
Better Ways to Read the Bible
Transforming a Weapon of Harm into a Tool of Healing
by Zach W. Lambert
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Pub Date 12 Aug 2025 | Archive Date 5 Sep 2025
Baker Academic & Brazos Press | Brazos Press
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Description
"A wide-ranging and cogent guide to seeing scripture in a new light. Disenchanted Christians will be energized."--Publishers Weekly
As a pastor for more than ten years, Zach Lambert has seen the Bible used countless times as something far from the "Good Book"--both in his own life and in the experiences of others. He has seen the Bible weaponized to subjugate women, justify racism, bash LGBTQ+ people, cover up abuse, and exclude people who speak out against these injustices.
If you've been hurt by harmful interpretations or feel disconnected from Scripture, this book offers a path forward to reclaim the Bible's life-giving message. This accessible resource will help you
● break free from harmful interpretations that distort Scripture's true message,
● develop Christ-centered reading practices,
● renew your relationship with Scripture,
● apply new frameworks to challenging Bible passages that have historically been misused to cause harm, and
● connect with Christians who embrace Scripture's call to abundant life for everyone.
In this compassionate guide, Lambert dismantles four common lenses for reading the Bible that lead to harm, then offers four new lenses that promote healing and wholeness. This book welcomes all Christians--regardless of background, doubts, or wounds--to reengage Scripture in life-giving ways.
Advance Praise
“In Better Ways to Read the Bible, Zach Lambert does what so many Christian leaders seem unwilling to do: he asks tough, important questions of the Bible and opens himself to unexpected responses. With a theologian’s mind and a pastor’s heart, Lambert shares his personal, often painful, stories from his journey of relearning Scripture. This book offers a fresh reading of the Bible that provides a counternarrative to white Christian nationalism and its rigid, exclusionary interpretations of the teachings of God. What emerges is a vision of the kind of Christianity most people imagine and hope for in the world. This book is for the faithful, the skeptic, and the inquirer. No matter who you are, this book will make you curious about another book: the Bible.”—Jemar Tisby, historian, professor, and New York Times bestselling author of The Color of Compromise
“This book is for those who have been harmed by the church; it will bring healing. This book is for those who will not agree with it; it will bring understanding. This book is for those who can’t reconcile the words of Christ to love God and love others with the church they see today; it will bring clarity. With pastoral compassion and wit, Zach Lambert invites you into a conversation about how the Bible can be read differently. He will challenge you; encourage you, and show you how, even amid theological differences, Christians should be known first for our love.”—Beth Allison Barr, James Vardaman Professor of History, Baylor University; New York Times bestselling author of Becoming the Pastor’s Wife and The Making of Biblical Womanhood
“This book is a must-read for anyone wrestling with faith after experiencing harmful Bible interpretations. Lambert offers a path forward, transforming Scripture from a weapon of harm into a healing tool. With clarity and compassion, he exposes problematic lenses and provides practical alternatives. Lambert’s unveiling offers hope for the marginalized and tools for healthy Bible reading. This book will empower readers to reclaim the Bible as a source of liberation and wholeness.”—Latasha Morrison, New York Times bestselling author of Be the Bridge
“It’s been said that many Christians have a head full of Scripture but a heart full of hate. That is why I find Zach Lambert so refreshing. In this debut book, he answers bad theology with good theology. Zach is a pastor who loves people and a theologian who loves Scripture. He cares so much about Jesus and the Bible that he isn’t willing to concede his faith to those who distort Scripture in order to camouflage their bigotry. This is a book for people who love the Bible as much as it is a book for those who have been turned off by the Bible because of how it’s been weaponized. Let it cause you to lean in, stay curious, question the clichés, and take the Bible back as a love story.”—Shane Claiborne, author, activist, and cofounder of Red Letter Christians
“Many are disturbed at the rapid rate at which the Bible, especially in the United States, is being used as a weapon. Rooted in his own personal experience, deep study, and pastoral ministry, Zach Lambert offers sage guidance for moving beyond the harmful lenses that obscure and distort the life-affirming words of Scripture. This book is a winsome and insightful aid for followers of Jesus.”—Peter Enns, professor of biblical studies, Eastern University; host of The Bible for Normal People podcast; author of The Bible Tells Me So and How the Bible Actually Works
“Lambert challenges the ways Scripture has been misused and invites readers into a more compassionate, justice-centered understanding of the Bible.”—Brit Barron, author of Do You Still Talk to Grandma?
“This fine debut book by leading post-evangelical pastor Zach Lambert is a profound combination of memoir, biblical storytelling, and scriptural interpretation. It will be a major resource for the rapidly growing community of post-evangelicals. I highly recommend this work!”—David P. Gushee, Distinguished University Professor of Christian Ethics, Mercer University
“Zach is a vigorous thinker, unafraid to shy away from the big questions. But he is also deeply pastoral. Underneath all of these words, you’ll find a kind, hospitable, and quiet invitation to curiosity, to wonder, and even to rest in the love of God as we seek to follow Jesus.”—Sarah Bessey (from the foreword)
Available Editions
EDITION | Other Format |
ISBN | 9781587436680 |
PRICE | US$19.99 (USD) |
PAGES | 208 |
Available on NetGalley
Featured Reviews

