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The garden and the bush: Two ways to read the Bible

Bryson Smith and Paul Sheely / Briefing #248-9 / December 1999 /

So which would you prefer? A pleasant bush walk through a national park or a leisurely stroll through an extensive botanical garden?

Perhaps you'd go for the bush walk. You enjoy seeing the progressive changes in the plant life as you leave the valley floor and start the climb up the hillside: the different plants that can exist in the one environment; the adaptations of each plant to its environment; the way in which the floral diversity is so complex and interdependent—these are the things which add to your delight of the bush walk.

Or maybe a botanical garden is more to your liking. You prefer the sense of order. The convenience of seeing related plants close together allows you to marvel at the variations within each plant family. You never knew that roses could come in so many colours. These are the things which add to your delight in the botanical garden.

Well, as with plants so with the Word of God. There are basically two ways in which we can approach the Bible. They are an expositional approach and a topical (or doctrinal) approach.

An expositional approach to the Bible is similar to our bush walk. Expository preaching and Bible studies take the Bible as they find it. This approach recognises that the Bible is made up of verses in chapters in books, and so verses and chapters are dealt with as they progressively unfold within a book. The aim of this approach is to understand what a passage means in its original context. For example, Romans 1 is understood before and in preparation for understanding Romans 2 which is in turn understood before and in preparation for Romans 3. And so it goes on.

A topical approach to the Bible differs from this. It's more like our stroll through the botanical gardens. In a topical approach, Scripture passages from all over the Bible are gathered together into common categories. The aim of this approach is to rightly understand specific topics or themes. For example, all the verses related to the Trinity are grouped together so that they can be compared and synthesised. In this way the entire counsel of God is systematically brought to bear on this specific topic, helping us to think rightly about it.

So which is to be preferred? The expositional approach or the topical approach? Which approach will best help us understand and live out God's Word? What sort of approach should I be looking for in the sermon on a Sunday? What sort of approach should control how and what Bible studies we do in our mid-week small groups? And what about my personal Bible reading time? Which of these approaches is most useful for that?

Complementary not competitive

It firstly needs to be said that expositional and topical approaches to the Bible are complementary not competitive. Both are needed, for each keeps the other accountable. On the one hand, topical approaches to the Bible help us to understand the full range of Scripture on a topic, and therefore they enable us to remain balanced in our exposition. For example, the way in which we might understand Jesus' teaching on divorce in Mark 10:1-12 should be influenced by what we also know from his teaching in Matthew 19:1-9. The topical approach can be a good safeguard to overstating or understating certain issues.

Alternatively expositional approaches to the bible are essential in properly understanding the Bible's teaching on a particular topic. Good exposition protects us from tearing verses out of context and thereby developing a distorted understanding of certain issues. For example, James 5:15 which states that “the prayer offered in faith will make the sick person well”, might in isolation lead us to certain conclusions regarding prayer, health and faith. But when the verse is treated in context, the theme of spiritual health and endurance come to the fore and quite different conclusions become apparent. Exposition is a good safeguard to correctly understanding the themes and topics of the Bible.

The pros and cons

Given that both topical and expositional approaches to the Bible are valid and useful, what then can we say of the relative merits of each? Consider the following points:

From plants to cars

What then can we conclude from all this? I would suggest that the above considerations mean that an expositional approach should be the usual but not the exclusive way with which we interact with the Bible. If we move from our initial botanical analogy to conclude with a mechanical analogy—our reading of the Bible is not all that different from driving a car. In a car our primary focus is on the road ahead. However, it's important to also have good peripheral vision so that we'll be aware of other things that might endanger us. In the Bible, our primary focus needs to be exposition. However, it is necessary to also have the peripheral vision provided by right doctrine. For that reason topical approaches to the Bible are not only helpful but crucial.

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