Blessings and Responsibilities

We live in a time of unique blessings.  We have unmatched access to information on the internet.  We have more commentaries and Bible study resources than ever before (even online materials).  We have visual media unknown to previous generations.

I don’t think the best way to handle these changes is by ignoring them.  It may sound very pious to lock yourself in a study with just the Bible (especially an old translation), and live out a monastic sermon preparation process.  I think we should be grateful for whatever extra tools God has allowed us to access.  But with the blessing comes responsibility.

We may be able to do instant concordance searches and access lexical information at the touch of a mouse button.  So what do we do with the extra time no longer spent flicking through chunky tomes of fine print?  If the fruit of quicker access to information is cheaper exegesis, then the church will be all the poorer for these advances in technology. Let’s try to take the time our predecessors had to spend in page turning in prayerful interaction with the text and the sermon preparation process.

We are blessed by the visual media available to us.  When the Passion of the Christ was in the cinema I saw it with a group of men from our church.  Then I was preaching on the crucifixion and so went back to see it again, on my own.  It was very moving to watch through it again as part of my preparation.  Since many people were watching it, I wanted to make sure my sermon wouldn’t differ confusingly from the film.  But also, and more importantly, I had to make sure I preached the inspired text rather than Mel Gibson’s screenplay.  It was certainly a blessing to see.  Something previous generations never had.  But it added a responsibility, I had to check the passion narratives more.

We live in an age of many blessings, but we must not forget that with blessing there is usually responsibility too.

One thought on “Blessings and Responsibilities

  1. Sometimes this responsibility means wrestling with something a lot longer than we planned. We use all the technology, read the latest commentaries, and something still doesn’t seem right. It’s really tempting to stop and go with the popular commentary, but our responsibility call us to suck it up, knuckle down, and wrestle with the text, with God, and with ourselves until we figure it out.

    Sometimes, it’s a grand discovery (I had to take an extra day this week to wrestle with a few verses in 1 John 5, and made a really wonderful discovery after the tools left me feeling that they were missing something). Sometimes, it ends up being something that doesn’t make the final draft of our message. But we have the responsibility to find out, because you never know…

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