Now let’s consider what it means to read the Bible as a
pilgrim.
"A pilgrim learns about
themselves, and you learn about yourself by leaving your home and looking at it
from a distance, you try to get closer to God through your travels.” Rick
Steeves.
I have asked
over the years, “Does a fish know that it lives in an aquarium?” This question
has been asked in many forms over the centuries, asking it can be quite the
journey, a pilgrimage. Can we answer the question without leaving the aquarium?
It is a
challenge to “leave your home and look at it from a distance.” Generally, this
is discouraged by the folks at home (in the aquarium). Whether it is a family, a business concern, a
religious tradition that exalts its practices and doctrinal distinctives, an
academic institution, a political or social movement…whatever the system may
be, traveling a distance and looking back to gain understanding is typically
considered a threat to the system, and threats are either subjugated and
brought back to be good little boys and girls, ostracized, or just plain destroyed.
Jesus was
constantly asking His hears to travel and look back, travel farther and look
back, travel even farther and look back again. “An hour is coming when neither
in this mountain nor in Jerusalem will you worship the Father…God is spirit,
and those who worship Him must worship in spirit and truth” (John 4:21, 24).
When Paul looked
back at his impeccable Jewish pedigree, he wrote, “Whatever things were gain to
me, those things I have counted as loss for the sake of Christ…I have suffered
the loss of all things, and count them but rubbish so that I may gain Christ”
(Phil. 3:7 – 8).
When we read the
Bible as a pilgrim, we learn to read the Bible not through the lens of our religious
tradition but rather learn to see our religious tradition through our reading
of the Bible. In America, we have the additional challenge of learning to see
our syncretistic Christianity through the Bible, seeing ourselves as Biblical
pilgrims – passing through the United States just as we are passing through the
world.
When we read as
a pilgrims we read as an aliens, as people whose eyes are heavenward (Col. 3:1 –
4; Heb. 11:8 – 16; 1 Peter 2:4 – 12).
We ask the Holy
Spirit to teach us about Jesus and about ourselves, with the Word of God
piercing into the depths of our beings (Heb. 4:12 – 13). As we come to realize
how intimately God knows us, we cry, “Search me, O God, and know my heart; try
me and know my anxious thoughts; and see if there be any hurtful way in me, and
led me in the Everlasting Way” (Psalm 139:23 – 24).
The greater the
distance between us and home, the more we realize that home is not home, the
more we realize that our Home is that City where the Father and the Lamb are
the Light (Rev. 21:22 – 23; 22:5). Now this can be a problem, for few people
want to hear this, speak this, know this, or practice this. We think the light
is in our tradition, our doctrinal distinctives, the history of our movement. In
America we think the light is in our syncretistic version of Christianity with its
creation myth along with its justification for conquest, war, and extermination
– and selling the souls of men (Rev. 18:13).
The farther we
travel as pilgrims, the deeper God speaks to us about ourselves and where we’ve
come from, and as we look back from a distance there may be things we are
thankful for, things we regret, things we see in a new perspective, and things
we dare no longer touch.
Pilgrimage is
not encouraged; questions are seldom welcomed. Mystery is not acknowledged, and
loose ends are quickly tied up or cut off. What do we fear? If Jesus Christ is
truly the Head of the Body and we are under His authority, if He is indeed our
Good Shepherd, then we can trust Him to care for us all on pilgrimage – we do
not need all the answers, but we sure do need Jesus.
I seldom meet
Christians on pilgrimage. I meet lots of Christians who care more about fitting
in with their religious system but don’t think about fitting in with Jesus,
about being conformed to His image. I have seldom heard a question asked in
Sunday school or in a small group that was searching and penetrating and which
had the potential to be life changing. True questions are not encouraged, on
the contrary, it is more important to articulate the “correct answers” and to
read the Bible in the image of our traditions, than to actually attempt to
touch the hem of His garment and behold the Face of the Lamb.
We should not be
surprised at this, it is our human condition, our center of gravity – it is a
challenge to gain perspective, and it is most certainly a challenge to go
against the grain of society and our associations. Perhaps this is particularly
true when we are in religious and political environments, environments in which
conformity is prized and insisted upon.
When we do sew a
new piece of cloth on an old garment, or pour new wine into old wineskins, we
soon have problems and find our actions quite unappreciated.
Ultimately, a
pilgrim becomes a pilgrim – at least that is a possibility. What I mean is that
the pilgrim may cross a point of no return in which his (or her) identity
ceases to be that home county which he has left, and becomes rooted in that heavenly
country which draws him with ever increasing desire.
The pilgrim
realizes that the Jerusalem here on earth is in bondage; whether it is a city
in the Middle East, or a flavor of doctrine, doctrinal distinctive, or particular
practices – the possibilities are myriad, they all fall aside as the pilgrim
beholds the Lamb. The pilgrim learns to live as a faithful citizen of heaven anticipating
that blessed hope of eternal transformation (Phil. 3:20 – 21).
The city from
which we departed appears dimmer and dimmer, indeed, without realizing it we cease
to look back, it fades from our minds…as the glorious City of the Father and
the Lamb descends from above into our hearts and minds, filling our souls,
quickening our spirits, uniting us to the Bridegroom, opening its gates and
calling us home – and we are pilgrims no longer.
“If they had
been mindful of that country from which they went out, they would have had
opportunity to return. But as it is, they desire a better country, that is, a
heavenly one. Therefore God is not ashamed to be called their God; for He has
prepared a City for them” (Hebrews 11:15 - 16).