I have to admit that when I was at school (many, many moons ago!) I was more of a Maths person. I loved Algebra. To me it seemed more like a game, solving a puzzle. What I never really liked was the science subjects. (Sorry to all you scientists out there.) We had to take at least one science subject so I decided on Biology. I always found reading the scientific books very hard going, especially when they used Latin terminology. But I did enjoy the practical lessons. After carrying out some experiment, the dull, boring books somehow came to life. On doing the experiments and discovering the results, the written word began to make some sense. Even now I love watching nature documentaries and seeing things that you can only imagine when you read about them.
The written word, although necessary and good for reference is only part of the whole picture. So many people refer to sacred texts as though they are the be all and end all of religious thought. We call the Bible the Word of God. Many take that to mean that there was no word from God before the Bible or has been since. For them the written word in the Bible is the sum total of what God is and what his truth means almost to the point of worshipping the written word. But God's first words were of creation - and God said ... .... Throughout the Bible we have stories of God's word. He gave the commandments, written words, rules of dos and don'ts as a guide. He spoke through prophets in order to bring his words alive. Often the prophets would actually live out their prophecies so people could see what they meant. And then of course, Jesus came to show us what God is like - the (written) word made flesh. We can read something and not really grasp the full meaning until we actually see it lived out.I like to think of nature as the first Bible - the spoken word of God as opposed to the written word. Our faith should not be just about the written word, theology, the things that we believe. It's not about reciting creeds, dogmas and belief systems. The written word should always point to the living word. We are each a living example of our faith. The Celtic British monk Pelagius (c 354 - 418) once said,
'It is not what you believe that matters, it is how you respond with your heart and your actions. It is not believing in Christ that matters, it is becoming like him.'
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| Red Admiral butterfly |
Unfortunately we moved all-knowing of God largely into the realm of argumentative words, which extremely narrowed the field of knowing and actually experiencing.
I wish we could take on board God's living word and learn from it more and not be so dogmatic about our personal and particular interpretation of the written word so that our experience of him becomes deeper and more meaningful - his living word becoming flesh in and through us.

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