“The goal of Bible study is not to make us smarter sinners but to make us more like our Savior.” – Howard Hendricks
Too often so-called “students” of the Word are looking for more information without ever getting to the all-important step of application. We need to ask this: “How does this truth change my life?” We should not be satisfied with just hearing a good sermon. James 1:25 pronounces a blessing on what you do when you apply God’s Word to your life. The one who is described as blessed in this verse is not a “forgetful hearer”, but an “effectual doer”. A forgetful hearer is one who neglects what needs to be done. It’s like hearing a sermon, complimenting the preacher, and then waiting for a new one next week. Meanwhile, the effectual doer is one who goes to work. That’s the significance behind the word “effectual”. Listen to a sermon, and get to work putting it into action.
Some good insights are offered in 2 Timothy 3:16-17 on how we can listen to scripture and use it for changing our lives. These verses tell us that the Word of God is profitable (useful and helpful) in four ways.
First, it is profitable for TEACHING Other versions use the word doctrine. The word has to do with giving us information. Such information may be something new to us, or something of which we need to be reminded. When listening to the Word of God, we should be asking questions about what we are learning. Here are some examples:
1.
What
did I learn about ______________ (God, Christ, Church, holiness, etc.)
2.
What
promise do I see from what I heard?
Second,
it is profitable for REPROOF Reproof means that you are being confronted
with something that is sinful, either doing something you should not be doing,
or not doing something that you should be doing. The verb form of this word is translated
as “exposed” or “convicted” (James 2:9; Ephesians 5:11). So the Bible
should bring conviction in your
heart that you are doing something wrong. Here are some questions to ask:
1.
What
sins have I committed and need to repent of?
2.
What
should I start doing (or start doing it again)?
3.
Are
there commands that I have ignored, forgotten, or not previously heard?
Third,
it is profitable for CORRECTION The positive side of reproof is correction. It
sounds just like the word: correcting the wrong behavior. Something in our life
is out of order, and it needs to be restored to its proper place. The Bible
shows you what you should be doing. It is looking for the opposite of what you
have been doing. Ephesians 4:22-24 and 1 Peter 1:1-2 offer some examples that can be
found in the New Testament where we have to do the negative (“put off”) before we can do the positive
(“put on”). Try these questions to help find areas of
correction:
1.
What
should I be doing instead of _________________?
2.
Where
do I need to make things right?
Fourth,
it is profitable for TRAINING IN RIGHTEOUSNESSTraining is what we do with people who don’t know how to do something, like our children, students in school or coworkers on the job. Here the object of the training is righteousness. This is not the righteousness that is to be gained by trusting in Christ alone for salvation. Rather, it is the righteousness that we are to live out day by day. We should be seeing how God wants us to think and act. Scripture shows us how we are to live. That's what Paul says in Titus 2:11-12. Here is what we can ask:
1.
What
do I need help doing? Who can help me?
2.
Is
there an example to follow (or not follow)?
These four ways of allowing the Bible to be profitable in your life will help you be a “doer of work” rather than a “neglectful hearer” and thus be blessed in your “doing”. That’s a promise!
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