|
Some Thoughts
On Reading
By John Piper
THE RIPPLE EFFECT OF THE
WORD
I've been thinking again
about the importance of reading and writing. There are several
reasons I write. One of the most personally compelling is that
I read. I mean, my main spiritual sustenance comes by the Holy
Spirit from reading. Therefore reading is more important to me
than eating. If I went blind, I would pay to have someone read
to me. I would try to learn Braille. I would buy 'books on tape.'
I would rather go without food than go without books. Therefore,
writing feels very lifegiving to me, since I get so much of my
own life from reading.
Combine this with what Paul says in Ephesians
3:3-4, 'By revelation there was made known to me the mystery,
as I wrote before in brief. And by referring to this, when you
read you can understand my insight into the mystery of Christ.'
The early church was established by apostolic writing as well
as apostolic preaching. God chose to send his living Word into
the world for 30 years, and his written Word into the world for
2000+ years.
Think of the assumption behind this divine
decision. People in each generation would be dependent on those
who read. Some people, if not all, would have to learn to read
- and read well, in order to be faithful to God.
So it has been for thousands of years.
Generation after generation has read the insights of its writers.
This is why fresh statements of old truth are always needed. Without
them people will read error. Daniel Webster once said,
If religious books are not widely
circulated among the masses in this country, I do not know what
is going to become of us as a nation. If truth be not diffused,
error will be; if God and His Word are not known and received,
the devil and his works will gain the ascendancy; if the evangelical
volume does not reach every hamlet, the pages of a corrupt and
licentious literature will.1
Millions of people are going to read. If they don't read contemporary
Christian books, they are going to read contemporary secular
books. They will read. It is amazing to watch people in the
airports. At any given moment there must be hundreds of thousands
of people reading just in airports. One of the things we Christians
need to be committed to, besides reading, is giving away solid
books to those who might read them, but would never buy them.
The ripple effect is incalculable. Consider
this illustration:
A book by Richard Sibbes, one of
the choicest of the Puritan writers, was read by Richard Baxter,
who was greatly blessed by it. Baxter then wrote his Call to
the Unconverted which deeply influenced Philip Doddridge, who
in turn wrote The Rise and Progress of Religion in the Soul.
This brought the young William Wilberforce, subsequent English
statesman and foe of slavery, to serious thoughts of eternity.
Wilberforce wrote his Practical Book of Christianity which fired
the soul of Leigh Richmond. Richmond, in turn, wrote The Dairyman's
Daughter, a book that brought thousands to the Lord, helping
Thomas Chalmers the great preacher, among others.2
It seems to me that in a literate culture
like ours, where most of us know how to read and where books are
available, the Biblical mandate is: keep on reading what will
open the Holy Scriptures to you more and more. And keep praying
for Bible-saturated writers. There are many great old books to
read. But each new generation needs its own writers to make the
message fresh. Read and pray. And then obey.
Notes:
[1] Ernest Reisinger, 'Every Christian a Publisher,' Free Grace
Broadcaster, Issue 51, Winter, 1995, p. 17.
[2] 'Every Christian a Publisher,' p. 18.
|
|