Thursday, April 23, 2026

Deep Bible Study

Sabbath School

Growing in a Relationship with God 

How to Study The Bible

Lesson 5 - Tuesday 

Bible Study Devotional Guide 

Studying the Bible is not about rushing through information—it’s about letting God’s Word shape your thinking, steady your heart, and guide your daily choices. One of the simplest and most effective ways to begin is to take a small portion of Scripture and sit with it slowly, carefully, and prayerfully.

A good place to start is by choosing a short book of the Bible such as Jonah, Mark, Philippians, or 1 John. These books are short enough to manage, yet deep enough to challenge and grow your faith. Instead of trying to understand everything at once, work through it one verse or passage at a time.

Here is a simple verse-by-verse method you can use to study Scripture in a meaningful way:

1. Pray for guidance.
Before you read, ask the Holy Spirit to guide your mind and soften your heart. This step matters more than anything else. Bible study is not just intellectual—it is spiritual. You are asking God to help you see what you would otherwise miss.

2. Choose a passage.
Pick a verse, a small section, or a chapter. Don’t overreach. Depth comes from slowing down, not speeding up.

3. Write it down.
Write the passage in a journal or write down the parts that stand out to you. Writing forces you to slow down and pay attention.

4. Read it again and underline key ideas.
Go back over the passage prayerfully. Notice words or phrases that seem important, repeated, or meaningful to you personally.

5. Reflect on what you underlined.
Ask yourself: What is God saying here? What does this reveal about Him, about people, or about me? Write down your thoughts honestly.

6. Pray through it.
Turn what you discovered into prayer. Ask God to apply it to your life. If the passage challenges you, ask for strength to obey. If it comforts you, thank Him. If it convicts you, ask for change.

7. Share it with someone.
Think about one person you could encourage with what you learned. Faith grows stronger when it is shared, not stored.


This approach helps Scripture move from the page into real life. It keeps you from reading passively and invites you into active relationship with God through His Word.

Psalm 119:105 says, “Your word is a lamp to my feet and a light to my path.” That means God’s Word does not always show the whole journey at once—but it gives enough light for the next faithful step. When life feels uncertain, confusing, or overwhelming, Scripture becomes steady guidance, not just information.

The real question is not only “What does this passage mean?” but also “Will I let this passage shape me today?” Bible study becomes transformative when it moves from understanding to surrender.

It is also worth asking: Would this be true for me right now? Am I actually letting God’s Word guide my decisions, my reactions, and my priorities—or am I just reading it and moving on? Honest reflection like this is where growth begins.


Prayer

Lord God,
Thank You for giving me Your Word as a light for my path and guidance for my life. Teach me to slow down when I read Scripture and to value Your voice above my own thoughts and distractions.

Holy Spirit, guide my mind as I study. Soften my heart so I am willing to be taught, corrected, and encouraged by what I read. Help me not to rush past Your truth, but to sit with it, reflect on it, and obey it.

Make Your Word alive in me today. Show me how to live what I learn and give me courage to share it with others. Lead me step by step in Your light.

In Jesus’ name,
Amen.


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A Place

 Sabbath School

Growing in a Relationship with God 

How to Study The Bible

Lesson 5 - Monday 

Seeking God Like Jesus Did

Jesus is our perfect example in every area of life, including personal devotion. If we want to grow spiritually, we should look closely at how He spent time with His Father.

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 verse reveals something powerful: Jesus intentionally made time for prayer. He rose early, stepped away from distractions, and sought quiet communion with the Father. If the Son of God needed time alone in prayer, how much more do we?

Jesus did not wait until He “felt like it” or until His schedule cleared. He made prayer a priority. That challenges us today. Many people give God leftovers—tired moments at the end of the day, quick prayers in the car, or rushed Bible reading when convenient. But Jesus gave God the first part of His day.

1 Chronicles 16:11 says, “Seek the Lord and His strength; seek His face continually.” Seeking His face means more than asking for blessings—it means desiring His presence. It means wanting to know Him personally, listen to Him, worship Him, and depend on His strength daily.

Now ask yourself honestly: During the past week, how much time have you spent in prayer and Bible reading? Was it consistent? Was it rushed? Was it absent?

Your answer may reveal where your priorities truly are. We often say God is first, but our schedules expose what matters most. If social media, entertainment, work, or busyness have crowded out time with God, changes need to be made. Realignment may mean waking earlier, limiting distractions, turning off devices, or setting aside a fixed daily appointment with God.

Time with God does not happen by accident. It happens by decision.

Even fifteen focused minutes with God each morning can begin changing your heart. Over time, those moments become the foundation of strength, peace, wisdom, and spiritual growth.

Don’t settle for knowing about God when you can know Him personally.

Prayer

Heavenly Father, thank You for giving us Jesus as our perfect example. Forgive me for the times I have allowed distractions and busyness to take priority over time with You. Place in my heart a deeper hunger for Your presence. Help me seek Your face daily through prayer and Your Word. Give me discipline to make You first each day. Change my priorities so my life reflects my love for You. Draw me closer to You and fill me with Your strength, peace, and wisdom. In Jesus’ name, Amen.


