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Reading The Bible Slowly

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  • Reading The Bible Slowly

    Are we going too fast?

    Link.

    -----

    Should you take your time? Let's plunge into the Deeper Waters and find out.

    I do Bible reading generally in the morning with a chapter in the Old Testament and one in the New Testament. I have also started doing Bible reading at night, except at night, I do it differently. I do this at two different times as well.

    One time is when my wife is ready to go to sleep. I stay up some, but we pick a book of the Bible and go through it together. For now, we use the NET to go through and follow the paragraphs in there and just read one a night. I find that when I read the Bible out loud and to my wife in the evening, I tend to notice aspects of the text I haven't noticed before.

    The second time I do this is right before I go to bed. This time, it's not out loud so I don't wake up the Princess. It's also shorter and I go by my memory. I pick the text that I am going through and usually read no more than two verses. You can vary this as you see fit. If I was going through the Gospels, I might read one pericope at a time for instance. That could depend on the length. If you wanted to go shorter, it's your study and that's up to you. Also, if I am finishing a chapter, I can go and add on a final third verse.

    Right now, I am going through Hebrews at night. This is giving me plenty of insights into Hebrews that I never noticed before. What I do is go through the text and try to get it as ingrained on my memory as possible and then go to bed and ask questions about the text and explore what it means. I try to also connect this with the reading that I have done before. This helps keep the passage in its context for me.

    I also have a commentary on Hebrews here that I have been going through as well. Having another guide helps me realize things that I might not have noticed on my own. I find this to be an incredibly helpful aid.

    This also can give me something else to think about when I try to go to sleep at night. It's not a perfect success as sometimes anxiety does still pop up, but when I have a text, at least I can think about that instead of any things I regret during the day or any time during the past or any concerns about tomorrow. If I want to pray about something I have found out, I can do that as well.

    Going through slowly allows me to take my time and savor over a text as it were instead of being in any sort of rush job. Doing this at night means there is no interruption. Going before I go to sleep means I have something to think about. Again, this is just my suggestion, but I find it helpful for me and you can vary it as you see fit if you want to try it. After all, it's your study and not mine.

    In Christ,
    Nick Peters

  • #2
    Originally posted by Apologiaphoenix View Post
    One time is when my wife is ready to go to sleep. I stay up some, but we pick a book of the Bible and go through it together. For now, we use the NET to go through and follow the paragraphs in there and just read one a night. I find that when I read the Bible out loud and to my wife in the evening, I tend to notice aspects of the text I haven't noticed before.
    Somebody told me long ago that "since faith comes by hearing", you should read the Bible out loud, so you can not only see it, but hear it.

    Whether that has any spiritual merit (I tend to think it does) there's no doubt that when we involve more of our senses in something, the brain is more likely to remember and / or process it.

    When you read -

    you're involving your sight
    when you read out loud, you're involving your speech
    when you read out loud, you're involving your hearing

    So, yeah!
    The first to state his case seems right until another comes and cross-examines him.

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    • #3
      In the early days of his Christian walk, Craig Keener regularly read 40 chapters a day, so he apparently was not reading slowly. That seemed to benefit him.

      OTOH, several years ago Gordon Fee mentioned that during a convalescence, he and his wife read the Bible aloud together. He found the practice of reading aloud very helpful.
      Geislerminian Antinomian Kenotic Charispneumaticostal Gender Mutualist-Egalitarian.

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