It is your sect's interpretation or my sect's interpretation? Not as clean and checklist checkoff simple as some would make it out to be.

We are in the year 2022. There is still debate as to the origins of which early church manuscripts, were the most accurate. Example:

https://www.ancient-hebrew.org/studies-nt/greek-and-aramaic-manuscripts-of-the-new-testament.htm

Comparing the Greek and Aramaic New Testaments

Matthew 19:24 (a camel or rope?)

Greek Translation (KJV): "And again I say unto you, It is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle, than for a rich man to enter into the kingdom of God."

Aramaic text: "And again I say to you, that it is easier for a rope to enter into the eye of a needle than for a rich man to enter into the kingdom of God."

32 posted on 03/22/2022 3:41:18 AM PDT by BiglyCommentary
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To: SeekAndFind
“The Christian faith doesn’t rise and fall on the accuracy of 66 ancient documents. It rises and falls on the identity of a single individual: Jesus of Nazareth.”

How clueless can someone be? He clearly never thought through his position. I can’t even call it reasoning because there is no reason in it.

Perhaps he could instruct us on how we know about Jesus without those “66 ancient documents”.

33 posted on 03/22/2022 3:42:49 AM PDT by metmom (...fixing our eyes on Jesus, the Author and Perfecter of our faith…)
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To: SeekAndFind; Alex Murphy; boatbums; CynicalBear; daniel1212; ealgeone; Elsie; Gamecock; HossB86; ...

Ping


34 posted on 03/22/2022 3:44:15 AM PDT by metmom (...fixing our eyes on Jesus, the Author and Perfecter of our faith…)
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To: Cronos

39 books. The non-canonical books of the apocrypha don’t count. Why is it Jesus never quoted from any books of the apocrypha?


35 posted on 03/22/2022 3:46:55 AM PDT by Old Yeller (A nation of sheep, produces a government of wolves.)
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To: SeekAndFind

The only thing that makes the Bible infallible is the death and resurrection of the person of Jesus. It is confessing Jesus as Lord and believing in our hearts that God has raised him from the dead that introduces us to everlasting life. The information for such a salvation is found in the scriptures.

Paul said:”If there be no resurrection of the dead, then let us eat and drink for tomorrow we die!” The resurrection is the ultimate center of the Bible’s power. If there never was a resurrection, the the Bible is just another fallible work of man. The Bible is infallible because we believe Christ rose from the dead.

It is kind of an irony that the scripture “All scripture is God breathed and profitable for reproof and doctrine...” is found in 2 Timothy 3:16...since it dovetails so neatly with John 3:16. To me...those are the two most important “chapter 3 verse 16’s” in the entire bible and they go together like bacon and eggs. The only thing the Bereans had for scripture was the old Testament and perhaps a few letters and early books of the Disciples. It takes the old Testament to give depth to the new testament but the new testament explains what the Old testament was leading to...the death and resurrection of Jesus and of his sacrifice that cleanses us of sin and all of our unrighteousness.

Now the best answer to give to those who detract from the Bible citing...this “source” or that “wrongly translated verse” is simply to cite 2 Timothy 3:16 and keep repeating it until they agree or scoff at you and stalk off.

The earliest church creeds...the apostles creed for example provide a good templates thru which, with the help of the Spirit, the Bible can begin to be read and understood. The Old Testament is threaded thru with the person of Jesus Christ, once you know how to look for him (and the creeds can provide a simple exposition of the faith)*...after all Jesus is that “WORD MADE FLESH!”. That is why he said...”Ye search the scriptures for eternal life. These are they that testify of me.”

*I think the early church creeds were sort of the first gospel style religious tracts...easily written down, memorized and passed around. Think what you will of tracts..even the “Chick” ones...they have their place! The creeds were not “the Bible” but the Bible supports what they say, especially about the person of Jesus Christ.


36 posted on 03/22/2022 3:48:49 AM PDT by mdmathis6 (Democrats and Biden...We are sore...We don't want no Ukraine war...no Blood for Burisma!)
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To: SeekAndFind

My nephew attended Andy Stanley’s church for years. I went with them once when I was visiting Atlanta and it was shameful. I walked out.

