More than “A Verse of the Day”
There is a growing
trend amongst believers. And it is this.
Post a verse
a day. Send it out to friends and family. Post it to Instagram. Put it up on
What’s App. Send it out via text.
And yes, it
usually has good intentions. The Word of God spread far and wide, in the hopes
that the verse will speak to someone who needs it and be an encouragement to them.
I’m not
saying that it’s a bad thing.
But what I
am saying, is that we need MORE than a verse a day.
The older I
get, the more I long to be in the Word of God in a deeper, richer way. The more
I long to study it. Meditate on it. Learn from it. Understand it.
If I want to
understand my Bible, I am going to need more than a verse a day.
And if you
want to gain a better understanding of your Bible, you are going to need
more than ‘the verse of the day’ to sustain you.
Yes, a
single verse can encourage you. Yes, a single verse can speak to you. It can help
bring comfort, healing, blessing. But to understand scripture, it requires more
than a verse a day. It requires context. It requires study.
God’s Word
was not written in snippets. It was not written in one-line verses. It was written
in books, in letters, in stories – all meant to be read together.
Context
is key.
When we
isolate verses, we run the risk of missing the authors intent. We run the risk
of misapplying God’s promises. We risk misinterpretation.
One of my favourite
authors says to ask yourself these questions when you read a passage.
What did
this text mean for them and for then?
What does
it mean for us and for always?
What does
it mean for me and for now?
Oftentimes,
we make Scripture about us instead of God. The Bible is a book about God.
Yes, there
are many stories in its pages that can be applied to us and for today, but its
goal is to draw us toward Christ, bringing repentance and making us more like
him.
We are to imitate Christ. We can’t do that if we
don’t know him. And we can’t know him unless we learn about him. And we can’t
learn about him if we are not in the Word of God, studying it,
meditating on it, memorizing it, applying it, obeying it and letting God reveal
himself to us through it.
When we read
a verse, we have to remember that context is key. ALWAYS. Context. Context.
Context.
Understanding
Scripture means asking better questions.
Who wrote
this and to whom was it written?
Why was
it written?
What
happened before and after this passage?
Where
does it fit in history?
And most
importantly, instead of asking, “What’s in it for me?”, we should be
asking, “What does this teach me about God?”
There are so
many questions to ask ourselves that we could do an entire series on it.
When we
neglect to ask ourselves the right questions and we verse hop, reading just a
verse a day, without context, we can often be left feeling very confused.
Why? Because
we are only seeing pieces. We’re not seeing the whole picture.
Sadly, I think
that in some churches, long-time members and infrequent attendees are not being
taught how to study the Bible.
We are
being told to READ our Bibles, but we are not being told how to STUDY them.
We are being
told how important it is to read the Word of God. We are being told to read a
portion each and every day. And that is good. But I fear that some Christians
treat it like the old saying, “an apple a day keeps the doctor away”.
The Bible is not a lucky charm.
Maybe you read more than the verse of the day. But just because you
read a lot of your Bible and know a lot about the Bible doesn’t mean you are
walking close to the Lord. Head knowledge doesn’t necessarily mean heart awareness
and change.
Many people read the Bible like a fiction novel. They read for pleasure.
For entertainment. Or just to say they’ve read it. To brag. They want a good
plot a good climactic narrative and an epic conclusion. Then the book is done,
and they’re left with the memory of a great story and maybe a handful of
interesting quotes, but no real comprehension and understanding and it doesn’t
change their life.
Other people read their Bibles by jumping around. A verse a day. A
passage in Galatians then a verse in Exodus then a Psalm and so it goes. They’re
reading their Bibles like they’ve been told to do. But they are often reading
without understanding and with no context. They are being exposed to the Word
of God, but they are not letting it speak to them through the guidance of the
Holy Spirit by ‘rightly dividing the Word of truth” (2 Timothy 2:15)
What we believe
about God shapes how we live. It determines how we endure hardship. It influences how we
respond to the circumstances in our life.
Did you know
that you don’t need a theological degree to understand Scripture? Yes, there will
always be passages that are hard to understand, but you are responsible for
what you do with the book you hold in your hands.
God has
given us passages that help to interpret other passages. We have been blessed
with Godly men and women who help to expound and explain the Word to us through
various resources.
When we
become content with only consuming the verse of the day that pops up on our
Bible app, or is sent to us by a friend, then we are missing out on so much!
The Bible
doesn’t hurry us. The Bible invites us to linger. To soak it all in. To meditate
on it.
As we read and
study the Word of God slowly, faithfully, consistently, not just a verse at a
time but a whole passage, a whole chapter, a whole book, God’s truth speaks
into our lives and shapes who we are and who we become.
When we read
our Bibles like we should, and obey it like we should, it grounds our faith. It
increases our discernment. It produces fruit that lasts. It enables us to live
lives worthy of our calling. (Ephesians 4:1)
The goal of
Bible reading and study is not to check off a list. It’s about growing in our personal
relationship with Christ.
Like Gipsy
Smith, the old evangelist said, “It’s not about how many times you’ve
been through the Bible, it’s about how many times the Bible has been through
you”
Your spiritual growth is directly proportionate to the amount of time
and effort you put into study of the Bible. Not growing spiritually can be
traced to a failure to be in the Word. You don’t grow if you refuse to feed
yourself.
What would happen if you blindfolded yourself and reached into the
fridge and took out 3 things to make a meal from? Tomato sauce. An apple. A jar
of olives. Like a Master Chef competition.
Sometimes that is how we approach the Word of God. We
close our eyes and open to a page. We open our Bible app, read our verse of the
day and carry on. We pick and choose, picking a verse here and a verse there
and maybe even a short passage and then we think that we will be able to make a
spiritual meal out of it and grow.
In order to truly grow spiritually, we need to read
and study the hard passages, the difficult to understand. The uncomfortable stories.
The ones that leave us scratching our heads.
We need the balance of the whole Word of God. The
whole counsel of God. (Acts 20:27)
Don’t let
your spiritual growth be stunted because of your spiritual diet.
By all
means, read your verse a day, but don’t let it stop there.
Get curious
about why that verse is where it is. Get curious about the context in which it
was written. Try and understand what God wants to show you through it by
looking at the surrounding verses.
Don’t just
let it stand alone. It has neighbours. Invite them in and let them shed some
light on it.
Aim for more than ‘a verse of the day’ and you’ll be amazed at
the precious treasures you’ll find.
Colossians 3:16 KJV - Let the word of Christ dwell in you richly in all
wisdom; teaching and admonishing one another in psalms and hymns and spiritual
songs, singing with grace in your hearts to the Lord.

No comments:
Post a Comment