Tuesday, December 29, 2009

Fulfill William Tyndale's Dream

I've been reading some of John Piper's book Filling Up the Afflictions of Christ, covering the lives of William Tyndale, Adoniram Judson, and John Paton. William Tyndale was the first to give us a Bible in the English language. When talking to a Priest about this, Tyndale said, "If God spare my life ere many years, I will cause a boy that driveth the plow, shall know more of the Scripture than thou dost" (p. 30). His desire was that the common man would know the Bible as well as, and even better than, a priest would. Indeed, Tyndale gave his life to see the Bible written in the language of the common man and not limited to the scholarly and well-learned.
As we come up on 2010, I have a question for you: have you tried to fulfill Tyndale's lifelong dream? I read a statistic that more than 85% of Christians have never read the Bible all the way through. Am I the only one who has a problem with this? And, I can already hear some objections:
#1 - "The Old Testament is Dull and Dry"
#2 - "The Old Testament isn't important anymore - we have Jesus"
#3 - "I don't really see the point in reading the Bible"
I'd like to answer these objections with 2 Timothy 3:16-17: "All Scripture is breathed out by God and profitable for teaching, for reproof, for correction, and for training in righteousness, that the man of God may be competent, equipped for every good work." Consider these two verses for a minute.
1. "All Scripture is breathed out by God" - ALL of it. The genealogies, the laws, the prophets, the psalms, the histories - everything. The whole book is from God.
2. "All Scripture...is profitable" - The Law is useful, the genealogies are useful, the Gospels, the stories and the prophecies. Through these various means of communication, we learn what to believe, we learn what is wrong in us, we learn what to do about it, and we learn how to live. The reason is so that we can be "equipped for every good work." It's not just about reading it all and knowing it all - it is about changed lives. It is about us knowing God properly and being prepared to do his work in the world.
God wants us to know his Word so that we can be effective in his World. So I challenge you to read the Good Book this year. Make William Tyndale's dream come true: know the Scripture more this year.
If you'd like to read through the Bible this year, here are a couple of links to some plans that can help you do it:
Into Thy Word - This site has several plans for you to choose from. I'm using their Genres Plan this year. I have made this plan into easy-to-use bookmarks if you are interested. Leave a comment if you would like these bookmarks in a Word Document format.
Discipleship Journal Plan (via Bethlehem Baptist Church) - This has a plan that also prints out on convenient bookmarks for your reading. Also, this plan breaks the Bible into 300 reading days, giving you about 5 grace days every month. I used this plan a few years ago.
You can also Google search "Bible Reading Plans" and come up with a wealth of plans for your choosing. Or you can create your own plan. Whatever you decide, please choose - no, resolve - this year to help fulfill Tyndale's vision. Above all, I pray that God transforms us all this year as we look into his perfect Word. God bless you as you seek to know him more!

5 comments:

  1. Wow! this is good. thank you for reminding me how important God's word is! I only have one more book to read then I will be done with the hole book again. I am very excited about that. it took me 2 years to read a chapter per day.

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  2. God's word is indeed valuable. I have never read the Bible straight through but have read the entire Bible. Although lately I have been thinking year long Bible programs are good for some people but others need to read where God has them if it is a few verses, a chapter or a few, or a whole book. The point is to listen to God and draw close to Him not to see what I accomplished.

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  3. Good point, Jeremiah, about it not being about what we accomplish. I kind of focused my challenge in this blog on reading through in a year, but I understand that this is not necessary. I hope that people will see the importance of reading ALL of scripture and not just the parts they're comfortable with or the stuff they find interesting.

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  4. interesting piont of view! but it is ture also. one more chapter fro me then I am done fro the second time thrgouhg the Bible! I am very excited about that. I hope the new plan would owrk fro you this year.

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  5. Thanks Heybet! I'm enjoying the plan so far this year. It's interesting to change it up a little and read different parts of the Bible every day.

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