Some have described the Bible as something of an owner's manual for our daily lives as Christians, and maybe that’s a fair analogy. Throughout the Bible, the Word of God tells us what we need to know and do to live lives that glorify, honor, and follow the lead of Jesus Christ, who came to live among us as a human being. Along the way, by grace through faith in Christ, we can come to assurance of eternal life with our Lord and Savior. Why, then, do so many supposed “Christians” use the Bible as a weapon to direct and control people in ways that suggest they’ve never actually read or listened to the Word of God at all?
I was fortunate enough to receive an advance copy of this wonderfully readable and accessible book by Zach Lambert. In it, Lambert suggests—correctly, I believe—that the Bible isn’t a maze of esoteric scholarship, as some people claim. Nor is it a club to be used to bludgeon into submission anyone who dares to question or fails to conform to someone else’s personal theological philosophy. Instead, it is a valuable treasure that was written to be read through the right set of lenses to fully understand and appreciate what God inspired its authors to tell us in the first place.
In Better Ways to Read the Bible, which ought to be required reading for anyone who wants to learn and understand how God speaks to us through His written Word, Lambert gives us tools that each of us needs to understand and grow in the Christian faith. Lambert recognizes that Jesus was seen as a radical during His lifetime, and He would certainly be seen as one today, as well. With that in mind, Lambert keeps a calm and steady eye on explaining Biblical reading as a gateway to radical grace, radical forgiveness, radical love, and other radical qualities that Jesus shows us and urges us to show others every day.
God wants us to love reading the Bible as much as He loved inspiring its authors to write it for us. In Lambert’s Better Ways to Read the Bible, we have a heartfelt and Christ-centric approach to Biblical reading and interpretation that will likely kindle (and/or nurture) that love in each of us. We can all thank God for that!

Love this book! Zach has a way of making scripture make sense. I really enjoyed the chapter on the lenses through which we can interpret the Bible that promote love and liberation rather than exclusion. This book is helping me find my love of scripture again.

This book was such a breath of fresh air to read. Zach strikes a really nice balance between thoughtfulness and thoroughness, but not at the detriment of easiness to read. There are many quotes incorporated from other authors, and citations from outside sources that were included in reference to his own arguments. All in all, this book feels thought provoking yet easy to read and digest.
Something that stood out to me while reading is the structure of the book and how it's organized. I ended up really enjoying how the book was arranged into its various parts and chapters. I also really liked the pace of the book. No chapter was too long and each chapter had a clearly defined purpose. The book is overall separated into 3 parts: 1) We All Have Lenses, 2) Lenses That Inflict Harm, and 3) Lenses That Promote Healing.
The first part explores the fact that we all have lenses through which we operate in the world, and this is especially true when we interact with religious texts like the Bible. Due to there being different interpretations or approaches to reading the religious text, Zach sets the stage for the arguments to be made in the parts that follow.
In Part 2, Zach carefully and honestly explores the various lenses and interpretations of the Bible that end up causing injury. Those lenses are: Literalism, Apocalypse, Moralism, and Hierarchy. If you grew up similarly to me, or in a tradition that teaches one or many of these lenses, you might struggle throughout reading this part of the book. If this is you, I urge you to take your time and at the very least consider the arguments Zach presents in this section as equally justified.
Finally, Part 3 counters the lenses that cause injury presented in the previous part, and explores the lenses that promote flourishing and healing. Those lenses are: Jesus, Context, Flourishing, and Fruitfulness. This part aims to give readers a new set of lenses to help guide them towards a new understanding and into flourishing and healing.
I don't want to spoil all of the good content, but I did want to offer a few quotes that stuck out to me towards the beginning of the book:
"The churches they joined and the leaders they followed weaponized the Bible in ways that hurt them and the people they loved. Millions of these defectors are not rejecting Jesus; they are rejecting the use of Jesus' name for the purpose of domination and oppression. They aren't rejecting the Bible; they are rejecting harmful ways of reading it."
"Could I have been reading it wrong? Could the pastors and teachers I had been trained under have been reading it wrong too? What if the problem wasn't the Bible but the way I'd been taught to read it? As I began to consider these questions, something started to shift. Like ice thawing in the spring, it happened slowly at first, but I began to realize that even though I believed the Bible was inspired by God, the interpretations I'd been given were not."
"...thirty-nine of my forty seminary classes were taught by White men. Regardless of our racial or cultural heritage, we all have biases– lenses through which we interpret the Bible. That's not the problem. The problem is pretending that one group of people doesn't bring any biases to their Scripture reading while everyone else does...The perspective of a straight, White, able-bodied man is assumed to be normative; everything else needs a disclaimer."
"We are all interpreting. We make interpretive decisions without even realizing it, based on a combination of who we are, what we've been taught, where we grew up, and how we see the world."
I recommend this book to anyone who takes the Bible seriously and wants a different set of lenses to read the Bible from the ones they were given.
Review also posted on my website:
marshallhahn.com/blog/better-ways-to-read-the-bible-review

