Sabbath School
Growing in a Relationship with God
The Role of The Bible
Lesson 4 - Thursday
A Heart Ready to Receive
“Receive, please, instruction from His mouth, and lay up His words in your heart.” — Job 22:22
God’s Word is always true, powerful, and life-giving, but our ability to receive its instruction often depends on the condition of our heart when we come to it. The problem is never with Scripture—it is with the posture of the reader. A closed heart can sit before an open Bible and still walk away unchanged. But a humble, willing heart can open even a familiar passage and hear the voice of God afresh.
Paul explains this clearly in 1 Corinthians 2:14: “But the natural man does not receive the things of the Spirit of God, for they are foolishness to him; nor can he know them, because they are spiritually discerned.” A person who approaches God’s Word only through human reasoning, pride, or self-will will miss its deepest meaning. Spiritual truth is not merely analyzed—it is received through the work of the Holy Spirit in a surrendered heart. This is why two people can read the same passage, yet one is transformed while the other remains unmoved.
Our attitude toward Scripture matters deeply. If we come only to defend our opinions, justify our behavior, or confirm what we already believe, we place ourselves above God’s Word rather than under it. But when we come with humility, asking God to teach us, correct us, and lead us, the Bible becomes a channel of grace and truth.
Paul praised the believers in 1 Thessalonians 2:13 because they received the message “not as the word of men, but as it is in truth, the word of God, which also effectively works in you who believe.” Notice the connection: they received it as God’s Word, and it worked powerfully in them. When Scripture is welcomed with faith, it changes the heart, renews the mind, strengthens the soul, and shapes the life.
So the real question is not only, “Did I read the Bible today?” but, “How did I come to it?” Was my heart soft or stubborn? Was I listening or arguing? Was I eager to obey, or only searching for support for my own ideas?
This answer is important because growth in our relationship with God depends on it. A teachable spirit invites transformation. A proud spirit resists it. God can do much with a heart that says, “Speak, Lord, for Your servant hears.”
Before you open the Bible, ask the Lord to open you first.
Challenge
The next time you read Scripture, pause first and pray:
“Lord, show me truth, even if it corrects me. Teach me what I need, not just what I want.”
Come with childlike faith, ready to listen, ready to trust, ready to obey.
Prayer
Father, thank You for giving me Your Word. Forgive me for the times I come to Scripture with pride, distraction, or a desire to defend myself instead of hearing You. Give me a humble and teachable heart. Open my eyes to understand Your truth, and help me receive it with faith and obedience. Let Your Word work powerfully in me, changing my thoughts, desires, and actions. Teach me to come before You with childlike trust, ready to listen and follow. In Jesus’ name, Amen.
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