Tuesday, April 28, 2026

Seven Ways to Do Deep Bible Study

 

Seven Ways to Do Deep Bible Study

Many people want to understand the Bible better, yet they often feel unsure where to begin. Deep Bible study is not about rushing through chapters or reading large amounts just to say it was done. It is about slowing down, listening carefully, and allowing God’s Word to shape your life. The Bible is not merely a book of information—it is a living message from God that speaks to the mind, heart, and soul.

If you desire a stronger walk with God, deeper Bible study is one of the greatest habits you can develop. It teaches wisdom, builds faith, corrects wrong thinking, strengthens you in trials, and draws you closer to the Lord. Here are seven simple but powerful ways to study Scripture deeply.

1. Pray That the Holy Spirit Will Guide Your Mind and Soften Your Heart

Before opening your Bible, begin with prayer. Ask God to help you understand what you are about to read. The Holy Spirit is our Teacher. He helps us see truth clearly and apply it personally.

Sometimes people read Scripture only with their intellect but never with humility. They gain facts but miss transformation. Ask God not only to guide your mind, but also to soften your heart. A hard heart resists truth, but a surrendered heart receives it.

Pray something simple like:

“Lord, open my eyes to see Your truth today. Remove distractions. Teach me by Your Spirit, and help me obey what I learn.”

When prayer comes first, Bible study becomes fellowship rather than routine.

2. Choose a Bible Verse or Passage

You do not need to study ten chapters to grow. Sometimes one verse studied deeply can feed your soul more than many chapters read quickly. Choose a verse, paragraph, Psalm, proverb, or story passage.

You may choose a passage based on your current need:

  • If you need peace, read Psalm 23 or Philippians 4.
  • If you need wisdom, read Proverbs.
  • If you need encouragement, read Romans 8.
  • If you want to know Jesus better, study the Gospels.

Do not worry about reading large amounts. Depth often comes through focus. Choose a manageable portion and stay with it long enough to hear what God is saying.

3. Write the Passage in a Journal or Write Portions That Stand Out

Writing slows the mind and sharpens attention. When you copy Scripture into a journal, you notice words, phrases, and details you might normally skip.

You may write the full passage or only the verses that deeply speak to you. As you write, ask:

  • Why did this phrase stand out?
  • What truth is repeated?
  • What does this reveal about God?
  • What does this reveal about me?

A journal also becomes a record of your spiritual growth. Later you can look back and remember what God taught you in different seasons of life.

4. Prayerfully Read the Passage Again and Underline Key Ideas

Now read the passage again, slowly and prayerfully. This second reading often reveals much more than the first.

Underline words or ideas that seem important:

  • Commands to obey
  • Promises to trust
  • Warnings to heed
  • Truths about God’s character
  • Examples to follow or avoid
  • Repeated words or themes

Do not rush this step. Sometimes the most life-changing truths are found when we pause long enough to notice them.

Reading prayerfully means you are not just analyzing the text—you are listening to God through the text.

5. Write Down What the Underlined Ideas Tell You

Now take those underlined thoughts and turn them into clear lessons. Ask yourself:

  • What is God teaching me here?
  • What does this show about His love, holiness, mercy, power, or faithfulness?
  • Is there a correction I need?
  • Is there a promise I need to believe?

For example, if you underlined “Fear not, for I am with you,” you may write:

  • God is present with me.
  • I do not need to live controlled by fear.
  • His presence is greater than my problem.

This step moves Bible study from observation to understanding.

6. Pray Over These Ideas and How They Impact Your Relationship With God

Truth should lead to prayer. After learning from the passage, talk with God about it.

If the passage reveals sin, confess it.
If it gives a promise, thank Him for it.
If it gives instruction, ask for strength to obey.
If it reveals His goodness, worship Him.

Then ask how these truths affect your relationship with Him.

  • Am I trusting Him more?
  • Am I resisting Him in some area?
  • Am I neglecting time with Him?
  • Is He calling me closer?

Bible study without prayer can become dry knowledge. Prayer turns truth into communion.

7. Consider Whom You Might Share This With Today

God often teaches us not only for ourselves, but also for others. Someone around you may need the very truth God showed you today.

