Christopher Columbus is often credited with discovering North America. The only problem was, it was already inhabited with Native Americans who had made the discovery long before he did. In fact, he wasn’t even the first European to land in North America. Leif Ericson had done so about 500 years before him.
What Columbus did was stumble into a discovery of this discovered land, spread the story across Europe, and the rest is history.
Like Columbus, I made a discovery of something that was always there several years ago. Others had seen it before me but for some reason, I never saw it. When I did, I felt as if I found new land when really my eyes were opened to an already settled land.
What did I uncover?
The grand narrative of the Scriptures.
I had viewed the bible as information and at best, a collection of stories. That’s true, but it’s so much more than that. It’s all about Jesus. In fact, it’s these words from John 5:39-40 that led me to look at the common thread throughout the bible, “You search the Scriptures because you think that in them you have eternal life; and it is they that bear witness about me, yet you refuse to come to me that you may have life.”
The Scriptures are a narrative of God’s epic story and it all points to Jesus as the hero of the Story and the plot is his passionate pursuit of his people. This is the heart of the gospel.
This has radically shifted my studying and teaching of the bible. Seeing how particular passages fit into the meta-narrative found in the scriptures has opened my eyes to things I had never seen before. I had been careful to quote verses in context but had neglected the context of the greater story that verses and passages are embedded in. Not to mention the context of the story of my life.
This has helped me better connect the Old Testament with the New Testament. It has opened my eyes to see Jesus in places I never expected in both the scriptures and in culture. It has shaped how I view the church in light of God’s great pursuit of his people. It has also helped me to gain perspective of my story and how I fit into the greater story.
Since this shift, I’ve sought to write, teach, and preach by storying the scriptures. I’m learning that stories work better at penetrating the heart and mind than mere information alone. Storying is our way of packaging information so that others can grab hold of its meaning. When our quest for truth treks through the frontier of our imagination it produces compelling stories.
Within each of us is a longing for a story. This is why we search and explore and why we tell others about our discoveries. History is full of amazing storyers and is how history has been passed along from generation to generation. This is why we consume books, films, and television. This why we have conversations over food and drinks. This is why we even ask others, “How are you doing?” That’s nothing more than a launchpad for a story (or in most cases, an odd way of saying, “hello.”)
Whimsical writer and thinker G.K. Chesterton wrote, “I had always felt life first as a story: and if there is a story there is a Story-teller.” I agree. Every tale has an author. Every story-casserole is baked in the oven of someone’s imagination. And God is the source of all stories.
His epic story is found in the Scriptures and the epic story he’s called us to live out is wrapped up in His.
This is my great re/discovery and it has awakened my soul, opened my eyes, and changed how I look at life.
I pray it will do the same for you.
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Every story-casserole is baked in the oven of someone’s imagination…i like that…good stuff