A GUIDE TO BIBLE READING
THERE ARE SOME people who have never seen the
sea. They have never scanned that broad horizon, never smelt the tang or
tasted the salt spray on their lips, never experienced the crash or roar
of the great breakers, the turmoil of the surf, or the gentle lapping of a
tranquil sea, the quiet stillness of a flat calm. They have missed a whole
dimension of life's experience.
'The Bible is like a great ocean. It
has a sandy beach with shallows where even children can play safely. It
has deeper parts where adults can swim. But it also has vast depths that
we can never get to the bottom of.'
A users' guide to
the Bible - Lion Press
Like the sea, the Bible has many moods. Sometimes it
thunders at us, challenging our complacency and inertia, and threatening
judgment to come. At other times, it calms and comforts, soothing shredded
nerves and offers words of comfort and hope, promising rebirth.
Yet there are many people who have never opened its
pages, never even dipped a toe in the water, so to speak. Like the man who
has never seen the sea, their minds have never been opened to these broad
horizons, these new perspectives which the Bible presents to us. There are
others who occasionally dip into its pages to read again a familiar and
much-loved passage, much as they might resort to an aspirin or
tranquillizer in time of stress. The Bible deserves better than that -
God's Word has so much to offer us if we open our minds to its message in
its completeness
But to read the Bible from cover to cover these days
is a daunting prospect for most people. Whilst it is probably no longer
overall than a typical 'blockbuster novel, its qualities and the impetus
to read it, are very different. A collection of 60 different books of
different types, some written three millennia ago or longer, springing
from a very different age and culture, it presents some formidable
obstacles which can quickly dissuade the casual reader.
So how to start? The following are a few suggestions
to help you get started on your Bible reading in a sensible and structured
way, which will eventually provide great rewards.
WHAT BIBLE SHALL I READ?
Any bookshop with a decent religious section will
present a bewildering array of Bibles to confuse the uninitiated. The most
familiar is still the Authorized Version produced by King James scholars
in 1611, read and revered by many for its outstanding literary qualities.
But the Bible is far more than great literature, and
there are some who, coming fresh to the Bible, will find the language of
King James an insurmountable barrier to understanding or applying its
message in the 1990s. The New King James Version retains the basic
sentence structure and rhythms of the Authorized Version, whilst updating
the language. Other totally new translations, such as the New
International Version, provide an alternative. Some translations are freer
and more colloquial than others. Every translation needs to be used with
care, and any serious Bible study will involve the use of more than one
version. But for everyday reading, find a version that you understand and
that you enjoy reading.
As your knowledge of the Bible increases, you will
become aware of the weaknesses and strengths of each version and better
equipped to choose between them.
When you are choosing a Bible for yourself, think
about other ways it can help you in your reading. Ideally, choose a Bible
with cross-references that will help you find quotations and parallel
passages. A good selection of maps will be useful, and some editions will
have other helps, such as a list of references to Christ in the Old
Testament, or Bible weights and measures and their current equivalents,
the Jewish Calendar and so-on. Some Bibles even have a small concordance
in the back, where you can look up particular words and discover where
they occur - but you will probably find that this type of concordance is a
very incomplete and abbreviated version, and so of limited value compared
with a separate complete concordance. Think also about whether you need to
carry a Bible with you and if so, choose a small Bible that will not be
too heavy.
WHERE
DO I START?
Many people when they pick up a good book, cannot
resist the temptation to look at the end, at the same time as - or even
before - they look at the beginning.
When it comes to the Bible, that is not at all a bad
idea. If, for example, you read together the early chapters of Genesis and
the last few of Revelation, you will find the origin of sin and death [Gen
3] and God's promise to remove both [Rev 21:4]: you will read of a new
creation to replace the first, [Rev 21:1; Gen 1:1] of the rivers watering
Eden and a river of Life in the new age and of the Tree of Life. [Gen
3:24; Rev 22:1] The importance of Genesis as the foundation of God's
purpose could hardly be clearer.
But it has to be said that the Book of Revelation is
not the easiest place for the new Bible reader to begin. Reading the Old
and New Testaments simultaneously is definitely a good idea - the fact
that they interrelate and compliment each other will rapidly become
obvious. Some editions of the New King James Version contain a plan for
reading the whole Bible in a year, reading part of the Old Testament and
part of the New Testament each day, starting with Genesis 1 and Matthew 1
respectively. The problem here is that, due to the difference in lengths
of each Testament, a very small section of the New Testament (often half a
chapter or less), is accompanied by a large chunk of the Old Testament -
often three or four chapters. Also, reading the Bible in sequence, (for
example the four Gospel records), is not necessarily the most interesting
and productive way of reading.
A
PLAN FOR DAILY READING
The Christadelphians have, for a century or more,
used a daily reading plan known as the Bible
Companion, which covers the Old Testament once and the New
Testament twice in the course of a year. It does so with three different
daily readings, two from the Old Testament and one from the New. The Old
Testament portions start with Genesis and Psalms, and then simply follow
the books through sequentially. The New Testament starts with Matthew but,
after each Gospel record, diverts to some of the later books and letters
before returning to the next Gospel record, and so on. Such a plan ensures
a varied and interesting diet each day - the Psalms, for example, provide
a perfect foil for the narrative of Genesis and the details of the Mosaic
Law in the subsequent books.