Perhaps a friend needs encouragement.
Perhaps a family member needs wisdom.
Perhaps someone needs hope.

Sharing does not require preaching a sermon. Sometimes it is as simple as sending a verse, speaking a kind word, or telling someone what God reminded you of this morning.

When you share God’s Word, it often becomes even more rooted in your own heart.

Final Encouragement

Deep Bible study is not reserved for scholars, pastors, or experts. It is for every believer who desires to know God more. If you consistently pray, read carefully, write, reflect, and respond, your understanding will grow over time.

You do not need perfect methods. You need a willing heart and steady practice.

God honors those who seek Him through His Word.

Closing Scripture

“Thy word is a lamp unto my feet, and a light unto my path.” — Psalm 119:105


More on: Lesson 5 How to Study The Bible   

Monday, April 27, 2026

Screen or Scripture? The Debate Over Digital Bibles

 


Technology and Studying the Bible: Blessing, Burden, or Both?

Technology has changed nearly every part of life, including the way people study the Bible. Today, millions of believers use smartphones, tablets, laptops, and apps to read Scripture, listen to sermons, compare translations, and follow reading plans. What once required shelves full of books can now fit inside a pocket.

Yet not everyone welcomes this shift. Some Christians strongly prefer a printed Bible and question whether digital devices help or hinder spiritual growth. So who is right? Is there truly a difference between holding a Bible in your hands and reading it on a phone screen?

The answer is more balanced than many realize.

Why Some Oppose Using a Digital Bible

Many people who resist digital Bible use are not against technology itself. Often, they are concerned about what technology can bring with it.

1. Distractions Are Real

Phones are powerful tools, but they are also full of interruptions. Notifications, messages, emails, social media alerts, and entertainment are only one tap away. Someone may open a Bible app and within seconds be pulled into something unrelated.

For many believers, this constant distraction makes focused Bible study harder.

2. Reverence and Habit

Some people associate a printed Bible with sacredness, discipline, and respect. Opening a physical Bible feels intentional. Highlighting verses, turning pages, and holding the book can create a deeper sense of connection.

To them, reading Scripture on the same device used for games and shopping may feel less meaningful.

3. Deeper Retention

Studies in learning often suggest people remember material better when reading physical text rather than screens. Some find it easier to track context, memorize passages, and focus when using paper pages.

4. Tradition and Comfort

For generations, Christians studied from printed Bibles. Many simply prefer what has worked faithfully for years.

The Pros of Using Technology for Bible Study

While concerns are understandable, technology also offers powerful advantages.

1. Instant Access Anywhere

A phone Bible means Scripture is available almost anywhere—at work, on break, traveling, waiting in line, or during lunch. This convenience helps many people stay consistent.

2. Multiple Translations in Seconds

Apps allow users to compare translations instantly. This can deepen understanding and clarify difficult passages.

3. Search Features

Need to find a verse about peace, forgiveness, or faith? A digital Bible can search keywords in seconds. That saves time and helps study efficiently.

4. Audio Bibles

Many people learn best by listening. Audio Scripture helps commuters, busy parents, visually impaired users, or anyone who wants to hear God’s Word during the day.

5. Study Tools Built In

Many apps include devotionals, reading plans, commentaries, maps, dictionaries, and note systems that once required many books.

6. Sharing and Encouragement

Verses can be shared instantly with friends or family. Technology can spread encouragement quickly.

The Cons of Using Technology for Bible Study

Technology helps, but it also has limits.

1. Distraction and Divided Attention

This remains the biggest issue. If every study session becomes mixed with texts and scrolling, spiritual focus suffers.

2. Shallow Reading Habits

Screens can train fast scanning rather than deep meditation. Bible study should not become rushed content consumption.

3. Dependence on Battery or Internet

Devices fail, batteries die, and apps sometimes need updates or internet access.

4. Less Tangible Memory

Many believers remember verses by location on a page, margin notes, or highlighted sections. Physical Bibles often make this easier.

Is There Really a Difference Between Holding a Bible or a Phone?

Yes—and no.

