A Message For All Time
A Message For All Time
A Message For All Time
HP142
Jack Kuhatschek
introduction
A Message for All Time
Understanding and Applying
the Bible
1
Einstein’s quest continues to this day. Some
call it the Unified Field Theory. Others describe
it as the Grand Unification Theory. Perhaps the
most popular label is the Theory of Everything.
Although I have little in common with Albert
Einstein, I too have been captivated by the thought
of a Grand Unifying Theory, one for the Bible—
a simple yet elegant theory that captures all of the
facts from Genesis to Revelation, all the teaching
of Scripture, and sums it up in a way that even a
child can grasp.
Why? Because understanding the Grand
Unifying Theory of the Bible reveals the heart and
mind of God and what is most important to Him
both now and throughout eternity. It helps us grasp
the driving force that should direct our lives, and
the primary purpose for which we were created.
My search was rewarded one evening while
having dinner with a seminary professor. I asked
him why so many chapters in Exodus are devoted
to seemingly endless details for building the
tabernacle. “Oh, that’s easy,” he said. “God Himself
was coming to live with His people!” That simple
response became the key that unlocked the
meaning of Scripture. I discovered that this master
key fit the entire story of the Bible from beginning
to end. In fact, in one of the final chapters of the
Bible, the apostle John writes the following climax
to his great vision:
Introduction 3
one of us and then by dying on the cross to remove
the gulf that separated us from Him.
When you realize that the Bible isn’t primarily
about rules but relationships, your Scripture
reading will be transformed. And when you
discover that God’s Word isn’t mainly about laws
but love, you’ll feel the heartbeat of the One who
made you for Himself.
The following pages are written to help you
understand and apply the Bible. But as you
embark on this important journey, always let the
“Grand Unifying Theory” be the North Star that
guides you to your destination.
Jack Kuhatschek
step one
Understanding the
Original Situation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .7
step two
Finding General Principles . . . . . . . . . . .21
step three
Applying General
Principles Today . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31
This booklet adapted from Applying the Bible: A practical down-to-earth guide to
helping you get more out of your Bible reading than you ever imagined!
by Jack Kuhatschek. Copyright © 1990 by Jack Kuhatschek.
Unless otherwise noted, all Scripture quotations are from the HOLY BIBLE, NEW
INTERNATIONAL VERSION® NIV® Copyright © 1973, 1978, 1984, 2011 by Biblica, Inc.®.
Used by permission. All rights reserved worldwide.
7
tank, clean the windshield and check the oil. Gas is 19
cents a gallon, and Cokes are 5 cents. As we watch the
movie, we are struck with how odd life used to be and
how much things have changed!
We also realize how many things are the same. Being a
teenager is as awkward now as then. We still have school,
homework, parties, friendships and first love. People still
cruise down the road with their favorite music blaring from
the radio. Little boys will always
tease their sisters, and although
Coke is no longer 5 cents, people
still love to drink it. What’s so
different?
We have a similar experience
when we read the Bible. Many Again and again,
things seem strange or unfamiliar. the Bible shows
People wear sandals, ride camels, us how God was
and live in tents. They offer patiently and
animal sacrifices and consider mercifully caring
pork “unclean.” They worship on
for His people
Saturday and work on Sunday.
When a woman can’t have children, and calling them
she allows her husband to marry to love Him and
her female servant. What a one another.
different world!
Of course, many things seem
just the same. The people in the Bible struggle with
temptation and have difficulty trusting God. So do we.
We identify with Job’s suffering, even though he lived
4,000 years ago. Husbands still need to love their wives,
Time Travel
In a sense, studying and applying the Bible is like entering
a time machine. We must cross the barriers of time,
language, culture, and geography in order to understand
the people of the Bible and how God’s Word applied to
the situations they faced. How we do that is the goal of
this section.
Then, when we have understood how God’s Word
applied to the people of that century, we reenter the time
machine and return to the 21st century. Now we are
able to reflect on how Scripture applies to our time and
culture and the problems we face. That will be the goal of
later sections.