“Better Ways to Read the Bible” helps readers to see that there is no “just plain reading” of an ancient text written by multiple writers in places and contexts unlike our own. Zach W. Lambert points out different lenses that we might use as we read, and some lenses will point more toward healing, love, and flourishing for all. Great personal examples lend weight and conviction to the book.

I have been anticipating reading this book ever since I found out about it last October at the CenterPeace Conference in Dallas. I’m here to loudly proclaim - not only did it meet my very high expectations, it blew them away!
I am so weary of people using the Bible as a weapon. I’m so tired of divisive behaviors cloaked in the name of Christianity. My heart breaks to know that people are tormented by things that are wielded against them in the name of God but have no connection to God in reality. And that’s where this book breathes much needs fresh air into these subjects. There really are better ways to read the Bible and Zach steps readers through them with love. He also comes with receipts, so it’s not just one man saying so - it’s backed up with proof.
This book is worth the read. It really IS a balm, just as Zach indicated in the last few pages as a hope for the book. I promise you. It’s releasing soon and you can pre order NOW. You won’t regret time spent reading and absorbing these words, I assure you.

Brazos Press eARC
I have been waiting for a book like this for years. Zach Lambert adequately addressed a lot of the questions and concerns I’ve had now and in the past. This book really dove into the Bible and all of the context surrounding the clobber verses that are used to exclude so many people from the church. I liked how he emphasized walking with Jesus and people over everything. His writing was relatable, and I learned a lot. It's a book I will revisit again and again.

As someone who has, over the years, broadened my way of reading the Bible, I found this book to be relatable and timely. This is not a "how to" guide to read the Bible, rather it is designed to show the reader how to expand their reading of the Bible beyond the literal interpretation that many in the church were brought up with. The structure of the book is easy to follow and leaves the reader room to process the information and come to their own conclusions. A good resource for those starting to question the message they might be hearing from the pulpit or within their church circles. Unfortunately, I think the people that REALLY need to read this aren't going to pick it up... So, it's a good resource to share with a friend.
I received an Advanced Reader Copy via NetGalley. I look forward to receiving my pre-order to do some highlighting and note taking.

better ways to read the bible is not telling you this is exactly how to read the bible in this one way. it is not saying this is what you should believe because x,y, z but rather offers a really digestible approach to understanding different classical theology stances and various alternatives to approach scripture (ie an alternative to moralism). though these different perspectives tends to be contradictory to popular southern evangelical interpretations, lambert encourages the reader not to be trapped in the politics of black and white theology but guides the reader to make their own conclusions about the loving and merciful nature of god. he tackles some really tough topics (hell, creation, women in ministry, divorce, LGBTQ+) with a lot of care and compassion but also with facts. i really appreciated how lambert consistently drew upon other biblical scholars, the primary text, or even just good old statistics themselves. this book is equally educational and impactful but most importantly leaves the reader with a profound sense of hope about who christ is and what that means for us as christians.

