How Does a Red Letter Christian Read the Bible?: A Jesus-shaped Proposal

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t/uploads/bible2-300×199.jpg” alt=”" width=”270″ height=”179″ />How does a Red Letter Christian read the Bible? From the name, you’d think it means that we focus on the red letters of Jesus. This is certainly true. But does that mean that we ignore the regular black letters of, for instance, the Apostle Paul? Some would say yes. They would argue that we need to prioritize the Gospels over Paul’s epistles because we have put too much focus on believing the right things about Jesus, and not enough focus on actually following Jesus. After all, Jesus clearly says in John “If you love me, keep my commands” and then adds “This is my command: Love each other as I have loved you.” Believing stuff about God doesn’t matter much if you don’t live it. As the saying goes, they will know we are Christians by our love. Our most powerful witness is when we show Jesus to people by our lives.

Nevertheless, I’d argue that this does not mean that we should stop reading Paul. Rather, we need to read both Paul’s letters and the Gospels with a focus on living the way of Jesus as part of a loving relationship with God where we grow to look and act like Jesus, rather than with a focus on abstract doctrine. Paul’s letters are in fact full of pastoral advice to churches about how to live Jesus-shaped lives. So the focus is not on reading just one part of the Bible and ignoring others, but on reading all of the Bible with a focus on following Jesus. As Tony Campolo writes in his book Red Letter Christians, “We emphasize the ‘red letters’ because we believe that you can only understand the rest of the Bible when you read it from the perspective provided by Christ.” In other words, all of the Bible needs to be read and interpreted in a way that points to its ultimate focus–which is Jesus.

So what does that Jesus-shaped focus mean practically? How does it change how we read the Bible? One consequence is that it means leaning to read our Bibles in the same way that Jesus did. Folks often quote the passage from the Sermon on the Mount where Jesus says “Do not think that I have come to abolish the Law or the Prophets; I have not come to abolish them but to fulfill them” and take this as a blanket approval of every part of the Old Testament. What this rather obviously ignores is the fact that after saying this, Jesus then immediately proceeds to say all sorts of things that throw the traditional reading of the Old Testament on its head–loving your enemies instead of seeking “an eye for an eye” and so on. His point of course is not to be unfaithful to the Bible, but to be more faithful to it. But we simply cannot do that if we read it as a flat book. We need to learn to read it like Jesus did, leading us to find the same loving Abba he did, and to love like he did.

The fact is, Jesus had a reputation among the religious folks of his day of interpreting Scripture in a way that seemed absolutely scandalous to them. He broke the Sabbath, touched the unclean, and so on. His clear focus in all of this was on caring for those on the margins, on prioritizing people over rules. We need to learn to read the Bible like that too. That means we need to ask whether a passage reflects Jesus or not. For example, once when some people were insulting Jesus, his disciples asked him if they should “call down fire from heaven, in the same way that Elijah had?” Here they are citing a clear biblical precedent set by the prophet Elijah who had demonstrated by this that he is a “man of God,” and they are asking Jesus if they should follow that example. This wasn’t just a theoretical question. We know that, before his conversion, Paul took part in the stoning of Stephen. So lots of people really thought back then that killing people was an act of faithfulness to God. That’s how many folks read their Bibles then, including as we can see here some of his disciples. But Jesus rebukes them and says “You do not know what kind of spirit you are of; for the Son of Man did not come to destroy people’s lives, but to save them.”

Here we have Jesus showing that if something does not reflect Jesus, we need reject it like he did. That’s pretty radical, but we follow a radical savior. Really making Jesus Lord means we need to prioritize Jesus as the ultimate and superior revelation of God’s nature and way. So we can look back in this way and see that the whole Bible including the Old Testament ultimately points to Christ, but we cannot simply read the Bible as a flat book. It is a book that is only properly interpreted when it reflects and leads us to Jesus and his way. That’s why Paul writes, “To this day the same veil remains when the old covenant is read. It has not been removed, because only in Christ is it taken away.”

Now, let me stress that all of this is my own perspective, my own humble proposal of what a Jesus-centered reading of the Bible should look like, and should not be taken as any kind of “official statement” by Red Letter Christians. I say all of this as part of a community of people who are all trying to live out a Jesus-shaped life, and believe that the best way to do theology is in conversation and community. That brings me to a second principle which involves the balance between reading the Bible personally vs. reading it through the eyes of tradition. Protestants emphasize personal interpretation, while Catholics emphasize tradition. I’d like to propose a third way which, again, puts Jesus at the center:

First, the key factor in a personal reading is that it must be Spirit-led. Again, Tony Campolo stresses that “Jesus can be alive and present to each and every person, and that salvation depends on yielding to Him and inviting Him to be a vital, transforming presence in our lives.” Anabaptists refer to this as the “hermeneutics of obedience” meaning that you can only properly interpret the Bible when you are living it, when you are really following Jesus. Note the Jesus-focus here. That focus does not lead to us wanting to side-step difficult parts of the Bible. In fact, the opposite is the case: The whole impetus of the RLC movement is that many of us felt that we needed to take the words of Jesus more seriously than we had seen it being taken by the larger church. Some clear examples here are taking seriously Christ’s call to love our enemies, or to care for the poor and the least. Red Letter Christians have seen this being neglected by their tradition, and are calling to more faithfulness to Jesus. That’s what it looks like when a person is lead by the Spirit to faithfully speak out against the status quo tradition.

The second point involves the positive role tradition plays in this. The key question is: what tradition? As we all know, Christian tradition has taken some pretty horrible turns over the years–burning people at the stake, holy wars, torture, and so on — and remember: these were practiced by both Protestant and Catholics alike! So what we need is not to base our reading on some central religious authority that claims to hold the keys to the truth (whether Catholic or Protestant). Rather, we need to read our Bibles communally as part of a body of disciples who are all actively seeking to embody and follow Jesus. Note again the Jesus-focus here: It is a Jesus-following tradition. We need to interpret Scripture both in community with others who are really living it, as well as hearing from those who in the past have walked the same narrow road we are on. This is crucial because learning how to live out the way of Jesus happens best when we can learn from the wisdom of those who have walked that way before us — who have built on the foundation of Christ, and demonstrate with their lives a sophisticated vision of what following Jesus looks like. As Issac Newton famously said, “If I have seen further, it is by standing on the shoulders of giants.”

Put all of that together and what we have is, in the words of Stewart Murray Williams, (1) a Spirit-filled disciple, (2) confidently interpreting Scripture within a community of such disciples, (3) aware that Jesus Christ is the center from which the rest of Scripture must be interpreted.

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Derek Flood is the author of Healing the Gospel: A Radical Vision for Grace, Justice, and the Cross. He is a featured blogger for the Huffington Post, Sojourners, Red Letter Christians, and writes regularly at his website theRebelGod.com. A longtime voice in the post-conservative evangelical movement, Derek’s focus is on wrestling with questions of faith and doubt, violence in the Bible, relational theology, and understanding the cross from the perspective of grace and restorative justice.

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About the Author

Derek FloodDerek Flood is the author of Healing the Gospel: A Radical Vision for Grace, Justice, and the Cross. He is a featured blogger for the Huffington Post, Sojourners, Red Letter Christians, and writes regularly at his website theRebelGod.com. A longtime voice in the post-conservative evangelical movement, Derek’s focus is on wrestling with questions of faith and doubt, violence in the Bible, relational theology, and understanding the cross from the perspective of grace and restorative justice.View all posts by Derek Flood →

  • http://www.facebook.com/jeff.fletcher.737 Jeff Fletcher

    Good thoughts, Derek. I’ve recently by trying to help my Church learn how to read the Old Testament as Christians. Your Jesus centered approach is very helpful. Have you read Christian Smith’s The Bible Made Impossible? He makes some similar observations. I think you are right on track. Thanks.

  • Drew Two

    I’m sorry, but I just don’t get. How does, say, one from stoning and an eye for eye approach to relationships to forgiving and loving your enemies without leaving the latter behind entirely? Forgive my ignorance, but on the face of it it seems a real stretch to me. Is it absolutely necessary to hang on every word of the old testament (or the new, for that matter) in order to remain a commuted and credible follower of Christ? I ask this in all seriousness.

    • Drew Two

      commited (pesky auto correct)

    • tarl_hutch

      Short answer…no. Nuanced answer, just as Derek says here Jesus is the focus and the axis from which the bible hinges. The most important thing then is Jesus and your relationship to him. From there you begin to see what is actually meant by the bible. Through Jesus colored lens, if you will.

      It is tough to reconcile certain OT elements to the ways of Jesus, which is why he lost so many followers who said his way was too hard. On the other side you have some difficult ideas from Paul here and there which once again must be read through Jesus. This may get me some flak, but it has helped me to realize that though the bible was inspired by God, it was written, I.e. filtered, through men, and since translated and retranslated by men, Si we have to use the spirit of Jesus to interpret their meaning. Dies that mean we have to follow every law written in the bible, or get hung up on them all as you said? No, their is grace for our mistakes, but if we live and learn as Derek has pointed out here, with our ficus on Jesus we learn how to truly live the logos of God.

      Just as Derek said here, community is very important. If you are feeling confused it unsure about things, it does wonders to have people to bounce ideas around with. But choose carefully, as some people are more mature than others.

