Kevin Stilley

  • Home
  • Blog Posts
  • On the Air
  • Quotes
  • Site Archive

May 22, 2014 by kevinstilley

Lectio Divina

What’s in a name, that which we call a rose (Lectio Divina)
By any other name (Magic, Humanism, Neo-Orthoxy) would smell as sweet.

Increasingly Lectio Divina is being adopted and practiced by many in the Christian faith for whom I have great admiration. However, I believe that when practicing this ancient form of mysticism they are spiritually misled and/or misleading.

It is magic – In the process by which a practitioner of Lectio Divina conjures up the sacred state/crisis experience in which they converse with God, the neophyte is instructed to select a phrase or single word to focus on. They are instructed to clear their mind of anything they think they might know, and simply let God use that one word or phrase to convey His message which is discovered by the practitioner as he enters into a divine union with God. The practitioner is to completely disengage the word or phrase from its context for this stage of the process. Let me ask you what the difference would be between opening your Bible and focusing on the word “overwhelmed” from Psalm 124:4 and opening my dictionary and opening it to the O words and focusing upon the word “overwhelmed”? “Well,” one might say, “the answer is obvious, the Bible is God’s Word and the dictionary is just a book of words.” To that I would respond by saying that when you remove the word “overwhelmed” from the biblical text it also becomes just a word. And, if you think that it has some magical conjuring properties in this detached state just because you found it in God’s sacred book then you are no longer treating it as God’s Word, you are treating it as a magical talisman.

It is humanism – Thousands of years ago Protagoras declared “Homo mensura”, that is “man is the measure”. Today, Christians are reading the Bible and asking not “What hath God said?” but “What does it mean to me.” The Lectio Divina displaces God and promotes a self-centered humanism that makes man the measure rather than God’s revelation.

The Lectio Divina is neo neo-orthodoxy (existentialism) – it replaces the authority of Scripture (what it means) with the authority of experience. Believers responded to classical nineteenth century liberalism’s attack on the Scriptures by realigning into movements with various “authority” claims. (1) Fundamentalists reasserted the Scripture as authoritative for all things related to faith and practice; (2) Pentecostalism and its variants resorted to claims that the Holy Spirit is the authority for faith and practice; and (3) the Neo-orthodox who at least partially bought into nineteenth century liberalism’s criticism of the Bible but wanted to retain much of the Christian tradition gravitated into a camp in which the “experience of God” became the authority for faith and practice. The Lectio Divina uses the Bible only as the starting point, catalyst, religious talisman to get one to the “experience of God” and then this experience becomes the source of authority (“what does it mean to me”).

It is bad hermeneutics – Origen got the church off to a bad start in looking for hidden, figurative, allegorical messages in the Scripture. Now, we have Christians practicing the Lectio Divina who are using decontextualized clips of words from the Bible, memories from their past, and other “texts” to find the hidden, figurative, and allegorical messages that are available through a crisis experience with God. It was bad hermeneutics with Origen and it is bad hermeneutics today.

It denies in practice, if not in theological commitment, the verbal inspiration of Scripture. Those who hold to the verbal-plenary inspiration of Scripture believe that God inspired the very words of the text and thus the specific meaning of individual words is important. When those practicing the Lectio Divina remove a word from its context and then conjure up any of many different meanings (see how groups practice the Lectio Divina) then they are denying the importance of the meaning assigned by God. As my old linguistics professor, Kenneth Pike from Wycliffe, used to say “You will know a word by the company it keeps.”

The Lectio Divina is contrary to Scripture. There is much about the practice of Lectio Divina which is perfectly consistent with the teaching of sacred Scripture. But, there is also significant areas in which this spiritual practice diverges from the instruction of Scripture. The Scriptures do not tell us to clear our mind, they tell us to replace bad thoughts with good thoughts. The Psalmist does not create new truths when he meditates on God’s Word in Psalm 119, but he is wiser than all his teachers because his eyes were opened to the wonderful things found in the Law of God, not wonderful things found in his own imagination. We are not told to chant a single word from the Bible, but to study the Bible (2 Timothy 2:15)

Filed Under: Bibliology, Blog, Theology Tagged With: Bible, Bible Reading, Bible study, Lectio Divina, Meditation, Scripture

November 13, 2012 by kevinstilley

Women Reading The Bible

According to Barna Group’s 2011 annual State of the Church Report, Bible reading for women has declined by 10 percentage points during the last two decades; in 1991 half all American women indicated that they read their Bible during a typical week, today only 40% indicate that they read their Bible weekly. However, men are no less likely to read from the Bible these days than they were 20 years ago (41% in 2001, 40% in 1991).

