Stop Scrolling and Start Scribing: A Call to Writing Out the Bible

Stop Scrolling and Start Scribing: A Call to Writing Out the Bible

I have been memorizing the book of Ephesians since last year. It's been a slow and steady process. As part of the memorization, I have been writing out the entire book of Ephesians in a Moleskine notebook. Then the thought hit me: wouldn't it be awesome (and very ambitious) to write out the entire Bible. Crazy thought I know! But a quick Google search proved that it's not as crazy as it seems. I found lots of people who are writing out the Bible. There was even one entry where a family had its patriarch's handwritten scriptures bound in leather books as a family keepsake.

But as awesome as the idea was, I knew I could never do it because I work, have three kids and don't have extra time to spare. Then, as only the Holy Spirit can, He whispered: "instead of scrolling, you could be scribing."

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The Spread of Sin's Crimson Stain (Genesis 4 Recap)

The  Spread of Sin's Crimson Stain (Genesis 4 Recap)

Genesis 4 opens with Adam and Eve fulfilling God’s command to be fruitful and multiply.

  • Eve may think that Cain is the promised Messiah that will bruise the serpent’s head. She soon finds out that her messiah child picked up the sin trait.
  • Cain and Abel begin the pattern of 2 sons - one chosen by the world, the other chosen by God. Bottom line - God is sovereign and He alone will determine how the Messiah will come about.
  • There are two camps of thought when it comes to the Abel preference.
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Delight, Death and the Downward Spiral (Genesis 3 Study Recap)

Delight, Death and the Downward Spiral (Genesis 3 Study Recap)

In Genesis 3, we see that God is personal AND redemptive in nature versus man who is sinful by nature. (This marks the continued contrast of light & dark established in the creation story.)

We know what goes down in Genesis 3, but let’s first take a look at where Adam & Eve fell from.

Garden of Eden is a type of the first tabernacle/temple: God’s dwelling place on earth. It was known as the Garden of Delights. This was a place of provision and Divine presence: a dwelling place where humanity is in the presence of God continually. Let’s look at the parallels

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God Ain't Stingy (Genesis 2 Study Recap)

Taking a slow walk through the book of Genesis with a group of women has proven to be such a blessing. I so look forward Monday nights when we meet up. Here are some recap notes from Genesis chapter 2. 

Genesis 2 opens with God finishing up His work.

The author stresses the fact that this is God’s work as seen in verse 2 with six references to God.

God BLESSED and SET APART the seventh day. Why?

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Creation: A Divine Act of Love (Genesis 1 Study Recap)

Tomorrow starts week 3 of the Genesis Bible Study. I thought I'd share some recap notes from each week. Here's the week 1 video.

Genesis is a foundational book full of firsts: marriage, birth, matter, energy, society, morality, sacrifice, murder, polygamy, death, lie, rainfall, boat, city made, covenant among others.

This book reveals God’s nature and is the start of His autobiography.

Genesis is important because it corrected the Israelites thinking away from the culture’s thinking.

This is important because they were coming out from under Egypt’s polytheistic influence after 200-400 years  and about to enter the Promised Land full of the Canaanites, the Hittites, the Jebusites etc. They needed to know: who you are and Whose you are.

Genesis 1:1 alone refutes 9 arguments:

Atheism: there is no God

Pantheism: all is God

Polytheism: many gods

Materialism: Matter is eternal

Dualism: good and evil are equal

Humanism: Man is the measure of all things

Naturalism: all things form from matter

Evolution: Man evolved from lower life forms

Deism: God is not involved in creation though he created it. Natural laws rule.

This book reveals God’s nature and is the start of His autobiography. We learn 3 things about God:

1. He’s a God of order

He made order out of chaos. He formed and then filled. He put sign in the sky for natural, agricultural cycles and festivals. God determines order and function, thus the use of this is very good.     

Genesis 1:1 has seven words in the Hebrew. (7 is used 735 times total in the bible) The number seven is a number of completeness, divine perfection or something that is finished or perfect order. Even the retelling of creation has order:

God and the pronoun used 35 times in Genesis 1. God said is used 7 times in Genesis 1.

2. God’s love is evident in HIs careful and deliberate act of creation.

He took seven days to establish a pattern for us and show His carefulness & attention to detail in creation. His Spirit hovered is a picture of a bird over the nest. We see gentleness, provision, great care in handling His creation. 

