The beginning of a New Year—and a new decade—is an an excellent time to try something new. As you make your list of resolutions and goals I want to recommend adding a simple four step process that could transform your life by, quite literally, changing your mind.
After reading the entire post the vast majority of readers will snicker at such a hyperbolic claim and never implement the method I outline. A smaller number will consider the advice intriguing, my assertion only a slight exaggeration, but will also never implement the method. A tiny minority, however, will recognize the genius behind the process and apply it to their own life. This group will later say that my claim was an understatement.
This post is written for those people.
A few years ago I stumbled across a variation of the four steps in a blog post by my Evangel co-blogger Fred Sanders and implemented his recommendation that day. I later had the pleasure of meeting Sanders in person and telling him how his post had transformed my life. My hope is that at least one other person will follow this advice and experience the same transformative effect.
Before I reveal the four steps I want to reiterate that while the advice could transform your life, it likely will not. As with most life-altering advice, it is simple, easy to implement, and even easier to ignore. Statistically speaking, the odds are great that you’ll ignore this advice. But a handful of you will try it so for the one or two people who will find this useful, the four steps that will transform your worldview are:
1. Choose a book of the Bible.
2. Read it in its entirety.
3. Repeat step #2 twenty times.
4. Repeat this process for all books of the Bible.
Christians often talk about having a Biblical worldview yet most have only a rudimentary knowledge of the Bible. They attempt to build a framework without first gathering the lumber and cement needed to create a solid foundation. The benefits of following this process should therefore be obvious. By fully immersing yourself into the text you’ll come to truly know the text. You’ll deepen your understanding of each book and knowledge of the the Bible as a whole.
Since this method is adapted from a book by James M. Gray (1851-1935), How to Master the English Bible‚ I’ll let him explain in his own words:
The first practical help I ever received in the mastery of the English Bible was from a layman. We were fellow-attendants at a certain Christian conference or convention and thrown together a good deal for several days, and I saw something in his Christian life to which I was a comparative stranger—peace, a rest, a joy, a kind of spiritual poise I knew little about. One day I ventured to ask him how he had become possessed of the experience, when he replied, “By reading the epistle to the Ephesians.” I was surprised, for I had read it without such results, and therefore asked him to explain the manner of his reading, when he related the following: He had gone into the country to spend the Sabbath with his family on one occasion, taking with him a pocket copy of Ephesians, and in the afternoon, going out into the woods and lying down under a tree, he began to read it; he read it through at a single reading, and finding his interest aroused, read it through again in the same way, and, his interest increasing, again and again. I think he added that he read it some twelve or fifteen times, “and when I arose to go into the house,” said he, “I was in possession of Ephesians, or better yet, it was in possession of me, and I had been ‘lifted up to sit together in heavenly places in Christ Jesus‚’ in an experimental sense in which that had not been true in me before, and will never cease to be true in me again.”
I confess that as I listened to this simple recital my heart was going up in thanksgiving to God for answered prayer, the prayer really of months, if not years, that I might come to know how to master His Word. And yet, side by side with the thanksgiving was humiliation that I had not discovered so simple a principle before, which a boy of ten or twelve might have known. And to think that an “ordained” minister must sit at the feet of a layman to learn the most important secret of his trade!
Rather than wasting time attempting to defend the wisdom of applying this method, I’ll close with a few helpful suggestions for putting it into practice:
1. Choose shorter books and work up to longer ones. Since you’ll be reading an entire book of the Bible and not just a chapter or two, you’ll want to work your way up to more extensive readings. When beginning this program you may want to start with a short book that has only a few chapters that can be read several times in one sitting. This will give you a sense of accomplishment and help develop the reading habit. For example, a short book like John or Jude can be read four or five times in one sitting allowing you to finish the entire twenty readings in less than a week. [NT books, shortest to longest: 3 John, 2 John, Phlm, Jude, Titus, 2Thess, Rev, 2 Peter, 2 Tim, 1Thess, Col, 1 Tim, Phil, 1 Peter, James, 1 John, Gal, Eph, 2 Cor, Heb, 1 Cor, Rom, Mark, John, Matt, Acts, Luke; OT books, shortest to longest: See this chart.]
2. Read at your normal pace. Treating the material reverently does not require reading at a slower than normal speed. Read for comprehension, ignoring the division of chapters and verses and treating each book as one coherent unit.