Our time machine is constructed from the various
tools available to the modern student of the Bible. With
Careful Reading
Imagine that you have entered the time machine and have
completely crossed the barriers of time, language, culture
and geography. You are in Corinth in the first century.
You are dressed in Greek clothes. You speak Greek fluently
and know the surrounding culture and geography. You are
even a regular visitor in the church at Corinth and are
intimately acquainted with the people and problems in
the church.
As you are gathering for worship in a nearby home, a
messenger comes to the door with a letter from Paul, the
letter we now call 1 Corinthians. You unroll the scroll
and begin reading the letter (in Greek, of course!). Does
the fact that you have successfully crossed the barriers
of time, language, culture, and geography mean that you
will automatically understand what Paul is saying to the
Corinthians? Not necessarily.
The apostle Peter was one of Paul’s contemporaries and
still found some things in his letters “hard to understand”
(2 peter 3:16). Of course Peter’s difficulty may have been
that Paul was unclear in places. But even when Paul
21
Lucy’s bacon. Then he would conclude his lengthy prayer
by mentioning whatever remained on the table: “Thank
you for the salt, thank you for the pepper, thank you for
the butter, and thank you for the jelly. In Jesus’ name,
Amen.” At that point everyone would breathe a sigh of
relief and begin the now-cold meal.
One morning he surprised everyone. The usual, awful
moment had arrived. The other family members bowed
their heads, folded their hands and bit their lips. They
all knew it would be five to ten minutes before they
could taste the hickory-smoked bacon and the golden
pancakes or drink their orange juice and once-hot coffee.
The youngest began as usual, but astonished everyone
by saying, “Dear Lord, thank you for this food. In Jesus’
name, Amen.” He had learned to generalize!
Though the Bible was written to particular people in
particular situations, its message is for all people in all
times. Since the time of Jesus, His followers have needed
to know how to appropriately live in response to God’s
grace, love, and salvation in Jesus Christ. How can we
show our gratitude to the God who has given Himself
to us? What does love for God and neighbor look like in
the grind of daily life? Fortunately, God has shown His
children what it means to live in relationship with Him.
But sometimes that guidance is so specific that it seems to
have no relevance for many modern readers.
Learning to generalize is one of the most important
steps in applying the Bible. When, on the surface, a passage
seems to have little application to our situation today, we
need to look beneath the surface for a general principle.
Jesus replied, “‘Love the Lord your God with all your
heart and with all your soul and with all your mind.’ This
is the first and greatest commandment. And the second is
like it: ‘Love your neighbor as yourself.’” Notice especially
what He said next: “All the Law and the Prophets hang on
these two commandments” (matthew 22:36-40, emphasis mine).
In other words, these two commandments summarized
the rest. According to Jesus, these two commands capture
the intention and spirit of every law, rule, and commandment
in the Bible and explain the message of prophets like Isaiah,
Ezekiel, and Jeremiah. These two commandments were so
Love for God and our neighbor does not exhaust the
meaning of Scripture . The Bible also speaks a great deal about
God’s love for us, a love which is not in view in the two great
commandments . Jesus later added a third commandment to
the previous two: “My command is this: Love each other as I have
loved you” (JOHN 15:12) . The new objects of this love are our brothers
and sisters in Christ . The new standard of love is Christ’s sacrificial
love for us demonstrated on the cross .
31
if they blow into the opening. The more they think about it,
the more uses they discover for the bottle.
In one sense, a biblical principle is like that Coke bottle.
We know the principle is a gift from God—even if the
Coke bottle isn’t. But at first we don’t know quite what
to do with it. Its usefulness only becomes apparent as we
think about how it can affect our lives.
Yet it is precisely at this point that many people fail.
Some simply don’t take the time to reflect on how the
principle might apply to the situations they face. Others
make the opposite mistake of applying the principle to
situations for which it was never intended. Like the bush
people, they use a biblical “Coke bottle” as a rolling pin!
CLICK TO DONATE