      Wow, more of a ramble than I meant to be, hope it was of some heko.

      • Drew Two

        sometimes I think we get ourselves into ridiculous mental and emotional knots trying to make what doesn’t fit fit

        • tarl_hutch

          Totally agree, when we get caught up in figuring everything out, we sometimes lose sight of the central and important things.

      • Drew Two

        I appreciate your input

        • tarl_hutch

          Thanks, I too am very thankful for your voice

    • Drew

      Short answer… yes. The Bible itself answers these questions.

      • tarl_hutch

        Can I say, in all honesty, I love you and love having someone to keep me honest.

      • Drew Two

        can you flesh that out even just a little bit?

        • Drew

          2 Timothy 3:16 says “All Scripture is God-breathed and is useful for teaching, rebuking, correcting and training in righteousness.”

          Not just the OT, not just the NT, not just the Gospels, not just the parts that agree with our political philosophy, but ALL Scripture. Pretty straight-forward.

          • Derek

            Read the verse before that one. It says that the purpose of Scripture is to point to Christ. So we read ALL of Scripture, but through the eyes of Jesus.

            The fact is, Jesus and the apostles read Scripture in a very different way than the Pharisees. They read it as pointing to Christ and his way. If we don’t know how to do that, we end up reading like Pharisees and espousing views of God and the Bible that look nothing like Jesus.

          • Drew

            “…and how from infancy you have known the Holy Scriptures, which are able to make you wise for salvation through faith in Christ Jesus. All Scripture is God-breathed and is useful for teaching, rebuking, correcting and training in righteousness.”

            It does not explicitly say what the point of Scripture is in this passage, but it does say that Scripture will make us wise for salvation through faith in Jesus, most likely alluding to all the prophecies that Jesus fulfilled.

            It does not say all Scripture has to be viewed through the “eyes of Jesus,” whatever that means. It simply says all Scripture is God-breathed and is useful for teaching, rebuking, correcting, and training in righteousness. You can ignore this Scripture if you want, or reinterpret it, but I think it stands pretty solid on it’s own. If you have any Scripture that contradicts it or is complimentary to it, please let me know.

            The apostles of Jesus did not read Scripture in the way you imply, seeing as how they would have only had the OT and most did not understand Jesus’ teachings while he was alive. Paul would probably be in the best position to know how the OT and Jesus meshed together, which is shown in Romans and his other writings. Paul of course wrote the letter to Timothy that I quoted from earlier.

            This is a good discussion, but I urge you to use real Scripture, not stuff you have made up or rewrote. You’re making the argument so you have the burden of proof.

          • tarl_hutch

            I believe the original intent of drew two’s response was to ask the question if we have to absolutely understand and reconcile all scripture to be committed followers of Christ. This is why my short answer is no. As Paul and the other apostles state, faith in Christ is enough, in fact many were saved in the bible without full understanding of scripture. Then you have the addition of works to the equation, sometimes as part of salvation and other times as evidence, but grace is overarching through it all.

            In regards to the verses in question, I am not sure where the conflict comes in here. I don’t believe anyone is saying certain parts of scripture are unimportant or that they can’t teach us something, but that some verses are geared for certain circumstances and when viewed through the teachings of Jesus may teach us a slightly different lesson now. Jesus is thr logos, the living word of God, so no true understanding can be had without reading through his spirit. All scripture is indeed useful for teaching, etc., but Jesus has fully illuminated the lessons for us and uses our knowledge to pave the way for his fulfillment.

          • Drew Two

            Actually, I intended to go farther than that in my questioning. I’m not sure how to treat the bible. I guess I’m not really asking the question so much as thinking out loud. I think it’s possible to believe that Jesus was God in the flesh without giving every bit of the bible the same weight or treat each in exactly the same way. I don’t think that’s the same as cherry picking or reading the bible to make it fit with what you’ve already decided. I think it means being grown up and thoughtful but still teachable.

          • tarl_hutch

            This is an important issue for many in the emergence church movement right now. Is the bible totally inerrant, infallible, and directly spoken by God, or is it written by men to give examples of a life with God, but potentially full of errors and bias, or is there another way that combines the two acknowledging inspiration by His, but accounting for human error in writing and translation?

            You may have guessed that at the moment I fall in the latter category. This is why I think we have to rely on the Holy Spirit to understand the bible, because we need God to help us sort through what is meant, or us relevant now, from the potential biases it errors in its writing. I know this approach does not sit well with many people, but it is logical and works for me. Like you, I feel this to be a mature way to handle biblical reading, I also incorporate others research and the wesleyn quadrant in my understanding. Figure if u include the spirit, and as much knowledge as possible I can start to come close. Plus, it allows new insights everytime I cone back to it, creating a multi layered narrative.