Yes, There Can Be a Difference

The medium can affect focus, memory, and emotional connection. Holding a printed Bible may help some people slow down, reflect, and engage more deeply. A phone may tempt distraction or casual reading.

No, The Power Is Not in the Paper

The transforming power is not in leather covers, ink, or screens. It is in the Word of God itself and the heart receiving it. A Bible on paper is not holy because of the paper. A Bible app is not lesser because it is digital.

God can speak through Scripture whether it is read from a pulpit Bible, a paperback New Testament, or a phone screen.

The Better Question

Instead of asking, “Paper or digital?” ask:

  • Which format helps me focus most?
  • Which one helps me stay consistent?
  • Which one helps me understand and obey Scripture?
  • Which one removes distraction instead of adding it?

That is the wiser test.

A Balanced Approach

Many mature believers use both:

  • Printed Bible for deep study, journaling, church, and memorization
  • Digital Bible for travel, quick reference, reading plans, and listening

That combination gives the strengths of both worlds.

Final Thoughts

The enemy is not technology. The enemy is neglect, distraction, and spiritual laziness. Likewise, owning a printed Bible means little if it stays closed on a shelf.

Whether you turn pages or tap a screen, the real issue is simple: Are you opening God’s Word regularly, listening carefully, and living what you read?

A paper Bible in the hand is valuable. A Bible app used faithfully is valuable too. What matters most is not the format—but the hunger for truth.


More on: Lesson 5 How to Study The Bible   

Following the Example of Jesus in Devotion

 


Following the Example of Jesus in Devotion

Jesus is our perfect example in every area of life, including how we spend time with God. Mark 1:35 says, “Very early in the morning, while it was still dark, Jesus got up, left the house and went off to a solitary place, where he prayed.” This simple verse teaches powerful lessons about personal devotion.

First, Jesus made time for prayer. He was busy healing people, teaching crowds, and helping those in need. Yet before the demands of the day began, He chose to meet with His Father. If Jesus, the Son of God, needed quiet time in prayer, how much more do we? Our schedules may feel full, but time with God is never wasted. It gives strength, wisdom, and peace for the day ahead.

Second, Jesus sought a quiet place. He stepped away from noise and distraction so He could focus on His Father. We also live in a world full of interruptions. Phones, tasks, and worries compete for our attention. But devotion grows stronger when we intentionally make space to be alone with God. Even a few quiet moments can refresh the soul.

Finally, Jesus showed that prayer was not a last resort—it was a priority. Before speaking to crowds, He spoke to His Father. Before carrying burdens, He received strength from heaven. We often try to handle life first and pray later, but Jesus showed the better way.

Today, follow His example. Rise a little earlier, find a quiet place, open your heart, and spend time with God. The more you walk where Jesus walked, the more your life will reflect Him.


More on: Lesson 5 How to Study The Bible   

Sunday, April 26, 2026

Surrendering Your Time to God

 

Surrendering Your Time to God

Life often feels packed. Responsibilities stack up, deadlines press in, and even good things can crowd out the best thing—time with God. Yet Scripture repeatedly calls us to slow down our hearts and give God first place, not just in theory, but in how we actually live our time.

Psalm 46:10 says, “Be still, and know that I am God.” This is not just a suggestion for quiet moments—it is an invitation to stop striving long enough to recognize who is truly in control. Stillness before God is not wasted time; it is realignment of the soul. When everything feels urgent, God reminds us that His presence is the most necessary thing.

A helpful way to respond is to step away from noise and distractions. Sit in a quiet place and read those words slowly: Be still, and know that I am God. Let them settle, not just in your thoughts, but in your heart. You might also reflect on the hymn “I Surrender All.” Whether sung or simply read, its message challenges us: are we truly holding anything back from God?

Surrendering time to God is really about surrendering control. It means acknowledging that even our schedules belong to Him. Romans 12:1 urges us to “present your bodies as a living sacrifice, holy and acceptable to God, which is your reasonable service.” That includes the hours of your day—not just your actions, but your availability.

Jesus Himself modeled this kind of surrender. In Mark 1:35, we read that “very early in the morning, while it was still dark, Jesus got up, left the house, and went off to a solitary place, where He prayed.” Even with overwhelming ministry demands, He made time to be alone with the Father. If Jesus needed that rhythm, we certainly do.