First Impressions – A Courageous, Healing Reintroduction to Scripture
I’ve just begun reading Better Ways to Read the Bible, and already it feels like a balm for anyone who's ever been bruised by well-meaning (or not-so-well-meaning) interpretations of Scripture. The author approaches the Bible with deep love, but also with clear eyes, unafraid to name how it has been misused, yet determined to show how it can become what it was always meant to be: a tool of healing, not a weapon of harm.
What makes this book stand out is its grounding in Jesus, not just as a figure in Scripture, but as the living lens through which we read it. This isn’t abstract theology. It’s rooted in real, personal experience: the author’s own disillusionment as a church staff member, watching verses be used to shame, silence, and divide. His journey away from literalism, fear-based readings, and hierarchical control is honest, vulnerable, and most importantly, hopeful.
This book doesn’t throw the Bible away. It reclaims it.
Through a structure of “harmful lenses” (like literalism or moralism) and “healing lenses” (like the Jesus lens, context lens, and fruitfulness lens), readers are invited into a more life-giving, justice-centered engagement with Scripture. As someone who has also wrestled with how to hold onto faith while letting go of rigid dogma, this feels not just affirming but liberating.
What I appreciate most is the pastoral tone. This book isn’t out to attack anyone, it’s here to guide, invite, and heal. It honors how many of us inherited harmful readings of the Bible and gently helps us imagine a better way.
If our way of interpreting the Bible hurts people, then we need to reconsider it. This book helps us do just that, with grace.
I’ll continue posting thoughts as I read further. For now, if you’ve ever struggled with the Bible, or felt like walking away from it completely, this book may offer just the kind of restored vision you need.
Let’s keep walking together toward a more healing way of reading Scripture.
#BetterWaysToReadTheBible #ScriptureHealing #JesusLens #FaithfulReading

Zach Lambert’s Better Ways to Read the Bible is a thoughtful and accessible guide to engaging Scripture with greater humility and awareness. While I don’t agree with all his conclusions, I appreciate his challenge to examine the cultural and personal lenses we bring to the text. It’s a helpful starting point for anyone wanting to read the Bible more honestly and responsibly..

Like many who will pick up Zach W. Lambert's "Better Ways to Read the Bible," I'm someone who has experienced the Bible used as a weapon.
And yet, I've always loved the Bible. I've always seen through and around the weaponizing and the lenses birthed more out of fear than love.
The "Good Book" is far too often used to justify our own biases, agendas, fears, and desires. The Bible has been used to keep women submissive, amplify racism, demonize those with disabilities, excuse and even empower abuse, and so much more.
A pastor for over 10 years, Lambert has crafted a gentle and wise resource that encourages a different way to read the Bible, a way that he believes is more consistent with centering our faith around Jesus and a way, ways really, to renew our relationship with Scripture and to see even the most troubling, misused scriptures through a different lens.
If you've been hurt by harmful interpretations or feel disconnected from Scripture, this book offers a path forward to reclaim the Bible's life-giving message. This accessible resource will help you
A surprisingly quick and accessible read, "Better Ways to Read the Bible" shatters to pieces for common lenses that have done great harm. In their place, Lambert offers four new lenses. In some ways, "Better Ways to Read the Bible" is surprisingly simple in its approach. At times, it almost feels like Lambert is playing a game of "Mr. Obvious" here as he invites us into a different relationship with scripture that not only promotes healing and wholeness but feels more relational than transactional.
Even in those few spots where it felt like Lambert's argument is a bit too simplified, Lambert's compassionate boldness in opening himself up to these discussions is refreshing, encouraging, and life-giving. If you are married to your Christian nationalist views, "Better Ways to Read the Bible" will challenge those exclusionary views and will open the door to a different relationship with the Bible and with our faith.
I was deeply moved by Lambert's frequent inclusion of disability here, a topic and a population far too often considered an afterthought by Christian leaders and writers, and I greatly appreciate the almost matter-of-fact way that Lambert challenges us to view the Bible differently and to be present with one another through our theological disagreements and different practices.
As someone who grew up in what amounts to being a cult (Jehovah's Witnesses) and who has been kicked out of two churches, one because I was gay (I'm not) and one because I attempted suicide (I did), I felt the healing of Lambert's words and Lambert's literary presence here. I practically wanted to book a trip to visit his church and bask in his community.
Don't worry. I didn't. Yet.
Ultimately, Lambert creates a literary world where the Bible is a tool of liberation and not harm, a book of love and not of hate.
If you've grown tired of a weaponized faith, this book is for you. If you love the Bible, but you don't love how it's used this book is for you. If you've longed to find the words to express a different way to read the Bible, then this book is most definitely for you.
It's okay to wonder. It's okay to question. It's okay to challenge. It's okay to doubt. As Lambert paints time and time again here, it's okay to fall back in love with the Bible and Lambert helps us find the path to doing so.

This was a fine entry-level introduction to a variety of hermeneutical topics, but only had space for one or two Scripture examples of each. The first half highlighted a handful of unhealthy lenses, while the second half introduced the "better ways." Even in the first half the author was trying to suggest better alternative interpretations, so I would have appreciated reading earlier on the author's thesis of what makes the better interpretations better, perhaps laid out in an introductory chapter.

