From God’s Mouth

If book banners would actually read the book they claim to protect, the Bible, they would run across the account of Jehoiakim and Jeremiah.  It’s in Jeremiah 36, if you care to follow along.  Jeremiah was not a popular prophet.  In fact, he was often in trouble for speaking what God told him to say.  He wasn’t wearing a “Make Israel Great Again” cap.  In fact, his message was that the kingdom of Judah had to fall in order to be restored.  So in chapter 36 he dictates his message, straight from God, to Baruch, his secretary.  Baruch reads the words in the temple and this comes to the notice of the royal staff.  They arrange for a private reading and it scares them like a good horror novel.  One of them reads the scroll to the king, Jehoiakim, who cuts off a few columns at a time and burns them in the fire.

My favorite part of this story has always been the coda: “Then took Jeremiah another roll, and gave it to Baruch the scribe, the son of Neriah; who wrote therein from the mouth of Jeremiah all the words of the book which Jehoiakim king of Judah had burned in the fire: and there were added besides unto them many like words.”  Many like words.  So we have book banners around the nation trying to stop children from reading.  The hope is they will become unreading adults because reading expands your mind.  Jehoiakim was a book banner—a book burner, in fact.  But the response from God himself is to write the whole thing over and add many similar words.  

The Bible has been, and still is, fairly constantly abused.  What it seems to be is unread, at least by those who use it to stop other books from being read.  I came to believe, while majoring in religion in a conservative college, that if literalism was truly from God there would be no way to stop it.  I took a route unlike my classmates, who tended to go to the most conservative seminary they could find to have their minds further closed.  I figured that if it was true then testing it by reason couldn’t hurt it.  It’s pretty obvious the way that turned out.  I don’t stand with book banners.  This is Banned Book Week.  Read a banned book.  Stand up to those who do the banning.  And if you need something to convince them that their tactics don’t meet with divine approval, point them to Jeremiah 36.

2 thoughts on “From God’s Mouth

  1. All religion is conjecture at best, and lies at worst. As an atheist of over half a century who was raised a Christian and attended parochial schools, I have come to that unfortunate conclusion. I call it unfortunate due to a part of me actually envying those that believe in something, as they have something I will never have – hope. That in itself is a contradiction is terms because hope resided in the corner of Pandora’s box and Pandora’s box contained all the evils of the world.

    I have perused your work on and off; i.e., when I stumble across the bookmark, and I like the way you think. I wrote a horror novel years back called Dark Resurrection where Jesus Christ rose from the grave as a vampire, having noticed long ago that religion seems to be the most terrifying horror story in the history of man, from Anubis to Zeus and all in between.

    That said – keep writing – I no longer bother any more due to too many rejection letters, age, and bitter cynicism in a world I have grown to despise.

    Like

    • Hi Frederick, and thanks for the comment. There’s much to ponder in your note, but I do want to encourage you not to let rejection letters stop you. I get plenty of them myself and each one hurts—as someone who both publishes and works in publishing I know that like a game with stacked odds it’s difficult to break through. I’ve had some of my writing (fiction) rejected over 100 times, but then I receive a kind note from someone like yourself. I am cynical about many things, but I do encourage keeping at it. Publishing’s a very tough nut to crack, but squirrels get through impossible shells by gnawing at them relentlessly. That’s my armchair philosopher musing, in any case.

      Like

Leave a comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.