More and more electronic devices keep appearing in my adult Sunday Bible studies. At first it was one or two of those little electronic Bibles that looked like cell phones, then along came smart phones, tablets and other devices. Still, a greater percentage of students carry bound paper Bibles, but these folks are older and their number is decreasing. I can't help but wonder if and when the time will come when I'll be the only dinosaur. (Your wife will be too. - Uni)
I love My Bible(s). I don't
own any electronic version nor do I even know how to find one on my
computer. What's more, I don't even own
any of those electronic aids. I have
shelves of aids - books - taking up space in my study: dictionaries,
concordances, lexicons, Greek and Hebrew grammars. All of these could be thrown out and replaced
by a few discs or online subscriptions.
I have many reasons (or excuses) for not doing so: I have a lot of money
invested in these and can't afford to invest in any more; I started with these
and know my way around in them; I need the exercise of pulling them off the
shelves. (Liddell and Scott's Lexicon
of Ancient Greek weighs 8 pounds.)
Please don't misunderstand. I'm no Luddite. I don't object to technology as such. I'm using it right now! Christians, as people of the Word, have
always been open to technological advancement, especially in the area of
communication. For instance, Christians
were among the first to utilize the codex - the modern book form - as opposed
to scrolls; it made Scriptural preaching
much simpler when one could locate a passage more easily. The printing press was welcomed by the early
Reformers and Bible translators as a way to get the Word into the hands of the
common people - the plowboy and the milkmaid.
And so we welcome the new ways of accessing
and studying the Word. A recent article
in CHRISTIANITY TODAY, "The Bible in the Original Geek" (March 2014)
discusses the many ways new technology "will change the way you think about
Scripture." We are able to data mine
the Word for all sorts of insights. We
can even build our own translations without the need for knowledge of the
original languages, or for those who have such knowledge.
Hopefully this is getting more people into
the Bible and helping people to understand and gain insight. And those who want to go deeper - scholars,
preachers and seminarians - can do so more quickly and with greater ease.
I feel like I'm John Henry racing the steam
drill! (If you don't know who he is, you
can Google him.)
I feel, however, that my techie friends may
be missing out on a few things. One
thing is familiarity, not only with the Bible, but with books in general. When I read a book - any book - I get
intimate with it; I feel it; I smell it; I break it in by cracking its back in
multiple places; I mark its pages; I flip back and forth; I write my thoughts,
questions and disagreements in the margins.
I suppose one can do some, maybe most of these things with a book on a Nook,
a Kindle or an iPad - but it seems to me that that would be like making love to
a robot.
My Bible is more than data to be mined. It's an old friend. It's a letter from my Lover. It's a story I'm familiar with. It's a reminder of my past and present
spiritual walk. It saddens me to think
that the very technology that can help us gain greater knowledge is depended on
by many to give them greater understanding and wisdom. Perhaps it can. But these only can come through familiarity.
So if I may sermonize: Read your Bible; don't just mine it for
information. Get familiar with the Book
and its authors - both the human and the Divine. Let its "data" penetrate your
thinking, whether this comes about through electronic media or through paper
and ink. And let it penetrate your life
and actions.
2 comments:
I have electronic copies of the bible, but I like my hard copy better. My hard copy has a leather cover and was given to me by my Nan. We used to go to church together on Sundays. It has a hand written message from her inside the cover. I use the electronic copies for convenience when I'm out and about or want to look something up really fast.
It seems an atheist agrees with you on this matter, Bill. :)
I love how fast I can look up verses online -- the ones I've heard but don't know their exact location -- and for reading LOTS of versions of particular passages.
But I LOVE my old Bible you & mom gave me when I was in high school. When it started wearing out I tried a replacement Bible but I just didn't like it. In my old Bible I can find things just by flipping and there are crayon marks in it from my son and the words y'all wrote on the fly leaf.
I prefer reading books in paperback form becuz of the whole physical relationship with them. And if I'm studying I can write all over them.
Post a Comment