Like an eagle that stirs up its nest, that flutters over its young, spreading out its wings, catching them, bearing them on its pinions, Deut. 32:11 (ESV)

3. God is sovereign and He rules by serving

He created this world for US. God rules to show us how to rule because we are image bearers. Created in God’s image gives us a God awareness unlike any other creation. We have the characteristics of God which no other creature has.     

Do not lie to one another, seeing that you have put off the old self with its practices 10 and have put on the new self, which is being renewed in knowledge after the image of its creator. 11 Here there is not Greek and Jew, circumcised and uncircumcised, barbarian, Scythian, slave, free; but Christ is all, and in all. 12 Put on then, as God's chosen ones, holy and beloved, compassionate hearts,kindness, humility, meekness, and patience, 13 bearing with one another and, if one has a complaint against another, forgiving each other; as the Lord has forgiven you, so you also must forgive. 14 And above all these put on love, which binds everything together in perfect harmony.  Colossians 3:9-14

Creation is a picture of our salvation.

God takes our chaotic voidness (our existence in sin) and makes it very good = fit for the purpose for which it was made.

I Timothy 1: 8-10 8 Therefore do not be ashamed of the testimony about our Lord, nor of me his prisoner, but share in suffering for the gospel by the power of God, 9 who saved us and called us to a holy calling, not because of our works but because of his own purpose and grace, which he gave us in Christ Jesus before the ages began, 10 and which now has been manifested through the appearing of our Savior Christ Jesus, who abolished death and brought life and immortality to light through the gospel,

Announcing - the Genesis Bible Study on Periscope

Announcing - the Genesis Bible Study on Periscope

I've spent the last few months in the first part of the book of Genesis. The result of so much time in this foundational book has overflowed into a Bible Study along with a study guide that I've written.

The whole idea of the study is simply to gain an understanding of what the Word of God says. We can't apply the Bible to our lives until we have a thorough knowledge and understanding of it. 

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5 Simple Ways To Make the Best of Your Bible Study Time

Yesterday on social media I shared a little tip that has helped my Bible study: printing out the book of the Bible I'm reading so I can write notes onto the pages. Honestly, I didn't expect that post to get nary a like, but it did. So I thought I'd share how I approach my personal Bible study time. 

Here's my approach to Bible study:

1. Open the Scriptures Prayerfully and Humbly: I pray for the eyes of my understanding to be enlightened. The Bible is a historical, factual book, but, above all else, it is a book about God and who He is. I can't possibly fathom all that God is, so I come in knowing that there will always be more to learn about the Bible and God....always. I remember a pastor of mine saying that an older pastor well into his elderly years said he was still getting revelation on a verse of scripture after decades of teaching the Bible. We will never exhaust its knowledge.

2. Print out a copy of the Bible: This has been a great tool for me instead of marking up my Bible. I circle recurring words and themes. Ask questions. Mark definitions and note revelation or questions that pop up as I'm reading. Loose-leaf, hole-punched Bibles are sold online, but I've found it cheaper to just cut and paste into a Word document. Bible Gateway even lets you remove title headings and verses which makes reading easier. 

printed bible

And I just read the Bible only. When most people say they're studying the Bible, what they're really doing is studying a book someone else has written about their study of the Bible. Not a bad thing, but it certainly shouldn't be the only source of gaining knowledge of the Word.

3. Choose a method of study: You may choose to do a topical study. A word study. A character study or read a whole book of the Bible. Whatever it is, stick to it and don't jump around during a single study period. My favorite is to study a whole book of the Bible using the Inductive Study method. Inductive study using investigative tools to gather information about the Bible: Observation (taking in all the facts about the text taking into consideration its context), Interpretation (figuring out what the text is saying & keeping in mind there is only one correct interpretation), Application (lessons for my life).

inductive study

Keep in mind that there are 11 categories of culture that need to be taken into consideration when reading the Bible. They are:

political  * religious * economic * legal * agricultural * architectural

* clothing * domestic * geographical * military * social

The Bible was written in the framework of another time. So though it's spiritual significance is timeless, it was written within the boundaries of culture and should be read with that in mind.

4. Gather "excavation" tools: As I dig deeper in the Word through Bible study. I find it's good to have a Bible dictionary (I especially like looking up name meanings), commentary, encyclopedia, maps (I've just recently started using maps & it I'm finding it gives a frame of reference) and concordance on hand. I admit, I'm a Strong's concordance junkie. I love to look up the origin of words. And be sure to cross-reference; it's the best way to see how the Bible is woven together as one big tapestry. Need help finding tools? This link has a list of basic resources.

excavation tools

5. Separate Bible study and devotion time: For me, Bible study is studying as a student would to gain knowledge for a class. I block out an hour in the evenings after the kids are sleep and I just pore over the scriptures. Often things get so good, I end up staying up too late! In the morning I have devotion time where I dedicate a shorter period of time to reading passages of scripture and praying so that God can speak to my heart for the day. 

