Christianity Today
The Good Book Is Great
A secularist reads the Bible all the way through, and discovers why It is the most influential Book in all the Western Canon.
For too many Decembers, I told myself while decorating our tree that I really ought to re-read the gospels – or at least the dramatic nativity scene from Luke depicted in “A Charlie Brown Christmas.”
A sudden decision to read the entire Bible
Like a lot of my resolutions, that one died on the shelf. It wasn’t because I disdained faith; I was a religion minor in college. But, as a secular person reared among like-minded people, I always felt there were better ways to learn and grow.
Then, about two years ago, I decided to read the entire Bible. I wasn’t driven by a spiritual awakening or hunger but, instead, by feelings of profound ignorance. Many moons ago, when I reviewed books for a living, I quoted the Victorian poet and critic Matthew Arnold, who wrote that learning should focus on “the best that has been thought and said” in order to understand the human spirit. Yet, I had never seriously engaged the most popular and influential Book* in the history of Western civilization. The embarrassment I would have felt if I’d never read Shakespeare or “Don Quixote” – and that I still feel in my failure to tackle Joyce – had never previously extended to the Bible.
The Bible connects the reader with humanity
If I had a deeper yearning, it was not to find meaning through faith. It was to connect with humanity. How could I understand who we are – who I am – if I didn’t know the stories we had long told ourselves to explain … everything? I also recalled the words that had fallen on my deaf ears years before from one of the most erudite people I’d ever known – the gay Christian poet and novelist Reynolds Price – who expressed amazement that so many people blithely dismissed ideas that had been embraced almost unanimously by the most brilliant and learned figures of the last 2,000 years.
I knew I couldn’t do it alone: Understanding the complex text required conversation; the Book was so long, it would be easy to stop reading without an obligation to others. A small group of committed Christians – including a doctor, a lawyer, and a college professor – agreed to meet once a month for a year as long as I supplied the pizza. It turned out to be one of the great reading experiences of my life; even Leviticus had its moments.
Books read us
It’s been said that we don’t read books, but books read us – we reveal the peculiar turns in our own minds by what we find interesting in them. As someone who writes about politics in an era of misinformation, I was especially struck by the deeply subversive nature of a Work commonly cast as a constricting Force of conformity. In a world so often ruled by power, wealth, and sharp-elbowed self-interest, the Bible trumpets the opposite values: love, compassion, and the equality of all people made in God’s image. What a rebuke to the realpolitik of pharaohs, kings, prime ministers, and presidents!
It is also the most Unlikely of stories. That the tribal god of the Jews – a small, relatively weak people whose history is often marked by oppression – would become the foundation of faith for billions of people is astonishing. So, too, is the fact that one of those Jews, a poor man who preached for just three years, who cast himself as the son of God – which, let’s be honest, is textbook crazy – died a criminal’s death, became, well, Jesus Christ!
To top it off, St. Peter, St. Paul, and many other early churchmen who spread the chief Thing Jesus left behind, the sometimes cryptic Message contained in a few thousand words, were themselves executed, which underscores Christianity’s remarkable rise.
An ironically powerful Message
Suffering and death. If one were setting out to craft a narrative to conquer the world, it is hard to believe anyone would concoct this Plot. Every element seems built for failure, especially the core commandments of both testaments, which seem so completely at odds with our Darwinian nature: “Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart” and “Love thy neighbor as thyself.”
And yet this Story – Which exposes the gulf between who we often are and who we yearn to be – became the chief Cornerstone not just of Western thought but of our experience. Finishing the Bible, I have never felt so connected to, or been filled with such love for, humanity. That our long-dead ancestors created and bequeathed to us this Vision of the better angels of our nature seemed an act of radical generosity. That this was the Message we have trumpeted above all others and against all odds through the millennia reveals the kindness and hope at our core.
Only beautiful creatures could have done that. Oh, lucky man!
This article was originally published by RealClearPolitics and made available via RealClearWire.
*Capitalized by reason of What the Bible is, the inerrant Word of God, not necessarily on account of what any reader might think It is – Editor
J. Peder Zane is a columnist for RealClearPolitics and an editor at RealClearInvestigations. He was the book review editor and books columnist for the News & Observer of Raleigh for 13 years, where his writing won several national honors, including the Distinguished Writing Award for Commentary from the American Society of Newspaper Editors. He has also worked at the New York Times and taught writing at Duke University and Saint Augustine’s University. He has written two books, “Off the Books: On Literature and Culture,” and “Design in Nature” (with Adrian Bejan). He edited two other books, “Remarkable Reads: 34 Writers and Their Adventures in Reading” and “The Top Ten: Writers Pick Their Favorite Books.”
Note: the profile image by Ellen Whyte is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-alike 4.0 International License.
-
Executive1 day agoFBI Raided Secret Service Agent’s Home in Tax Fraud Probe
-
Executive4 days agoTrump Ditches ‘The Weave,’ Delivers Sales Pitch Susie Wiles Asked For
-
Executive4 days agoWaste of the Day: Outlays Per Person Up Nearly 100X Since 1916
-
Executive4 days agoJudge Green-Lights Secret Service Agent’s Retaliation Case
-
Christianity Today3 days agoYou Must Know His Voice – Powerful Video
-
Guest Columns3 days agoBlood on the Sand: Australian Massacre Exposes Hollow Core of Anti-Zionism
-
Civilization2 days agoWork, Welfare, and the Illusion of a New Eden
-
Executive3 days agoWaste of the Day: Superintendent Resigns, Nets Over $900K

