Remember the Bereans!
(Acts
By Bob Wilkin
The Principle Stated
After a short ministry in
Thessalonica, Paul moved on to
There’s an important
principle for all of us in Acts 17:11:
God wants us to listen thoughtfully and
critically to Bible teaching, taking care to evaluate the teaching based on
personal examination of Scripture.
Note that the people who
were more fair-minded and who received the word with all readiness and who then
searched the Scriptures daily, not just hearing Paul on the Sabbath, were unbelievers. They
were not yet convinced that these things were so. But they were open.
This verse destroys the
Reformed idea that unbelievers are like rocks and that they have no spiritual
sensitivity.
How Unbelievers Might Be Like the Bereans
When we share the saving
message with unbelievers, many simply reject what we say as out of hand because
it doesn’t match their tradition (Roman Catholic, Mormon,
On the other hand, we
sometimes meet an unbeliever who says something like this, “I’d like to believe
that. That would be great if it were true. While that makes sense in the verses
you showed me, I wonder about other verses in the Bible. I’m open, but I need
more evidence from the Bible.” That’s a Berean.
How Believers Might Be Like the Bereans
Of course, believers should
be Bereans as well. We shouldn’t be fooled by emotional singing followed by
sermons that are based on shoddy exegesis. Anecdotal evidence should carry no
weight with us. Berean believers need to see a truth taught in Scripture.
Illustrations won’t prove a truth for them.
Sadly many church people
today, including many born-again church
people, do not critically evaluate what they hear.
If they are moved by a great
worship team and a very emotional preacher, they may well be swept along by what
the preacher is saying without even engaging their minds as to whether what he
is saying is Biblical or not.
Many people assume that a
true story of a person must convey the truth the preacher says it conveys. Many
listeners don’t ask if the result in this case might be a coincidence. Worse
still, they don’t hold the principle the preacher is promoting up to the lens of
Scripture.
Berean believers cannot be
persuaded by stories and feelings. They must be convinced by the Word of God.
The opposite is also true.
Berean believers don’t let their tradition stand in the way of being open to
clear teaching from the Word of God.
Lots of believers
immediately reject that which is contrary to their tradition. Tell a person who
is a member of a Reformed church the Free Grace message and most will reject it
out of hand as easy believism and cheap grace.
Why? Because they have
searched the Scriptures to see if it was so and found out it wasn’t? No. Because
the Free Grace message is not the message of their church and so they rule it
out without even considering the Biblical evidence we give them.
Finally, Berean believers
encourage others to examine what they say in light of what the Bible says. You
can tell
Don’t Be a Calcified Christian!
Do you automatically reject
Bible teaching as out of hand if it contradicts your tradition, even if the
teaching explains the text well? If so, you’re a calcified Christian. Your
understanding of Scripture is petrified. It can’t change because your tradition
won’t let it change.
We can only be Bereans if we
receive the word with all readiness and
search the Scriptures to see if what we are hearing is true.
Now don’t get me wrong. On
milk of the Word issues we shouldn’t be searching the Scriptures over and over
again. Once we’ve done the searching, we should know.
I can’t tell you how much my
theology changed from 1978 till 1985 during my 7 years at DTS. And I can’t tell
you how much it changed between 1985 and today.
I’m still changing my
understanding of Scripture. I hope you are as well. None of us has a complete
and perfect understanding of the Word of God.
It is God’s Word, not our
tradition, which we must search. Traditions, even Free Grace traditions, may be
wrong. God’s Word isn’t.
To be a Berean you must be
open. You must search the Scriptures.
To be a Thessalonian all you
need to do is reject sound Bible teaching as contrary to your tradition. Don’t
pray about it. Don’t search the Bible. Don’t study further. Don’t meditate. Just
retreat back into your tradition, into your turtle shell of theology.
Novel Isn’t Right or Wrong
Recently a friend forwarded
an email he received from a
¨
the meaning of
repentance,
¨
the doctrine of
eternal rewards,
¨
the place of
God’s wrath for the believer,
¨
the meaning of the
term gospel,
¨
the concept of the
three tenses of salvation.
I had to smile, for my own
thinking has changed on every single one of those points from the traditions I
learned within Campus Crusade for Christ, the traditions I learned in Baptist
and Bible churches, and the traditions I learned at
I plead guilty to printing
things by other authors and writing things myself that go against long-held Free
Grace views on these and other issues.
Please bear with a personal
example. The first point the
From 1983-1985 I searched
the Scriptures about the doctrine of repentance. I wrote a 270-page dissertation
on the subject. My advisor on the dissertation was
Five years later, in 1990,
When I saw what Zane wrote,
I was open but unconvinced. I couldn’t find fault in the way he explained the
Scriptures on this subject. But I still had trouble with a handful of passages
that, at the time, I still thought taught the Greek word
metanoia was a condition of
everlasting life.
My thought at the time was
that if I could be convinced that those verses didn’t teach that, then I would
be convinced.
It took about 7 years, but
by 1997 I was convinced that repentance isn’t a condition of eternal life and
that it isn’t changing one’s mind about Christ.
That wasn’t easy for me. It
was seven years of thinking about certain texts, a little at a time. But it was
necessary if I was to grow as a believer. If I clung to a position simply
because it fit my tradition and it seemed right to me, then I would never change
any views.
I’ve come to the point where
I am very excited when I see for the first time a truth that before that was
hidden to me in the Scriptures. When that happens it is like a flower unfolding.
I see the Scriptures in a new light. My view of Christianity becomes a little
bit clearer that it was before. My enthusiasm for the life to come grows a bit
more.
Here is ways to look at
being or not being a Berean: If you cling doggedly to your tradition, you aren’t a Berean. Put
another way: If you listen carefully
whenever you hear God’s Word being taught, are open, and compare what you hear
to other Scriptures, even if what you are hearing contradicts something you
already believe, you are a Berean.
None of us has arrived. We
always have room to grow. No
Fortunately for us, the Free
Grace tradition is one grounded on searching the Scriptures. We have lots of
role models.
I have friends and mentors
who have modeled this truth for me. What a privilege it has been for me to know
people who, throughout their lives, have searched the Scriptures diligently and
daily. That has had a powerful impact on me. Seeing real life Bereans has made
me long to be one too.
Listen
Thoughtfully and Critically
God wants us to listen
thoughtfully and critically to Bible teaching, taking care to evaluate the
teaching based on personal examination of Scripture. Remember the Bereans!
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