This prompts the question of why the percentage has declined among women but not among men. I would not hazard a guess as to what factor or factors have led to this phenomena but I feel compelled to at least consider some possibilities. When historians see changes in one community but not in another they typically look at what might be influencing the affected community but not the unaffected community. For instance, when considering the Fall of Rome, a responsible historian will ask what factors were affecting the Western Roman Empire, but not the Eastern Roman Empire [Byzantine Empire] because the Eastern Roman Empire was thriving during the same time frame.

Can you think of change that has occurred during the last two decades that has affected women more than men and might be instrumental in women reading their Bible less than they did two decades ago?

__________

Related:

  • ESV Study Bible

Filed Under: Blog, Ethics / Praxis, What Do You Think?, Worship Tagged With: Bible Reading, women

November 25, 2009 by kevinstilley

The Bible: Where Should I Start?

I recently received the following questions:

First I wonder if you can give me any suggestions on what parts of scripture I should begin reading from?

And second can you recommend a book that gives an overview of each book in the bible and explains the significance of each chapter? Maybe a real good Commentary?

In one form or another, these questions seem to be asked of me with some frequency. When someone asks me where to start reading in the Bible I usually suggest one of the following three books:

a) If they are seeking something more than what they have but don’t really know for what (both Christians and non-Christians) I usually recommend The Gospel According to John

b) If they are a Christian at a crossroads and looking forward to an new era in their life – Philippians

c) If their faith demonstrates some level of maturity but they know they need to step it up a notch – Ephesians

Regarding Question #2, it is difficult to point to a good one-volume commentary, but my favorite one-volume guide to the Bible is J. Sidlow Baxter’s Explore the Book.

I also like Mark Dever’s books on The Message of the Old Testament: Promises Made and The Message of the New Testament: Promises Kept and they seem to be much more consistent with what this particular questioner is looking for.

So, what do you think? How would you respond to these questions?

__________

Related Content

  • Understanding Islam
  • Building A Theological Library
  • A List of Ephesians Resources
  • Textbooks

__________

Book Cover

(click on image)

.

Filed Under: Blog, Front Page, Theology Tagged With: Bible Reading, Bible study

June 30, 2009 by kevinstilley

Spiritual Disciplines for the Christian Life

Book Cover

Recent research conducted by the Barna Group found that religious leaders struggle when asked to describe what it means to be spiritually mature. How can one facilitate the spiritual growth of those within one’s sphere of influence if one cannot even describe the goal towards which we aspire?

Understanding spiritual maturity really isn’t that difficult. In Spiritual Disciplines for the Christian Life, Donald Whitney describes the object of our struggle as godliness – and the Biblical injunction to discipline ourselves for the purpose of godliness as leading to naturally expressing Christ’s character through our own personality. Simple, and clear.

Spiritual Disciplines for the Christian Life was written by Donald Whitney while he was serving as a local church pastor. He served twenty-four years in local church ministry before becoming a professor at Midwestern Baptist Theological Seminary and Southern Baptist Theological Seminary. His work displays the heart of a pastor and the head of a professor. His concern for those in his care and his desire for the spiritual growth of the readers of this book is evident on every page.

Whitney leads his readers in examining the following disciplines; Scripture reading, Scripture meditation, Scripture application, prayer, worship, evangelism, serving, stewardship, fasting, silence and solitude, journaling, and learning. The loving presentation, practical orientation, and solid Biblical foundation make this a book worth reading. In fact, J.I. Packer recommended that the book be read three times by each of its readers.

There are a few times along the way where I think Whitney extrapolates beyond the text of Scripture in ways with which I am not comfortable. Nevertheless, I add my voice to Packer’s in suggesting that this is a book that will benefit those who would discipline themselves for the purpose of godliness.

__________

* There is also a Study Guide available for this book for use in small group and individual study.

__________

RELATED CONTENT

  • Spiritual Growth, by Andrew Murray
  • The Pursuit of God, by A. W. Tozer
  • Matthew Henry’s Commentary on Ephesians 4:2-16

Filed Under: Blog, Books, Front Page, Spiritual Growth Tagged With: Barna Group, Bible Reading, discipline, Donald Whitney, fasting, Godliness, prayer, Spiritual Disciplines, Spiritual Growth, Spiritual Maturity

Recent Blog Posts

  • Discussion Questions for “The Language of God”
  • Billy Graham knew where he was going
  • Interesting quotes from “The Impeachment of Abraham Lincoln” by Stephen L. Carter
  • The Bible – select quotes
  • America’s Christian Heritage
  • Christian Involvement In Politics
  • Freedom – select quotes
  • Kevin Stilley on For Christ and Culture Radio
  • Early Western Civilization classroom resources
  • Early Western Civilization Final Exam

Currently Reading

Frankenstein

Twitter Feed

Tweets by @kevinstilley

Connect With Me On Twitter

Follow_me_on_Twitter

Connect With Me On Facebook

Receive My Monthly Newsletter


Copyright © 2023 · Executive Pro Theme on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in