“So Easy Even a Kid can Understand it”
BIBLE
READING: Deuteronomy
5-7
“You shall teach them
diligently to your children, and shall talk of them when you sit in your house,
and when you walk by the way” -Deuteronomy 6:7
During the Protestant Reformation, the
Reformers worked hard to put God’s Word into the hands of the people. Prior to
the Reformation, the Bible was accessible mostly to the clergy alone, shut up
in the monasteries and churches and written in Latin, a foreign tongue to the
uneducated masses. Many worked before this time to translate the Scriptures
into the vernacular, but it was the Reformers’ stress on the importance of
studying the Word of God (as well as the printing press) that led eventually to
the widespread availability of the Bible in all different
languages today. Prior to the
Reformation, the church was uncomfortable with the laity interpreting the Bible
for themselves, mainly because they were afraid that the study would open the
floodgates of iniquity and lead to all manner of sects and heresies. This fear
was not ill-founded, and even Luther realized that allowing for private
interpretation of the Scriptures would cause many headaches for the church.
Nevertheless, he believed (rightly) that the gospel was so simple that a child
could understand it; therefore, he and other reformers were willing to put the
Word of God into the common languages and watch the Spirit do His work.
The idea that the message of salvation in the Bible is so clear that even a
child can understand it is encapsulated in the doctrine of the clarity of
Scripture. God’s Word is not some esoteric code book full of mysteries that
only a select few can comprehend; rather, it is that which any person can read
for himself to find reproof, correction, and encouragement (2 Tim. 3:16–17). Such clarity is taught in today’s passage, where we see that
all the Israelite parents were expected to be able to teach their children the
Law. From the families who labored in the fields to those who had the privilege
of advanced studies, God revealed His law so plainly that even the simplest
Israelite could understand it. The
clarity of Scripture applies only to the message of the gospel — not everything
taught in Scripture. There are, indeed, some things that are “hard to
understand” (2 Peter 3:15–16). Yet nothing essential to salvation is so obscure that it
cannot be found simply by reading the text on one’s own.
-Selected
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