I meet with women all the time who
are curious about how they should study the Bible. They hunger for
transformation, but it eludes them. Though many have spent years in church,
even participating in organized studies, their grasp on the fundamentals of how
to approach God's Word is weak to non-existent. And it's probably not their
fault. Unless we are taught good study habits, few of us develop them
naturally.
Why, with so many study options
available, do many professing Christians remain unschooled and unchanged?
Scripture teaches clearly that the living and active Word matures us, transforms us, accomplishes what it intends,
increases our wisdom, and bears the fruit of right actions.
There is no deficit in the ministry of the Word. If our exposure to it fails to
result in transformation, particularly over the course of years, there are
surely only two possible reasons why: either our Bible studies lack true
converts, or our converts lack true Bible study.
I believe the second reason is more
accurate than the first. Much of what passes for Bible study in Christian
bookstores and church resource libraries just isn't: while it may educate us on a doctrine or a topic, it does
little to further our Bible literacy. And left to our own devices, we pursue a
host of unsavory (and un-transformative) self-constructed approaches to “spending
time in the Word.” Here are several that I encounter on a regular basis.
The Xanax Approach: Feel anxious? Philippians
4:6 says be anxious for nothing. Feel ugly? Psalm 139 says
you are fearfully and wonderfully made. Feel tired? Matthew 11:28 says
Jesus will give rest to the weary. The Xanax Approach treats the Bible as if it
exists to make us feel better. Whether aided by a devotional book or just the
topical index in our Bibles, we pronounce our time in the Word successful
if we can say, “Wow. That was touching.” The
Problem: The Xanax Approach makes the
Bible a book about us. We ask how the Bible can serve us, rather than how we
can serve the God it proclaims. Actually, the Bible doesn't always make us feel
better. Quite often it does just the opposite (feeling awesome? Jeremiah 17:9 says
you're a wicked rascal). Yes, there is comfort to be found in the pages of
Scripture, but context is what makes that comfort lasting and real. The Xanax
Approach guarantees that huge sections of your Bible will remain unread,
because they fail to deliver an immediate dose of emotional satisfaction.
The Pinball Approach: Lacking a preference or any guidance about what to
read, you read whatever Scripture you happen to turn to. Releasing the plunger
of your good intentions, you send the pinball of ignorance hurtling toward
whatever passage it may hit, ricocheting around to various passages “as the
Spirit leads.” The Problem: The Bible was not written to be read this way. The
Pinball Approach gives no thought to cultural, historical or textual context,
authorship, or original intent of the passage in question. When we read this
way, we treat the Bible with less respect than we would give to a simple
textbook. Imagine trying to master algebra by randomly reading for ten
minutes each day from whatever paragraph in the textbook your eyes
happened to fall on. Like that metal pinball, you'd lose momentum fast. And be
very bad at algebra.
The Magic 8 Ball Approach: You remember the Magic 8 Ball—it answered your most
difficult questions as a child. But you're an adult now and wondering if you
should marry Bob, get a new job, or change your hair color. You give your Bible
a vigorous shake and open it to a random page. Placing your finger blindly on a
verse, you then read it to see if “signs point to yes.” The Problem: The
Bible is not magical, and it does not serve our whim. The Magic 8 Ball Approach
misconstrues the ministry of the Holy Spirit through the Word, demanding that
the Bible tell us what to do rather
than who to be. And it's
dangerously close to soothsaying, which people used to get stoned for. So,
please. No Magic 8 Ball.
The Personal Shopper Approach: You want to know about being a godly woman or how to deal
with self-esteem issues, but you don't know where to find verses about that, so
you let [insert famous Bible teacher here] do the legwork for you. The Problem: The
Personal Shopper Approach doesn't help you build “ownership” of Scripture. Much
like the Pinball Approach, you ricochet from passage to passage, gaining
fragmentary knowledge of many books of the Bible but mastery of none. Topical
studies serve a purpose: they help us integrate broad concepts into our
understanding of Scripture. But if they're all we ever do, we're missing out on
the richness of learning a book of the Bible from start to finish.
The Jack Sprat Approach: This is where we engage in “picky eating” with the
Word of God. We read the New Testament, but other than Psalms and Proverbs we
avoid the Old Testament, or we read books with characters, plots, or topics we
can easily identify with. The
Problem: All Scripture is God-breathed
and profitable. All of it. Women, it's time to move beyond Esther, Ruth, and
Proverbs 31 to the rest of the meal. Everyone, you can't fully appreciate
the sweetness of the New Testament without the savory of the Old
Testament. We need a balanced diet to grow to maturity.
Discipleship Defined
Why do these six habits of highly
ineffective Bible study persist in the church today? Why does biblical
ignorance continue to dog the church, despite the good intentions of leadership
to obey the Great Command to make disciples? I believe the answer lies in our
definition of a disciple. A disciple is, literally, a learner—one who follows
another's teaching. But the modern church has tended to define a disciple as a
“doer” instead of as a “learner.” We have been asked to do service projects,
join home groups, find an accountability partner, get counseling, fix our
marriages, sing on the worship team, get out of debt, help in the nursery, hand
out bulletins, go on mission trips, give to the building fund, share the gospel
at Starbucks—but we have so rarely been challenged to pursue the most
fundamental element of discipleship—earnest study of the Word. Yes, a disciple
does, but we're motivated to act by love for the God revealed in the Word. Stop
waiting for your community of believers to call you to be what Christ already
has. Be a student. Be a good student. Read repetitively and in context, line by
line. Keep the God of the gospel at the center of your study. Strive for
comprehension before interpretation. Give application ample time to emerge from
a passage. Watch ignorance flee and transformation flourish. Study the
Word. Master it, master it.
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