The breath of fresh air needed in a world more focused on the bad than the good. An excellent way to put words to the deepest desires of our hearts to follow Jesus by being loving and affirming of everyone he has created and finding beauty in the diversity.

Thank you to Netgalley and Zach Lambert for this galley. I'm using this and The Bible recap in my women's bible group and its helped me greatly!

Zach Lambert's book is a beautiful, welcome breath of fresh air. In very readable yet deeply insightful chapters we're led through understanding context and considering layers of meaning. Any reading of the Bible is done through lenses of bias, even if we don't know or acknowledge that fact. I think what Pastor Lambert has done so well is free up scripture and widen our perspectives, allowing the true depths of passages and stories to be plumbed, and the gift of the Living Word to be enlivened again. A wide range of other voices have been included, which I think enriches the journey. I believe Better Ways to Read the Bible is going to be very helpful to a lot of people.

Excelente. This book is a game changer for anyone questioning their faith after the rise of Christian Nationalism.

In Better Ways to Read the Bible, Zach Lambert does a great job in sharing his deep love for scripture and how he has seen it harm so many people by bias', negative interpretations, or viewpoints. Zach shares four lenses that scripture it typically viewed through: the literalism lens, the apocalypse lens, the moralism lens, and the hierarchy lens. He elaborates on how scripture is viewed by others through their own bias' and lenses, and how these views can somewhat be harmful and hurtful to others, as well as skew the actual meaning of the Word of God. In the last part of the book, Zach shares what he promotes as healing lenses: the Jesus lens, the context lens, the flourishing lens, and the fruitfulness lens. In each chapter, he pulls examples from the Bible of harmful lenses and then provides alternative examples of better ways to read those Scriptures. I found myself being encouraged as I read through this book, as I have personally seen many people harmed and hurt by patriarchal viewpoints, as well as other damaging views, which then leads to many falling away from the church and God. If our goal, as believers in Jesus Christ, is to bring others to know Him, wouldn't we want to espouse His teachings, love for others, and humble views for all? I highly recommend this book to read, as it will challenge your way of thinking, enlighten your views, and give you so much to think about on how you view the Bible and God's word. Thank you to NetGalley and Brazos Press for the advanced review copy. All opinions are my own.

Outstanding read! Growing up in the evangelical Christian church, there are so many things I was taught to not question. Zach Lambert has done a great job of helping us rethink how we interpret the Bible and reminds us that God welcomes all our questions and doubts.

As a former pastor and someone well-acquainted with how the bible can be and has been used to cause harm and division, I absolutely loved how Zach Lambert introduced alternative ways to approach scripture. Many people feel like they have to choose between loving their neighbor and calling themselves Christian, but Lambert makes a clear biblical case for those two things to go hand in hand.
In his conclusion, Lambert writes: "I hope this book is a balm. I pray the stories and concepts found in these pages will help you read the Bible in ways that bring healing and wholeness to yourself and your neighbor. Transformation can happen. I've seen it and experienced it first-hand too many times for me to doubt it now. I know it might feel like your love of Scripture is dead or your faith is lifeless, but Jesus is in the business of resurrection."
This book is a balm, and it's helped me to again find comfort in the book that has been used to cause such harm to so many.

“Better Ways to Read the Bible” has been the most helpful tool for me during the reconstruction of my faith. I was fired from the church I had attended for 10 years for my support and identification of the LGBTQ+ community. Zach W. Lambert makes it more than clear that the hateful, sexist, homophobic, exclusionary ways that many churches present Jesus and the bible are so far from the reality of God’s love for us. It’s brought me so much peace to hear a pastor like Zach talk about verses that have brought me and others so much pain in a whole new light. I would recommend this book to anyone who has felt ostracized by the church, anyone who has felt hated or pushed away by someone claiming to be a follower of Jesus, and anyone made to feel like who God made them to be is gross, wrong, sinful, or something to be ashamed about. There are many ways to read the bible, but this book demonstrates healthy, ACTUALLY fruitful ways to read it that don’t involve the shaming, guilting, fear-based ways many of us grew up with.