I should add that getting a Bible version that is easy reading for you is key. I recently switched from the KJV to the ESV because I wanted a greater ease of reading and the ESV is a word-for-word translation rather than a thought for thought translation like the NIV, NAB, NLT and Bibles. I also gave up the Message Bible for Bible Study because it's a paraphrase rather than a translation. Here's a handy list of Bible translations and types.

What are your tips for Bible Study? And what are you studying now? I'd love to hear how you study!

currently: may 2015

womenoftheword

Just finished reading: Women of the Word by Jen Wilkin. Actually finished it in 2 days! Some good solid info. I especially like her reminder that the Bible is first and foremost a book about God and His dealings with His people--not about us. Next read: Shadow of the Almighty: The Life and Testament of Jim Elliot.

Loving: Jen Wilkin's Bible studies. I'm right in the midst of the Joshua study. I really like slowly digesting a book of the Bible at a time. 

Planning: A trip to Bay Area later this month. My mother has a storage she's getting rid of and I'm going to go raid her goodies!

Thinking about: Summer plans for the boys. Summer is when I wish I was a homeschooling mama. I don't take kindly to having to pay for summer camp while we work. 

Looking forward to: Two-year-old being fully potty trained. She's been in underwear for the past two-three weeks. We've had a few accidents-which is to be expected. Still working on staying dry overnight.

Listening to: A whole smattering of things: some old Ben Rector, United Pursuit, Kenny Lattimore.

Watching: Loads of iTunes University. I can't believe I didn't know about iTunes U. I'm "taking" an Old Testament History course at Dallas Theological Seminary. Taking = watching via Apple TV and writing notes. And also a Bible Study Methods course

Anything new with you? I'd love to hear in the comments below.

The Beauty (& Benefits) of Memorizing Scripture

The Beauty and Benefits of Memorizing Scripture

Time and time again, I've attempted to memorize big chunks of scripture, only to fail. Sure, I have lots of scripture committed to memory. But not whole books. The boys have to memorize weekly Bible verses as part of their curriculum at school, so I always thought this would be a good motivator. It never was.

Recently, my online gal pal Kim Cash Tate (a gifted Christian book author by the way) shared a video about her tips for memorizing scripture. That video re-ignited the flame. And it's funny how something as simple as spiral bound index cards helped me tremendously!

A few weeks back I started memorizing the book of Ephesians. I'm still early in the book, but I'm okay with the progress thus far. I've discovered that giving myself a deadline to memorize verses was stressful and counterproductive. Instead, I move on to the next set of verses once I feel I've gotten a good understanding of the verses. I don't just want to memorize for memorization sake. I want to have a clear and deep understanding of what I'm memorizing. I'm finding that this method is helping those verses to stick!

Benefits I'm discovering:

  • Revelation comes from pondering the same scripture over and over. I've read Ephesians numerous times, but with more reading comes a deeper revelation of the verses.
  • Verses pop up in my heart just when I need them. Verses that seem insignificant take on great importance when the Holy Spirit brings them back at just the right moment.  
  • I can spot errors.  Reading verses over and over in context can help you spot when it's pulled out of context or when it's misinterpreted.
  • You can teach it to your kids.  What I know for sure, I can surely pass on to the kids. Instead of looking it up, I have it right in my head (and heart!)
scripture index cards

The System That's Working for Me:

  • Spiral bound index cards: I write down two verses per card and carry it around with me. I prop it up while I'm getting ready in the morning, on the nightstand and on my desk at work. Since I'm a visual learner, seeing it constantly works best for me.
  • I also like to listen to the audio version. YouVersion (the app and web version) has audio versions of various translations. I like to listen and say the verses along with the narrator. I'm currently memorizing the ESV translation but am considering switching to KJV since I've discovered that a lot of verses that I already know are in this translation. 
  • I'm also loving the BibleMinded app for the times when I just have my phone but not my index cards. It provides virtual memory cards with verses as well as fill-in-the blank "quizzes" and I can test my memory by typing the verses out.
bibleminded app

Do you memorize scripture? If so, I'd love to hear your tips as to how you do it!