They haven’t returned since Covid, and I think they might be better off spiritually to go nowhere than to attend that “church”. (It’s a combo of social club and cult.)


37 posted on 03/22/2022 3:55:22 AM PDT by MayflowerMadam (When government fears the people, there is liberty.)
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To: Big Red Badger

“The Word was with God and the Word was God”


38 posted on 03/22/2022 3:56:38 AM PDT by MayflowerMadam (When government fears the people, there is liberty.)
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To: MayflowerMadam

Hezekiah 4:3-7.


39 posted on 03/22/2022 3:59:38 AM PDT by gitmo (If your theology doesn't become your biography, what good is it?)
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To: Old Yeller

Matt. 6:19-20 – Jesus’ statement about laying up for yourselves treasure in heaven follows Sirach 29:11 – lay up your treasure.

Matt.. 7:12 – Jesus’ golden rule “do unto others” is the converse of Tobit 4:15 – what you hate, do not do to others.

Matt. 7:16,20 – Jesus’ statement “you will know them by their fruits” follows Sirach 27:6 – the fruit discloses the cultivation.

Matt. 9:36 – the people were “like sheep without a shepherd” is same as Judith 11:19 – sheep without a shepherd.

Matt. 11:25 – Jesus’ description “Lord of heaven and earth” is the same as Tobit 7:18 – Lord of heaven and earth.

Matt. 12:42 – Jesus refers to the wisdom of Solomon which was recorded and made part of the deuterocanonical books.

Matt. 16:18 – Jesus’ reference to the “power of death” and “gates of Hades” references Wisdom 16:13.

Matt. 22:25; Mark 12:20; Luke 20:29 – Gospel writers refer to the canonicity of Tobit 3:8 and 7:11 regarding the seven brothers.

Matt. 24:15 – the “desolating sacrilege” Jesus refers to is also taken from 1 Macc. 1:54 and 2 Macc. 8:17.

Matt. 24:16 – let those “flee to the mountains” is taken from 1 Macc. 2:28.

Matt. 27:43 – if He is God’s Son, let God deliver him from His adversaries follows Wisdom 2:18.

Mark 4:5,16-17 – Jesus’ description of seeds falling on rocky ground and having no root follows Sirach 40:15.

Mark 9:48 – description of hell where their worm does not die and the fire is not quenched references Judith 16:17.

Luke 1:42 – Elizabeth’s declaration of Mary’s blessedness above all women follows Uzziah’s declaration in Judith 13:18.

Luke 1:52 – Mary’s magnificat addressing the mighty falling from their thrones and replaced by lowly follows Sirach 10:14.

Luke 2:29 – Simeon’s declaration that he is ready to die after seeing the Child Jesus follows Tobit 11:9.

Luke 13:29 – the Lord’s description of men coming from east and west to rejoice in God follows Baruch 4:37.

Luke 21:24 – Jesus’ usage of “fall by the edge of the sword” follows Sirach 28:18.

Luke 24:4 and Acts 1:10 – Luke’s description of the two men in dazzling apparel reminds us of 2 Macc. 3:26.

John 1:3 – all things were made through Him, the Word, follows Wisdom 9:1.

John 3:13 – who has ascended into heaven but He who descended from heaven references Baruch 3:29.

John 4:48; Acts 5:12; 15:12; 2 Cor. 12:12 – Jesus’, Luke’s and Paul’s usage of “signs and wonders” follows Wisdom 8:8.

John 5:18 – Jesus claiming that God is His Father follows Wisdom 2:16.

John 6:35-59 – Jesus’ Eucharistic discourse is foreshadowed in Sirach 24:21.

John 10:22 – the identification of the feast of the dedication is taken from 1 Macc. 4:59.

John 10:36 – Jesus accepts the inspiration of Maccabees as He analogizes the Hanukkah consecration to His own consecration to the Father in 1 Macc. 4:36.

John 15:6 – branches that don’t bear fruit and are cut down follows Wis. 4:5 where branches are broken off.


40 posted on 03/22/2022 3:59:56 AM PDT by Cronos
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