There is so much to like about this book. Zach Lambert takes a common sense approach to reading the bible, illustrating the biases (or lenses) that we all filter our reading of the Bible. What is sad is there is nothing new here --- I learned all of this in my college Bible as Literature class 40 years ago, and certainly in my seminary Bible classes. Unfortunately, too many people today are not given the language to understand what they bring to their Bible reading (and hearing).
Lambert identifies four distinct negative ways of reading the Bible. He defines these negative ways by the harm that they have caused people over the years. While these are four lenses, they are not the only negative lenses that people read the Bible through (I wish he had traveled a little way down this path). The four negative ways of reading the Bible are: Literalism, Apocalypse, Moralism and Hierarchy. Like Lambert, I have seen the harm done with these lenses.
He then spends the second half of the book going over four lenses that he defines as helping to promote healing. I personally did not care for his descriptive word choice for theses positive lenses, but found that adequate. The four lenses that heal are: The Jesus lens, the Context lens, the Flourishing lens and the Fruitfulness lens.
My biggest complaint about the book is while he says he doesn't care which positive lens you read the Bible through that clearly isn't true. Lambert is convinced that the Fruitfulness lens is the end all be all of the four. My second complaint is that the book is too much about him. I know he wanted to make is simple and accessible to a wide range of readers, I personally started skimming through his continual stories that he used to prove how right he is.
My one question would be, why when he is talking in the Introduction about how the Bible beat him up, does he quote from a poor translation of 1 Cor 6? He will much later tell us why this is a poor translation, but not until near the end of the book. If I had experienced that "clobber passage", and read it here, I very well may have set the book and made some incorrect assumptions about where Lambert is trying to go.
Would I recommend this book? Absolutely! I doubt it is going to open anyone ones eyes who actively are using the four harmful lenses that he describes, but I do think that it can be a source of healing for those who have been beaten up by the institutional church in how they have chosen to interpret the scriptures.
I appreciate Zach Lambert, Baker Academic , Brazos Press and NetGalley for an ARC of this book in exchange for my unbiased opinion.

One of my favorite quotes sums up so much of the book.
“I started this journey because I came to believe that if our way of interpreting the Bible hurts people, then it must be reconsidered. The way of Jesus always leads to healing, not harm. Better ways to read the Bible exist, ways that lead to restoration, wholeness, and flourishing for all people. If you feel similarly and are ready to take a fresh look at the Scriptures, welcome to the journey. Let’s discover better ways of reading the Bible together.”
Throughout the book, Zach Lambert uses his story, the experiences of people he knows, history, subject-area experts, and his vast knowledge & wisdom to explain how we all come to the Bible with different biases and lenses and how this can impact our interpretation and understanding of Scripture.
As one of his professors at a conservative seminary in America succinctly stated, “every reading of the Scripture is an interpretation of the Scripture.”

This book adds to the conversation of how we should approach the Bible. Should we be literalists or should we view the Bible through a lense of is this Christlike, is this loving our neighbor, is this loving God? We should definitely be the latter. God's table is open to all and we should focus on building more tables and less walls. Zach helps give us tools to continue this vital and important work in this book. ♥️

I had come to a point in my journey that I wasn’t sure what to do with the Bible. I had seen it used for harm or control, this book was so timely. I love the way it is organized by looking at the harmful lenses then at more healthy lenses. I read it in two days and am reading it again. It will seriously be a highly used tool in my library.

From the very beginning of this book I was drawn in to the ideas and writing, and I kept picking it up!
Not just for current Christians. Also a good read for anyone who is Jesus-curious, a good starting point.
Let this author bring you up in how to approach knowing Jesus, and reading the bible. His foundation will help shape you into one of the good ones.
In this book, “better ways to read the bible” I found some solid ways to read and comprehend the goodness and love in the bible, and to speak in my own voice, opposed to those who “use the bible" to thump people over the head and don’t get the Jesus-part.
The book was a pleasure to read, and it’s possible to read quickly. I *also* happen to like to go s.l.o.w.l.y through sentences and soak them up, and that was possible with this book too because it is rich and thoughtful. Reading “better ways” provided air to some new-to-me ideas… for instance, who would have thought that someone who is already “a believer” would need to so-intentionally look through a “Jesus lens” as the author described in order to see how to be more like Christ. I have heard about rose-colored glasses and other lenses before, but Zach Lambert’s writing is so good and really sheds quality clear light on this idea, what did JESUS say, and what did JESUS do? BE like that, LOVE like that.
The whole discussion about what is “biblical” and what is “Christlike” was clear and helpful. Many good flashlights illuminating Loving in this book, I underlined quite a bit, and will refer back to it. Many authors I hadn’t heard of are quoted (refreshing and exciting) and I hope to make time to read their work too. The quotes are seamlessly woven in, and 100% relevant with value-added in the footnotes at the bottom of the pages if you feel like reading even more. Very well done. I am so glad I read this one. And I will definitely come back to it.
#BetterWaystoReadtheBible #NetGalley.

