4 Simple Ways To Help You Read the Bible Better

How to hear the voice of God

Do you want to hear from God? Then you must learn to study and read the Bible for yourself. Don’t worry, you can do this!

I know the Bible can be intimidating. It can be hard to know where to start.

Reading the Bible is not just for scholars and Ph.D.’s, but that doesn’t mean it won’t take a little effort.

But if we can know with confidence we are hearing the voice of God, then isn’t it worth the effort?

Reading the Bible is Worth the Effort!

The Apostle Paul reminds us of this important truth when he was writing to his young protege Timothy:

“Be diligent to present yourself approved to God as a workman who does not need to be ashamed, accurately handling the word of truth.” – 2 Timothy 2:15

This passage is helpful because it lets us know up front that reading and understanding takes work. We need to be like a craftsman who gets better at our craft.

We also need to handle God’s Word accurately. Note: This assumes that the Bible can be handled inaccurately.

Now more than ever in our post-truth culture it is important to recognize that the Bible can be misinterpreted.

Let’s look at a few tips together that will help unlock the meaning of God’s Word.

Four Principles That Will Help You Accurately Read the Bible

(1) A text cannot mean today, what it never meant to the original audience.

The main point to grasp here is that I am trying to understand how the recipients of this book or letter would have understood this. That is where meaning starts.

As the biblical story advances, greater light is available to see things more clearly (this is known as “progressive revelation” as redemptive history unfolds). For example, something I discover in the book of Genesis may become clearer by the time I get to the book of Revelation, but the trajectory is set in Genesis. Start with the original audience.

(2) Interpretation is one but application is many.

How many times have you been in a small group or conversation and someone said, this is what the Bible means to me?

This is a principle I teach our students at Impact 360 Institute. If our goal is to hear accurately from God, then I am convinced that “what does the Bible mean to me?” is the worst question you can ask.

The best question is “what does the Bible mean?”

Hard stop.

Period.

I can’t express this any better than Howard “Prof”  Hendricks, the man who taught me how to study the Bible (and countless others):

“There is only one ultimate interpretation of a passage of Scripture. The text doesn’t mean one thing today and something else tomorrow. Whatever it means, it means forever. But you will never cease the process of applying that truth to your life.”

Then the natural follow up question, is how does this passage or principle in the Bible apply to me and my life situation?

This one principle keeps us from relativizing the Bible.

(3) Context is king when reading the Bible.

Actually, this is true when reading any form of communication. Whether it’s a text message, a tweet, ESPN, the evening news, or Shakespeare.

But this is especially true when we come to the Bible and are trying to hear from God. We really want to get that right!

Two quick tips here. When you read the Bible you need to understand the historical backdrop of the text. For example, the Old Testament needs to be understood in light of the Ancient Near East. And the New Testament needs to be understood in light of a largely Jewish mindset emerging in a world heavily influenced by Greco-Roman Culture.

Second, verse numbers and chapters as we have them in our Bibles today were inserted later as a help (and they can be). But they can also hurt too.

Don’t just read one verse.

Read the paragraph before and after, or the whole narrative (like Joseph in the book of Genesis) or the whole teaching (like Jesus’ parables).

So how do you better understand the context? That leads me to my final tip.

(4) Asking the right questions leads to greater understanding.

Be an active reader! Dig into God’s word. Be curious. Think of yourself as a detective or investigator.

Some good questions to ask:

  • Who wrote this?
  • Who was it written to?
  • What was going on in history then?
  • What are the main ideas and events?
  • What are the repeated words?
  • When was it written?
  • Why is this here?
  • How is this being communicated?

That’s just to get you started, make your own list. There are tons of questions! Go crazy! You can never ask too many questions of the Bible if your goal is better understanding.

Just Start Reading the Bible

I am convinced–by evidence and experience–that Christianity is true and God has spoken in the Bible.

If that is the case, then we can know what God wants us to do, why we are here, and how to live. Discovering that is worth the effort don’t you think? Just start and ask God to join you on your journey!

[leadpages_leadbox leadbox_id=142390346639c5] [/leadpages_leadbox]

Do Our Minds Matter to God?

Thinking Helps Us Navigate Life

Feelings reign supreme in our culture.

So many people have bought into the lie that how you feel determines what’s real.

What we need is more thinking. We need to love God with our minds.

One of my mentors J.P. Moreland, put it this way:

“The spiritual journey is certainly more than loving God with our minds, but just as surely, that journey is at least a life of such intellectual devotion.”

One of the reasons is that we don’t engage the mind and think more is that we are too busy. I mean who has the time to read a book? Or think about something for longer than three minutes?

Moving From “How I Feel” to “How I Think”

If we want to grow personally and help teenagers follow Jesus for a lifetime, then we must help them learn how to think well. This is part of our worship of God. Not all of it, but a major part of it.

Pay attention to how many conversations begin with “I feel that” rather than “I think that.”

Feelings are important and good barometers of what is going on inside, but thinking helps us successfully navigate life.

Jesus explained the greatest commandment:

“And he answered, “You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your strength and with all your mind, and your neighbor as yourself.”–Luke 10:27

Putting This Into Action

  1. Pick a book of the Bible (like Philippians or Colossians) and read it every day for the next week (it will take about 15 minutes)
  2. Find a physical book (not a digital copy) and set aside 10 minutes a day to read it.
  3. Around the dinner table, ask your kids what they think about what they learned in school or church that day. Ask them to give you reasons they agree or disagree with whatever they share.

These are small things that can make a big difference!

[leadpages_leadbox leadbox_id=142390346639c5] [/leadpages_leadbox]

Are Today’s Teenagers The Least Christian Generation Ever?

Fox News Op-Ed by Jonathan Morrow on Gen Z

Many Christian teens are simply unprepared for the world that is waiting for them.

With the best of intentions, we bubble wrap our kids and create Disney World–like environments for them in our churches, and then wonder why they have no resilience in faith or life. Students are entertained but not prepared.

Students Are Entertained But Not Prepared

They’ve had a lot of fun but are not ready to lead. When the pressure to conform is turned up, Christian teenagers tend to wilt if they do not have the confidence that only comes from knowing why they believe what they believe.

As one teenager told me, “following Jesus today is hard because sometimes you feel like the only one.”

Gen Z has been discipled by their smartphones, taught sex ed by Google, and conditioned to assume that just because they believe something makes it true.

Gen Z Least Christian Generation to Date

Gen Z—the generation following the millennials—is also the least Christian generation to date. According to a new Barna study I led over the last 18 months on behalf of Impact 360 Institute – 34 percent of Gen Z’s religious affiliation is either atheist, agnostic or none.

In fact, teens 13-18 years old are twice as likely as adults to say they are atheist. And just three in five 13- to 18-year-olds say they are some kind of Christian (59 percent)… [Read the rest of my article on Fox News here ]

Wake-Up Call

Awareness can be a gift. But only if we do something about it. Many students are walking away in their hearts and minds in middle and high school long before they walk away with their feet in college.

It will become increasingly uncomfortable and socially costly to follow Jesus in the is post-Christian culture we are living in today. Most teenagers are unprepared. Are your kids ready?

Just showing up at church for the goldfish, pizza, and candy is not enough. We must train and disciple students for the world they are actually heading into.

If you want to give your Christian student a confident faith, then I encourage you to get them some apologetics and worldview training. I am the director of two life-changing summer experiences for teenagers at Impact 360 Institute. I think both Propel and Immersion would help your son or daughter resist the pull of secularism and relativism while building a stronger faith of their own. I hope to see them this summer!

[leadpages_leadbox leadbox_id=142390346639c5] [/leadpages_leadbox]