The Value of Learning History
John Piper
The little letter of Jude teaches us something about the value of learning history.
This is not the main point of the letter. But it is striking.
In this next-to-last book of the Bible, Jude writes to encourage the saints
to "contend earnestly for the faith which was once for all handed down to the
saints" (verse 3). The letter is a call to vigilance in view of "certain persons
[who] have crept in unnoticed . . . ungodly persons who turn the grace of our
God into licentiousness and deny our only Master and Lord, Jesus Christ" (verse
4). Jude describes these folks in vivid terms. They "revile the things which
they do not understand" (verse 10). They "are grumblers, finding fault, following
after their own lusts; they speak arrogantly, flattering people for the sake
of gaining an advantage" (verse 16). They "cause divisions, [and are] worldly-minded,
devoid of the Spirit" (verse 19).
This is a devastating assessment of people who are not outside the church
but have "crept in unnoticed." Jude wants them be spotted for who they really
are, so that the church is not deceived and ruined by their false teaching
and immoral behavior.
One of his strategies is to compare them to other persons and events in history.
For example, he says that "Sodom and Gomorrah . . . since they, in the same
way as these, indulged in gross immorality and went after strange flesh, are
exhibited as an example in undergoing the punishment of eternal fire" (verse
7). So Jude compares these people to Sodom and Gomorrah. His point in doing
this is to say that Sodom and Gomorrah are "an example" of what will happen
when people live like these intruders are living. So, in Jude's mind, knowing
the history of Sodom and Gomorrah is very useful in helping detect such error
and deflect it from the saints.
Similarly in verse 11, Jude piles up three other references to historical
events as comparisons with what is happening in his day among Christians. He
says "Woe to them! For they have gone the way of Cain, and for pay they have
rushed headlong into the error of Balaam, and perished in the rebellion of
Korah." This is remarkable. Why refer to three different historical incidents
like this that happened thousands of years earlier - Genesis 19 (Sodom), Genesis
3 (Cain), Numbers 22-24 (Balaam), Numbers 16 (Korah)? What's the point?
Here are three points: 1) Jude assumes that the readers know these stories!
Is that not amazing! This was the first century! No books in anyone's homes.
No Bibles available. No story tapes. Just oral instruction. And he assumed
that they would know: What is "the way of Cain" and "the error of Balaam" and "the
rebellion of Korah"? Do you know? Isn't this astonishing! He expects them to
know. It makes me think that our standards of Bible knowledge in the church
today are too low.
2) Jude assumes that knowing this history will illumine the present situation.
The Christians will handle the error better today, if they know similar situations
from yesterday. In other words, history is valuable for Christian living. To
know that Cain was jealous and hated his brother and resented his true spiritual
communion with God will alert you to watch for such things even among brothers.
To know that Balaam finally caved in and made the Word of God a means of worldly
gain makes you better able to spot that sort of thing. To know that Korah despised
legitimate authority and resented Moses' leadership will protect you from factious
folk who dislike anyone being seen as their leader.
3) Is it not clear, then, that God ordains that events happen and that they
get recorded as history so that we will learn them and become wiser and more
insightful about the present for the sake of Christ and his church. Never stop
learning history. Gain some knowledge every day. And let us give our children
one of the best protections against the folly of the future, namely, a knowledge
of the past.
Learning with you, for Christ and his kingdom, |