Luke 24:44-49
Struggling with Scripture
A Life Founded on the Word: The Evangelical
Tradition
James Sledge September
7, 2014
In
his wonderful little book entitled Eat
This Book: A Conversation in the Art of Spiritual Reading, Eugene Peterson
shares an illustration borrowed from the great 20th Century
theologian, Karl Barth. “Imagine,” he begins, “a group of men and women in a
huge warehouse. They were born in the warehouse, grew up in it, and have
everything there for their needs and comforts. There are no exits to the
building, but there are windows. But the windows are thick with dust, are never
cleaned, and so no one every bothers to look out. Why would they? The warehouse
is everything they know, has everything they need.”
But
one day a child takes a stool over to one of the windows, cleans a bit of the
dust and grime off, and looks out. There are people outside, walking on the
streets, people no one in the warehouse ever imagined even existed. The child
calls his friends over, and they crowd around, looking out at this strange
world they have never seen before.
They
notice that people outside are pointing up at something and talking excitedly.
The children at the window look up, but the only thing above them is the warehouse
ceiling. After a while, watching people point up and get all excited about
nothing becomes boring, and the children tire of it.
But
of course the people in the street aren’t looking at a ceiling. They are
looking up into the heavens, seeing airplanes or birds or storm clouds. The
people on the streets are gazing into the heavens, but “the warehouse people
have no heavens above them, just a roof.”
But
what might happen, asks Peterson, if one child decided to cut a door in the
wall and go outside? What if she was able to convince some other children to go
with her, and they discovered the sky and far-flung horizons they had never
imagined? Karl Barth said that this is the sort of thing that happens when we really
engage and enter into the Bible. “We enter the totally unfamiliar world of God,
a world of creation and salvation stretching endlessly above and beyond us.
Life in the warehouse never prepared us for anything like this.”
Peterson concludes this picture saying,
“Typically, adults in the warehouse scoff at the tales the children bring back.
After all, they are completely in control of the warehouse world in ways they
could never be outside. And they want to keep it that way.”[1]