This is a book that will either garner very high or very low ratings, all depending on the reader’s theology. Because regardless of your theology, Better Ways to Read the Bible is well-written, well-researched, and well-organized. Author Zach Lambert is a clear and concise communicator and the personal stories he tells of his own evolving relationship with the Bible, and the stories of his friends and church congregants who have been hurt by Scripture, are compelling. He cites diverse authors and theologians and includes pages of footnotes. The book is a pleasant read and very digestible for the average reader without a seminary degree.
The book is organized in three parts: Part 1 explains that we all have lenses through which we read the Bible, for “Pure exegesis is impossible. Every reading of the Scripture is an interpretation of the Scripture.” Part 2 are lenses that inflict harm: the literalism lens, the apocalypse lens, the moralism lens, and the hierarchy lens. Part 3 are lenses that promote healing: the Jesus lens, the context lens, the flourishing lens, and the fruitfulness lens. In each chapter, he pulls examples from the Bible of harmful lenses and then provides alternative examples of better ways to read those Scriptures. Examples include the Creation story, the End Times, divorce, the Samaritan woman caught in adultery, the hierarchy of men over women, hell and sin, and LGBTQ+ affirming theology.
I learned a lot from Lambert’s book and was impressed with the depth of his research, his heart for people, and the compelling stories he shares. The examples given were helpful to illustrate each harmful lens and alternative ways to interpret them. I don’t agree with all his theology and conclusions, and I imagine that will be a sore point for other readers who don’t find themselves on the far progressive side. As I read, I imagined the objections from more conservative readers who won’t agree on the definitions of sin, or flourishing, or love, so it is hard to arrive at the same conclusions that Lambert does. Still, I believe in reading widely and learning from those with whom I may have some differences. It would be a shame for readers to pass up on this book because of some theological misalignments. Even if you don’t land on the same conclusions as the author, there is still so much to learn and gain from Better Ways to Read the Bible.

I have shared before that when I learned that there’s (currently) no archaeological evidence for the Biblical Exodus that I felt as if I needed to lie down on the floor to ground myself. I felt I had been lied to. And, in truth, I had. There are a lot of claims made about the stories in the Bible and about the construction of the Bible itself that are false and that are passed on because people feel the need to “protect” the Bible.
But that’s not the only way that the Bible is misunderstood. Those are historical concerns but there are also theological concerns that need to be addressed. For me, the unwinding of the historical component came first and then the unwinding of the theology. I had been told that women couldn’t lead, and that God loved me but also that I was disgusting to God because I was born sinful, and that what mattered in our lives was mostly what we needed to do to get into heaven. Those were lies told to me as well (except that God does love me), well-meaning, ill-informed, theologically devastating lies.
When we moved out of evangelical spaces, I learned from the people around me to look more at the context and time period in which the different parts of the Bible were written, and the genre of the particular text. I learned that there were different kinds of theology that came from different viewpoints, and the one that I had lived under (white male patriarchy) did not begin to tell the entire story of God’s presence with God’s people. I read liberal and liberation and feminist theologians and fell back in love with the Bible, and only then was I lucky enough to find a way to go to divinity school. (I was happy about that because I did occasionally see a classmate look like they needed to lie down on the floor when something was said, but I had done all of that in the privacy of my own home.)
Yesterday I finished Better Ways to Read the Bible. A book like this would have been helpful when I was doing all that unpacking 20 years ago (how is that possibly the correct number???). In it, Zach Lambert talks about the harmful lenses through which he was taught to read the Bible, which are similar to many of the ones I mentioned earlier, and then he offers better, healing lenses through which to look at the Bible: looking at the Bible through the lens of Jesus, and through the context in which the scripture was written, and with the idea that God wants us to flourish, and looking for the fruit of the theology.
I read this pastorally, wondering if perhaps one of our Sunday School classes might use it. And I think that could be appropriate in some places. I think that at the church where I work, many of our congregants who are willing to go to Sunday School have already done enough of this work that it would be preaching to the choir, but this is a helpful book for someone who is still mad at the Bible but is open to new interpretation. I couldn’t think of a group at my church that might study it, but I could think of some individuals who would benefit from it.
There are a few places I had some quibbles, although I was reading a pre-release copy, so perhaps some of this changed before its final form. I did not love the note at the beginning that he chose to use masculine language for God because the Biblical authors did (a theological concern and a choice I wouldn’t have made). I was disappointed that in the conversation about John 8 (the woman caught in adultery all by herself) that he didn’t mention that story is not in the earliest manuscripts (a historical concern). And while he does make it clear that you can find a lot of different things in the Bible depending on what you are looking for, near the end, he mentioned that throughout the Bible we see God’s people doing the work of liberation. On one hand, I agree. I believe we should read the Bible as a liberative text. I believe the Bible is a liberative text. I read it and teach and preach it as a liberative text. I also think we have to decide what to do with the stories that are flatly oppressive, like the book of Joshua. Hebrew Bible scholar Anna Sieges said on the podcast The Bible for Normal People, “[T]here’s some really horrifying stuff in the [scriptures - she was specifically talking about the prophets]. Don’t be afraid to wrestle back and be like, ‘Eww, I don’t like that depiction of God.’ And keep moving through until you find one that you like better.” I think it is okay to verbalize those concerns, and to admit that we do at times see God’s people in the text acting as oppressors, believing they are following what God wants. Perhaps that view helps us understand the people who, at best, misled us because they themselves were misled and, at worst, have chosen to read the Bible as an oppressive text so that they can continue to hold on to power.
I refuse to cede the Bible to those people. If you do, too, or you want to but you’re still a little wobbly about how that might work, this book can help. It appears that bookshop.org and my local indie have it backordered, but I still recommend you use those instead of Amazon! There’s a good deal to it from the publishers themselves. Thanks to the publishers for the opportunity to read it and have it as a resource for my congregation.