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Time

 Sabbath School

Growing in a Relationship with God 

How to Study The Bible

Lesson 5 - Sunday 

Abiding in God Through Daily Surrender

One of the greatest blessings in life is having a close relationship with God. Yet strong relationships do not happen by accident—they grow through time, love, and intentional choices. If you desire to know God more deeply, begin by asking Him to place that desire in your heart. Sometimes we want to seek Him, and sometimes we feel distracted or spiritually dry. But God can awaken hunger for Him within us.

Jeremiah 29:13 gives this promise: “And ye shall seek me, and find me, when ye shall search for me with all your heart.” God does not hide from those who sincerely seek Him. Psalm 37:4 adds, “Delight thyself also in the Lord; and he shall give thee the desires of thine heart.” As we delight in Him, He changes our desires and draws us closer to Himself.

Ask God to help you make room for Him. Invite Him to wake you earlier than usual or to open time in your day for prayer and Bible study. Life is busy, but time with God is never wasted—it is an investment in your soul.

Find a quiet place and pause before Him. Read Psalm 46:10: “Be still, and know that I am God.” In silence, let your heart settle. Think about areas of life you may still be holding onto—your worries, schedule, relationships, habits, or future plans. Surrender them to God. Tell Him, “Lord, all I am and all I have belongs to You.”

There will be days when you do not feel like spending time with God. Do it anyway. Healthy habits require discipline, and spiritual habits do too. Just as exercise strengthens the body, daily time with God strengthens the soul. Habits often take time to form, but with the Holy Spirit’s help, consistency becomes joy.

Jesus teaches this clearly in John 15:1–8. He says He is the vine and we are the branches. A branch cannot bear fruit unless it stays connected to the vine. In the same way, we cannot grow spiritually, have peace, overcome sin, or bless others unless we remain connected to Christ. Abiding in Him means daily dependence, daily surrender, and daily fellowship. When we stay close to Jesus, His life flows through us.

Do not wait for a perfect schedule or perfect feelings. Start today. Even a few faithful minutes with God each day can change the direction of your life.

Prayer

Heavenly Father, place within me a deep desire to know You more. Help me seek You with all my heart and delight myself in You. Teach me to surrender my time, plans, worries, and desires into Your hands. Help me be still and know that You are God. Keep me abiding in Jesus every day, so that Your life may grow in me and bear fruit through me. Strengthen me by Your Holy Spirit to stay faithful even when I do not feel like it. Thank You for drawing near when I seek You. In Jesus’ name, Amen.


Sabbath School Lesson 5: How to Study The Bible

 Growing in a Relationship With God

Lesson 5 

How to Study The Bible
 

You may use this for presenting and studying the current Sabbath School Lesson.

Wednesday, April 22, 2026

Bible Study and Prayer

 Sabbath School

Growing in a Relationship with God 

The Role of The Bible

Lesson 4 - Friday Further Thought 

Built on the Right Foundation

A strong relationship with God does not happen by accident. Like any healthy relationship, it grows through communication, trust, time, and attention. That is why Bible study and prayer must be the foundation of our walk with Him. Through prayer, we speak to God. Through His Word, He speaks to us. Remove either one, and the relationship becomes weak, unbalanced, and distant.

Many people want closeness with God but neglect the very things that create closeness. Imagine wanting a deep friendship with someone while never listening to them or never speaking to them. It would never thrive. The same is true spiritually. Prayer without Bible study can become one-sided, based only on our thoughts and feelings. Bible study without prayer can become dry knowledge without heart transformation. But together, they build a living connection with God.

Jesus showed us this pattern. Mark 1:35 says, “And in the morning, rising up a great while before day, he went out... and there prayed.” Jesus made prayer a priority even in a busy life. If the Son of God needed regular prayer, how much more do we?

God’s Word gives guidance and strength. Psalm 119:105 says, “Thy word is a lamp unto my feet, and a light unto my path.” The Bible helps us see clearly when life feels confusing. It directs our choices, warns us of danger, and leads us in truth.

Prayer brings peace and dependence on God. Philippians 4:6-7 says, “Be careful for nothing; but in every thing by prayer and supplication... let your requests be made known unto God. And the peace of God... shall keep your hearts and minds through Christ Jesus.” When we pray, we trade anxiety for peace.

The Bible also transforms us inwardly. 2 Timothy 3:16-17 teaches that Scripture is profitable for doctrine, correction, and instruction in righteousness so that we may be complete and equipped for every good work. God uses His Word to shape our character.

How can you make Bible study and prayer your foundation? Set a daily time, even if short. Start with a passage of Scripture, read carefully, ask what it teaches, and apply it to your life. Then pray honestly—thank God, confess sin, ask for wisdom, and intercede for others. Be consistent more than dramatic. Five faithful minutes daily can become a lifetime of growth.

Without prayer and Bible study, a relationship with God becomes shallow and vulnerable. With them, roots grow deep. Storms may come, but a life anchored in God will stand.

Prayer

Heavenly Father, thank You for wanting a real relationship with me. Forgive me for the times I have neglected prayer and Your Word. Give me a hunger to know You more each day. Help me make time to listen through Scripture and speak through prayer. Build my life on a strong foundation that cannot be shaken. Draw me closer to You, change my heart, and guide my steps. In Jesus’ name, Amen. 


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