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How To Read Your Bible
Contributed by Jefferson Williams on Jan 17, 2021 (message contributor)
Summary: This sermon is based on Nate Pickowitcz's new book "How to read your Bible?" and contains an interview with the author at the end.
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How to Eat your Bible
2 Tim 3:16-17
Pastor Jefferson M. Williams
Chenoa Baptist Church
01-17-2021
Learning to eat
I became a Christian in 1992 and, soon afterwards, my brother bought me a NIV Study Bible with my name on it.
I treasured that Bible. I bought a case so I could carry it around. I put in on my desk where people could see it.
There was just one problem. I didn’t read it. It was a huge book with lots of strange names and things that I didn’t understand.
At that same time, I started listening to Christian music and artists like Steven Curtis Chapman, Michael W. Smith, Rich Mullins, and Michael Card whose music was full of Scripture.
About six months into my Christian journey, I decided that I needed to read the Bible to understand God better and how to walk as Jesus did.
For months, I sat on the deck of my North Carolina chalet (which Maxine says was a shack) with a guitar and highlighter and read book after book, making notes of life events and things that God spoke to me. A lot of the notes are places where I found lyrics that I loved that came straight out of the Bible.
Eventually I finished the whole Bible and I’ve been reading and listening to it ever since.
Last week, we studied a very dangerous prayer, “Speak to me” and I made the case that the number one way God speaks to us today is through His Word.
If that’s true, then why don’t more people read it?
Many of you made a new year’s resolution to read your Bible. You know howe I know that? Because the number one podcast in Apple podcasts this week is “The Bible in a year.”
That may be your desire but you don’t even how to start.
This morning, I want to highlight a recently released book by Pastor Nate Pickowitcz that will help you learn how to eat your Bible.
We are going to be in many different passages this morning, but you can turn to 2 Timothy 3:16-17 and hold you place there.
Prayer.
Famine in the Land
Research tells us that 88% of Americans own at least one Bible and the average household has five Bibles.
Now with the YouVersion Bible app (and others) more people have access to the Bible in their own language than anytime in history.
But research also tells us that 48 % of Americans are completely disengaged from the Bible and 9% report that thy read it sporadically.
The 2019 Discipleship Pathway Assessment study from Nashville-based LifeWay Research found those who regularly attend Protestant churches are inconsistent in their reading and thinking about Scripture.
A third of Americans who attend a Protestant church regularly (32%) say they read the Bible personally every day. Around a quarter (27%) say they read it a few times a week.
Fewer say they only read it once a week (12%), a few times a month (11%) or once a month (5%). Close to 1 in 8 (12%) admit they rarely or never read the Bible.
A 2016 LifeWay Research study found 1 in 5 Americans said they had read all of the Bible at least once. However, more than half said they have read little or none of it.
In the latest study, churchgoers aged 50 to 64 are more likely to say they read the Bible every day (35%) than adults under 50 (30%).
New Testament scholar Kent Barding wrote:
“Christians used to be known as people of the book - they memorized it, meditated on it, talked about it, and taught it to others. We don’t do that anymore, in a very real sense we are starving ourselves to death.”
The prophet Amos says the same thing:
“The days are coming,” declares the Sovereign Lord, “when I will send a famine through the land—not a famine of food or a thirst for water, but a famine of hearing the words of the Lord. (Amos 8:11)
Michael Card has a song called “So Many Books” whose chorus is:
So?many?books, so little?time
So many hunger,?so many blind
Starving for words, they must wait in the night
To open a Bible and move towards the Light
All these stats aren’t meant to shame you or make you feel guilty if you aren’t in the habit of reading your Bible.
This past week, John Piper tweeted, “Most Christians neglect their Bibles not out of conscious disloyalty to Jesus, but out of failure to plan a time and place and method to read it.”
If we believe the Bible is the primary way that God speaks to us, then we have to develop a plan for reading it, mediating on it, memorizing it, and make it part of our daily lives.
Eating your Bible