Lambert's gracious, honest, and pastoral approach to what might be deemed "deconstructionist" reading practices of Scripture is refreshing and helpful.

I recommend this book to anyone who loves the Bible but struggles with it because at times it seems needlessly cruel or contradictory. You love Jesus, but don't love the way the scriptures have been weaponized against marginalized people, or you long for a deeper dive into the text, but don't know where to start.
Within these pages, Zach lays out the various ways we have been taught to read the Bible, and addresses the common pitfalls and tripping points many of us have come across in our earnest desire to understand scripture. He then presents alternative methods of interpretation that place the verses in context while maintaining the centrality of Jesus's teachings. And if you have questions about anything Zach mentions, he has meticulously cited his references, so you can look into his sources in more detail. Ten out of ten! I can't wait to get a paper copy of this book!

As someone who was raised in church, the very essence of who I was as a person had been shaped by the Bible - in some good ways and some not so good ways. Over the last several years my faith has been evolving and growing and it reached a point that it no longer fit neatly in the boxes it always had. The questions had no answers. The questions created even more questions. The Bible became sort of a scary thing because so many of the interpretations I’d been taught felt wrong, but even saying that out loud would have been a red letter I was terrified to wear. When others, including spiritual mentors, started using it in ways that were incredibly damaging to me, I felt like I didn’t have anywhere to turn. I existed solely in a space that idolized certain interpretations of the written words, and it became a kind of killing field. I began to turn so far inward so as to shield myself from all of it, and it has been challenging to read what should have been the ultimate love letter. Engaging with the Bible has been complicated to say the least. This book has been like the most gentle healing balm to deep wounds of my soul. It has made me fall in love with the Bible again, and has offered freedom I hope that others will also find in its pages. I know I’m not the only one who has walked this road of enduring spiritual abuse and church trauma and what I like to call ‘spiritual renovation,’ but I’m here to tell you that this is just the guidebook I was looking for. What an amazingly bright light in a landscape of darkness and turmoil Pastor Zach and Restore have been for me, and reading this book is like sitting down for a coffee chat with a good friend that heals you in a way not much else can. Buy a copy for yourself, and buy several extras for the people God will inevitably bring to your mind while you’re reading that also need its truths. As my friend Denise always says - may this book be a pebble that sends ripples of healing and restoration into not just our own faith but into our churches, families, our country, and our world. There truly are ‘better ways to read the Bible,’ and you’ll find the starting point in the journey to being able to do that right in this book!

As a lifelong Christian and pastor for two decades, I have seen the Bible used as a source of inspiration and a source of harm. Zach Lambert argues that the difference comes down to the lenses we read it through. Certain groups approach the Bible assuming they have no lenses and are not interpreting, and this is where harm most often occurs, as Lambert demonstrates through numerous heartbreaking stories from his own life and pastoral work. But when we read the Bible for human flourishing and fruitfulness, this sacred book has immense spiritual value.
How much you’ll appreciate this book depends on how much work you’ve already done in deconstructing fundamentalist readings of Scripture. I would highly recommend this book if you’ve only ever had the Bible used as a weapon. If you’ve done much reading in the deconstruction area, you won’t find a lot of new ideas here. And while I appreciate that Lambert addresses most current hot button biblical issues (gender, sexuality, the afterlife, etc.), these topics could all use more discussion. But since he aims to offer an introduction to a healing approach to Scripture, I would still recommend Better Ways to Read the Bible. 4.5/5
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