Rev
22:18-19
And
I solemnly declare to everyone who hears the words of prophecy written in this
book: If anyone adds anything to what is written here, God will add to that
person the plagues described in this book. And if anyone removes any of the
words from this book of prophecy, God will remove that person’s share in the
tree of life and in the holy city that are described in this book.
In the broader Christian community, this verse is often wrongly
applied to mean that no one is allowed to either add or remove anything from
the books in the whole Bible.
But verse 18 of our quoted section above refers to “in
this book” and “what is written here”, clearly limiting the warning to the
actual prophecy given in Revelation, and verse 19 further defines this limit
with “words from this book of prophecy”.
If we were to interpret it as applicable to the total Bible,
then John himself would be in trouble, because he wrote his other two books in
the New Testament after he wrote Revelation, therefore adding to Scripture! Apart
from the scrolls on which the Old Testament were preserved, most of the New
Testament was still being written, and no complete book of the whole Bible
existed yet.
Even a similar warning from Moses in Deut 12:32 “Whatever
I command you, be careful to observe it; you shall not add to it nor take away
from it refers only to “Whatever I command you” and not to the Bible as
a whole.
We definitely do not want to be guilty of either
distorting, erasing or altering the text as given in the Bible. But the
misapplication of the quoted verse to the whole of Scripture sometimes generates
many misleading assumptions. For instance, people we know who studied Apocryphal
books (a collection of biblical or related writings that were not included in
the officially recognized canon of the Bible) were told that they were wrong to
do that, as they were “adding” to the Bible. This of course is not true.
Another totally wrong deduction would be that you cannot
make notes in your Bible. In answer to that I can only stress that Jesus
Himself and Holy Spirit are the revealers of the basis of our faith, and the
text itself is a tool that leads us to more understanding of Him – so go ahead
and make notes, highlight verses, jot down all new revelations Holy Spirit
gives you!
Pearls to ponder:
We are living in times where deception is increasing at
an alarming rate. The sad part is that the church itself sometimes brings
deception across our path. We have to start grounding our basic beliefs in
truth and practise our discernment. Make sure that what you are told about the
Bible is actually what is written there – do not take anybody’s word for it,
read it for yourself – Holy Spirit promises to teach you (John 14:26).
Make time, you will be greatly rewarded!
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