          • Drew Two

            Yes. I don’t see why there can’t be a truth threading its way through something that is sometimes messy and confusing.

            I think perhaps we’re meant to wrestle with things in this way. I also think it’s arrogant to be so certain and intractable, especially early on in one’s journey even if it feels safer.

  • tarl_hutch

    You took the words right out if my mouth. Thanks for the post.

  • JeffreyPrice

    Jesus reminded those around him of the old testament dictate about a man leaving hs family and cleaving to a woman. This was the plan from Genesis that he reiterated. So, why do some believe that Jesus said nothing about what specifically marriage s?

  • Lee

    If I still read Paul, do I have to treat Paul’s words as though they came from a God? Is Paul a deity? Is every verse he wrote perfect? Is every thought that Paul wrote a command? Do I have to follow Paul to the letter? If you say, ‘yes,’ explain to me why I should treat Paul as a God?

    • Drew

      I see a lack of solid Bible understand and teaching more and more frequently on this website. It’s tragic.

      First of all, you should be reading all of the Bible, just not the parts your political persuasion makes it mandatory for you to read and believe in. “If I still read Paul” is a foolish thing to say; you should be reading him as well as all the other books in the Bible.

      Second of all, yes, you do have to treat Paul’s words as though they came from or were inspired by God. Scripture is God-breathed, and Peter recognizes Paul’s writings as Scripture. The verses are perfect, unless you think God breathes mistakes.

      Third of all, yes, all Scripture is useful, not just the parts that you find politically expedient or parts that agree with what you already want to believe. Again, I would make an attempt to read and understand all Scripture and let all of Scripture guide you.

      Fourth, you are not treating Paul as a God, but rather recognizing that these Scriptures are God-breathed and all are useful. If you doubt Paul, why not doubt anything and everything? If you don’t think Paul’s writings are accurate, then you can question all OT and NT writings as not being accurate since in your foolish opinion, treating them as inerrant is as treating them as “God.” By that foolish logic, you can even question the Gospels, since they were written by man and not by Jesus. Even John 20:30 says his Gospel does not contain all of Jesus’ works.

      One final point – are you a postmodernist or a Christian? Do you believe in the Bible or do you believe in postmodernism and that there is no such thing as truth? I’d be interested to see what your thoughts are.

  • http://theoldadam.com/ Steve Martin

    “All upright sacred books agree on one thing, that they all collectively preach and promote Christ. Likewise, the true criterion for criticizing all books is to see whether they promote Christ or not, since all scripture manifests Christ. Whatever does not teach Christ is not apostolic, even if Peter and Paul should teach it. On the other hand, whatever preaches Christ is apostolic, even if Judas, Annas, Pilate, and Herod should do it!” (LW 35:396)

    • Anonymous

      But the question Luther was afraid to answer- is who decided which books are in the Bible. I find most who use this quote are still afraid to answer that question today.

  • Anonymous

    Now here’s where, despite me reading this website, I part ways with the Red Letter Chirstians. How can I be truly reading the Bible from the perspective of Jesus if I’m not reading it as a part of the Church Militant, the Physical Body of Christ on Earth?

    • Anonymous

      And to reply to myself and *really* get into hot water with the Protestants here- and how can I claim to be part of the Church Militant, if I’m not also in solidarity with the Church Suffering, and reliant upon the Church Triumphant- the other two parts of the Communion of Saints that make up the Mystical Body of Christ in all three parts? After all- we claim as Catholics that the writers of the Bible are part of the Church Triumphant- are alive in Christ and can still be talked to! St. Paul, pray with me, and let me know how to read the Black as well as the Red!

  • Adam

    How do you read the following parts of the Old Testament through the perspective of Jesus? God sends bears to murder kids for making fun of someone being bald 2 Kings 2:23-24, rape of virgins (spoils of war) Numbers 31:7-18, God killing 50,000 people for looking at something 1 Samuel 6:19, God killing 14,000 people for complaining Numbers 16:41-49, God killing babies and children because a King was being stubborn Exodus 12:29, and of course God killing everyone on the planet with the exception of one family Genesis 7:21-23.

    I am on the brink of leaving Christianity behind, I’m so pissed off at the Old Testament and the fact that anyone worships such an evil, jealous God (I’ve only recently looked into all this, before I just blindly followed). I don’t understand how the God of the New Testament can be the same as the God of the Old Testament? I’m pretty much lost, I have no church to worship at, I have no like minded followers to worship with, I’m on my own and it’s depressing. It’s a shame Marcionism and Marcion’s writings were stamped out by the early church, I think he was on to something.

    I’m not trying to be combative, I want to believe, I just haven’t heard an explanation for the evil of the Old Testament that I buy.

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