Eat the Book
“Christians are hypocritical; they say they believe in something that they don’t live out.”
These were the words my unbelieving friend used to criticize Christians. My friend’s perception of our faith was that followers of Jesus know a set of rules, but they don’t seem very joyful or alive. While this critique was harsh, it also felt true. It is all too easy for Christians to know things about God without ever digesting that knowledge, getting the teaching of Christ into our bellies where it might course through our bodies and make us different. When we settle for training our minds and neglect our whole bodies, bringing them into alignment with the knowledge we profess, we find ourselves living an undernourished faith. But this is not the way it is supposed to be.
In Revelation 10, John listens to an angel in heaven read about the mysteries of God from a scroll. The angel’s voice is like a lion’s roar, thundering across the land. Intuitively, John moves to write down what he hears, but the angel forbids him from writing down the words and rather invites him to eat the scroll. Though Revelation may seem to be full of bizarre snippets such as this, Revelation is all about worship. Here, John is being instructed about true worship. Worship is not simply knowledge or writing down information so our minds might absorb it; rather, worship is about our bodies.
In response to this passage, Eugene Peterson says,
Why, that [writing the words down] would be like taking the wind or breath out of the words and flattening them soundless on paper . . . It’s as if the heavenly voice said, “No, I want those words out there, creating sound waves, entering ears, entering lives. I want those words preached, sung, taught, prayed—lived. Get this book into your gut; get the words of this book moving through your bloodstream; chew on these words and swallow them so they can be turned into muscle and gristle and bone.” And John did it; he ate the book. (As Kingfishers Catch Fire, 324)
“Most of us are in danger of living a life flattened on soundless paper.”
Most of us are in danger of living a life flattened on soundless paper. Christians can fall into a way of life that exists primarily in the mind, the place of knowing and thinking, but we fail to fully digest our knowledge. This has always been a religious person’s problem; Jesus criticized the religious people of his day for this very thing because knowing and believing something while not producing congruent actions is called hypocrisy. Those Pharisees knew the law and the traditions, but their religion was like a fine table set at a party at which no one feasted; they were missing the point of all that knowledge. Their traditions and learning never nourished their heart; they hadn’t eaten the book. And unfortunately, this is a problem in modern Western churches too. We are an undernourished people, hungry for intimacy with Christ and settling for only baseline knowledge of him. We need to be people who eat the book.
An Undernourished People
And [the Lord GOD] said to me, “Son of man, eat what is before you, eat this scroll; then go and speak to the people of Israel.” So I opened my mouth, and he gave me the scroll to eat. Then he said to me, “Son of man, eat this scroll I am giving you and fill your stomach with it.” So I ate it, and it tasted as sweet as honey in my mouth. He then said to me: “Son of man, go now to the people of Israel and speak my words to them. (Ezek. 3:1–4 NIV)
Ezekiel receives his call from God to be a prophet to Israel, but rather than filling Ezekiel’s mind with perfect theology or knowledge of God’s law, God goes for his gut. He wants to fill Ezekiel, get his Word inside his body, coursing through his bloodstream and sustaining his muscles for the task ahead of him.
His task is to prophesy to Israel, God’s own people. These people knew God. They had the law to instruct them and the story of God freeing them from Egypt so that they might dwell in his presence and worship him. And yet, Israel had not gotten the law into their hearts; they had not come to hunger for the ways of God. Later God and Ezekiel would have a conversation about Israel in which God calls them dry bones, dead and wasted away. The question of the conversation was this: can they really come alive again? Is God able to raise them back to life, put muscle on their bones, give them breath, and empower them to walk in his ways?
“When our faith is predominantly an intellectual faith, one situated in our minds, we are on the path to becoming dry bones, bodies that are unnourished and wasting away.”
The same question goes for us. When our faith is predominantly an intellectual faith, one situated in our minds, we are on the path to becoming dry bones, bodies that are unnourished and wasting away. It is not because our minds are unimportant—on the contrary, they are critical to our faith and we are commanded to use them (Matt. 22:37)—but a faith that is only about knowledge will always trend toward hypocrisy. We must put what we know into action. We must be people who not only read the book but eat it. We need to hunger for more than knowledge about Jesus. We must hunger for him—his presence, love, and peace in our lives. And fortunately, this is exactly what God wants for us.
The Nourishment We Need
Jesus said, “Truly, truly, I say to you, unless you eat the flesh of the Son of Man and drink his blood, you have no life in you. . . . For my flesh is true food, and my blood is true drink” (John 6:53, 55).
Though Ezekiel and John were invited to eat the written Word of God, we are invited to something much stranger—to eat the flesh and drink the blood of Christ. It is no coincidence that Jesus chooses food to be the way his people remember him and participate in his covenant. He knows humans trend towards anemic lives that lack the fullness we were made for. So he chooses food.
My sister is a naturopathic doctor who says that food is the fastest way to teach people to connect with their bodies. When we eat wholesome, nourishing foods, our bodies are fueled and empowered to do what they are made to do. Food changes us from the inside out, repairing our cells, giving us energy, and teaching us to hunger after the right things. Just as the Word of God nourished Ezekiel to fulfill his calling as a prophet to Israel, speaking against their ways and calling them to repentance, Jesus, the incarnate Word of God, offers himself as our spiritual nourishment so that we might live sacrificial lives and fulfill our calling as Christians to follow him. God is not interested in only teaching our minds—he is first and foremost interested in getting into our hearts and guts. As we feast on Jesus, the true Word of God, he softens our hearts, strengthens our limbs for his work, and empowers our bodies to move through the world like he did.
How to Eat the Book
Prioritize intimacy with Christ over knowledge about him. It is much easier to learn facts about God than to get to know him. We need to know him, and knowing God comes from spending time in his presence, listening to him, and loving him for who he is rather than what he can do for us. He is more than worthy of our time, so let’s give it to him.
Don’t be a hypocrite. Be hearers and doers of the Word (James 1:22–25). Ask yourself where and why you aren’t taking God’s Word seriously. Repent and ask the Spirit to make you hungry. Jesus says, “Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness” (Matt. 5:6). Make this your prayer: that you would hunger after the ways of God—not your ways, not the ways that are comfortable, but the ways of God.
Remember that our God wants to nourish us. In Christ, the incarnate Word, God has revealed himself to us and given us the same Spirit that gave breath and put sinew and muscle back on those dry bones. He is able and he wants to nourish us. Let’s ask him to do so.
Anne Kerhoulas is a writer for Christian Union. After six years of campus ministry at Harvard University, she moved to Asheville, NC with her husband and twin daughters. She loves hiking, creating, and helping people grow in their love and knowledge of Christ. Read more of Anne’s writing at Daily Discipleship.