Surrendering time also means honestly examining what competes for your attention. Are there habits, distractions, or commitments that quietly take priority over God? Psalm 139:23–24 becomes a helpful prayer here: “Search me, O God, and know my heart… see if there is any wicked way in me, and lead me in the way everlasting.”

As you reflect, bring those areas to God. You don’t have to fix everything at once. Surrender is not about perfection—it is about placement. Putting God back in His rightful place at the center of your day.

And as you do, remember this promise from Matthew 6:33: “But seek first the kingdom of God and His righteousness, and all these things shall be added to you.” God does not lose out when you give Him your time. Instead, He brings order, peace, and clarity into everything else.

So today, slow down enough to be still. Offer Him your time, your plans, and your priorities. And trust that what you place in His hands is never wasted.


More on: Lesson 5 How to Study The Bible   

Friday, April 24, 2026

'Tis So Sweet!

 Sabbath School

Growing in a Relationship with God 

How to Study The Bible

Lesson 5 - Thursday  


Through God’s Word Comes Understanding

Scripture Focus: Psalm 119:104
"Through Your precepts I get understanding; therefore I hate every false way."

The writer of Psalm 119 reminds us that true understanding comes from God’s precepts—His teachings, commands, and truth found in His Word. This means wisdom is not gained merely through experience, education, or human reasoning alone. Real understanding comes when we learn God’s ways and allow His truth to shape our thinking.

The Bible does more than give information—it transforms the heart and renews the mind. It helps us recognize right from wrong, truth from deception, and wisdom from foolishness. Without God’s Word, people often follow feelings, trends, or opinions. But with His Word, we gain clarity, direction, and spiritual discernment.

That is why Bible study is so important. When we consistently read and meditate on Scripture, God gives us insight for daily living. We begin to see life through His perspective instead of the world’s.

God’s Invitation in Isaiah 55

Isaiah 55 expands this beautiful truth with a loving invitation from the Lord.

What does the Lord give to those who come to Him to “eat” from His Word?

Isaiah says, “Come, everyone who thirsts, come to the waters... come, buy and eat” (Isaiah 55:1). God offers spiritual nourishment, satisfaction, joy, mercy, and life. His Word feeds the hungry soul in ways nothing else can.

Many people try to satisfy themselves with success, money, pleasure, or entertainment, yet remain empty inside. God alone gives what truly satisfies.

What is His invitation to you here?

The Lord invites you to come freely. You do not need to earn His love or prove yourself worthy. He simply says, “Come.” Come thirsty. Come needy. Come tired. Come broken. Come willing.

God’s invitation is open today. He wants a relationship with you and desires to fill your heart with His presence and truth.

What is His challenge?

Isaiah 55:6-7 says, “Seek the Lord while He may be found; call upon Him while He is near. Let the wicked forsake his way…”

The challenge is to turn from sin, pride, and self-reliance. It is to seek God seriously and sincerely. We cannot cling to worldly ways while expecting spiritual fullness. God calls us to repentance and wholehearted pursuit of Him.

What is His promise?

God promises mercy, pardon, and purpose. He says His Word will not return void but will accomplish what He sends it to do (Isaiah 55:11). That means when God speaks, lives change, hearts heal, and His plans succeed.

He also promises joy and peace to those who walk with Him (Isaiah 55:12).

Application for Today

If you feel confused, weary, or spiritually dry, return to God’s Word. Open your Bible not as a duty, but as a hungry soul coming to a feast. God still gives understanding through His precepts. He still satisfies those who come. He still transforms lives through His living Word.

Prayer

Heavenly Father, thank You for giving me Your Word, which brings wisdom and understanding. Forgive me for looking to other things to satisfy my soul. Help me come to You daily with hunger and humility. Teach me Your ways, renew my mind, and guide my steps. Thank You for Your mercy, Your promises, and the power of Your Word to change my life. Fill me with joy and peace as I walk with You. In Jesus’ name, Amen.


More on: Lesson 5 How to Study The Bible