3. Skip the commentaries (for now). Don’t get bogged down by referring to commentaries or other outside sources. Commentaries are for your Bible study, rather than for this synthetic reading. Read each book in its entirety and then attempt to summarize in your own words its theme and major points.
4. Stick with the process. After the eighth or ninth reading you’ll hit a wall that is similar to what runners face in marathons. The text will become dry and lose its flavor. You’ll want to move on to the next book or abandon the program altogether. Stick with it. Persevere and you’ll discover the treasures that repeated readings can provide. Keep in mind that not every book will be equally rewarding. It doesn’t mean that you’re a heretic if during one of your readings you find 2 John a bit redundant or Jude just plain boring. Keep in mind the words of 2 Timothy 3:16-17: “All Scripture is breathed out by God and profitable for teaching, for reproof, for correction, and for training in righteousness, that the man of God may be competent, equipped for every good work.” Stick with it and you’ll fully understand the truth of that verse.
5. Choose an appropriate version. A modern language paraphrase is not an appropriate version for synthetic reading. Likewise, the familiar rhythms and cadences of the KJV can, upon repeated readings, get in the way of comprehension. I personally recommend the ESV, though the NIV can be a suitable alternative.
6. Pray. Ask God to open your heart to his Word. Trust the Holy Spirit to illuminate the text and provide guidance and understanding.
7. Begin today. Don’t put it off another day. Don’t say you’l start tomorrow, or next week, or after New Year’s. You won’t. Start with the only time that you are guaranteed—right now. Use some of the time you’d normally spend reading blogs to begin this program. Start now and then tomorrow, next week, or after New Year’s—after your mind has become saturated with God’s Holy Word—you can tell me my claim was an understatement.




December 31st, 2009 | 8:55 am
I had the Book of John loaded on my Mp3 player a year or so ago and listened to it on my walks probably just six or eight times (and in sections, so some may have been repeated more than others). I was amazed at how many things jumped out at me as I listened multiple times and had those words melt into my being. I discovered, for one thing, the significance of the fact that the person who challenged Peter in the courtyard was a relative of the guy whose ear he’d cut off hours before. And Chapters 14-17 have become even more dearly beloved to me than they were before.
I think I’ll take your challenge and actually start with John, since I have a head start on it already! Thank you! :-)
December 31st, 2009 | 9:29 am
Excellent suggestion. About 20 years ago, I started reading St. Paul’s letters, and these played a large part in bringing me back to the Church. I practically memorized the first chapter of First Corinthians: “For the word of the cross is folly to those who are perishing, but to us who are being saved it is the power of God.” The world changes when you hear teaching like this.
December 31st, 2009 | 10:42 am
[...] Make 2010 A Biblical New Year Posted on 12.31.09 by Danny Glover @ 10:42 am The Bible is indeed a transformational work of spiritual art, so I am intrigued by this four-step plan for a New Year’s resolution from Joe Carter at First Thoughts: [...]
December 31st, 2009 | 10:53 am
[...] This post was mentioned on Twitter by DNC DUDES, glennsnews. glennsnews said: How to Change Your Mind » First Thoughts | A First Things Blog http://bit.ly/8fkBP3 [...]
January 1st, 2010 | 9:06 am
Interesting idea.
By the way, there’s a typo in your list of NT books. Revelation is obviously one of the longer books. Should be roughly between Romans and Mark.
January 1st, 2010 | 9:32 am
[...] How to Change Your Mind » First Thoughts | A First Things Blog. [...]
January 1st, 2010 | 10:40 am
Here is a project I recently started. I read all four Gospels in one week (Mt, MK, LK, JN), then read Acts of the Apostles. Then, the second week I read the Gospels again, then read Romans. Third week, the Gospels, then 1 Co., the Gospels then 2 Co., and so on. I use the NIV.
But I like your system also.
I have always found it difficult to committ to reading the Bible until I decided to read each book as a whole document, ignoring the chapter and verse divisions. Sometime I will stop reading in the middle of a paragraph in the middle of a chapter, and nothing lost.
January 1st, 2010 | 5:16 pm
The best ideas are always the simplest and most obvious. You’ve inspired my slapping my own forehead, and the beginning of a new resolution. Thank you, and a happy new year.
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