No reading plan is perfect - and one of the
criticisms which may be leveled at the Bible Companion is that it splits
up even some of the smaller books over several days, and it is sometimes
difficult to achieve an overall picture of a book's message and structure.
No daily reading plan will be sufficient on its own
to do justice to Gods Word, and needs to be supplemented by additional
study which focuses on particular themes or books. The Bible Companion has
been tried and tested by several generations of Christadelphians, and we
recommend it to you. If you would like a FREE copy
please contact:
Biblelight@biblelight.org
AN
APPROACH TO READING
Reading the Bible needs discipline. It may be
unfashionable, but it is essential. It needs self-discipline to set aside
a particular part of each day, ideally when the mind is fresh and when
your reading can perhaps be shared with a partner or other members of your
family. It needs the discipline of re-focusing the mind which is otherwise
occupied with 1,001 things. some trivial, some important, but none as
important as God's Word. It means a disciplined approach to the Bible
itself - a constant and structured questioning of its content, designed to
bring out its real message and its genuine practical relevance to your
life. The following, for example, are some of the questions that you might
like to keep in your mind as you do your daily reading:
WHAT
KIND OF WRITING IS THIS?
The Bible contains many different types of
literature: historical, narrative, poetry, prophecy, parables, etc. If a
passage appears to be straightforward historical narrative, then we need
to ask why it has been preserved and what we are intended to gain from it.
This is how the early disciples of Jesus used the Old Testament narrative.
The Apostle Paul, in looking back on some of the events which happened to
Israel in the wilderness, says that "these things happened to
them as examples and were written down as warnings for us." [1Cor
10:11] James says:
"As an example of patience in the
face of suffering, take the prophets who spoke in the name of the Lord
... You have heard of Jobs perseverance and have seen what the Lord
finally brought about. The Lord is full of compassion and mercy." James
5:11
So we need to read the Bible imaginatively, and
actively, placing ourselves in the position of its heroes and villains,
drawing practical and spiritual guidance from the record of their lives.
If a passage we are reading is poetry (and one of the advantages of a
modern version is that the layout of the text will clearly distinguish
between poetry and prose), then we need to be aware of the poetic imagery
being used, and to ask ourselves what emotional response it is designed to
evoke from us and not to read it or interpret it in the same literal way
that we would an historical section.
Many parts of the Bible contain prophecies about the
future - it was in this way that God and His prophets distinguished their
message from the many false gods and false prophets.
Some understanding of the historical background of
the prophecy will probably be essential if we are to understand how it was
fulfilled in biblical times, and a Bible dictionary, or one of the popular
'study' Bibles, will usually provide the basic information we need.
But many Bible prophecies have more than one
application, and you may well find in your reading that a prophecy which
may appear to have been fulfilled, has had an even more dramatic
fulfillment in our own time, or is maybe telling us about something still
to happen in the future - preparing us for the great climax of God's
purpose with this earth. So when we read passages like this, we need to
ask ourselves:
- What is the background of this passage?
- When was it given and why?
- Was it fulfilled at the time, and if so,
how?
- Does it have anything to teach me?
- Is there anything about the future here
that I should be expecting and preparing for?
- What does it teach me about Jesus?
One of the most astonishing features of the Bible,
as you get to know it, is that such an assortment of writers and authors
has a single theme, and is dominated throughout by a single person. The
theme is Gods plan for bringing salvation to sinful mankind. That person
is the one man through whom that objective is being achieved: Jesus
Christ. Jesus is there, from cover to cover - in the earliest chapters of
Genesis, the Law of Moses, in the Psalms, in the prophets, the Gospels and
the letters.
So one of the key questions to ask yourself as you
read any particular passage of the Bible is this: 'Does it tell me
anything about Jesus? Often of course the answer will seem to be 'No' -
but as you explore the Bible more and more often you will find the answer
is 'Yes'. As you learn more about Jesus, as for example when you read
about his feelings as depicted in the Psalms, (which fill out the often
sparse account of the Gospel records), you will come closer to him, and
become better equipped to imitate his outstanding qualities in your life.
UNANSWERED
QUESTIONS
Having set yourself a series of questions, don't
worry if many of the answers escape you. It is the experience of all Bible
students, that, as their knowledge of the Bible increases, the number of
unanswered and unanswerable questions increases as well. Bible reading and
study is not an intellectual diversion. Unlike completing a crossword
puzzle, the Bible was never designed to completely satisfy human
curiosity. Whatever the problems that your reading of God's Word may pose,
we believe they are nothing compared with the clarity, the simplicity, and
the certainty of God's plan which it reveals.
LISTENING
TO GOD EVERY DAY
'The very best way to study the Bible is
simply to read it daily with close attention and with prayer to see the
light which shines from its pages, to meditate upon it, and to continue
to read it until somehow it works itself its words, its expressions, its
teaching its habits of thought and its presentation of God and His
Christ into the very warp and woof of ones being
Dr Howard A Kelley
Follow that advice and you will find out what the
Psalmist meant, and you will be able to pray with him when he said:
"Your word is a lamp to my feet,
and a light for my path ... your statutes are forever right: give me
understanding that I may live." Psalm 119:105:144 (NIV)
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