How do I read the Bible well?

Most men who struggle with the Bible aren’t struggling because it’s too hard. They’re struggling because nobody told them how to read it. Hermeneutics is a ten-dollar word for a straightforward idea: every text has rules for how it works. Once you know the basic ones, the Bible opens up in ways that will surprise you.

Hermeneutics sounds like a disease. It isn’t. It’s the art and science of interpretation โ€” the set of principles that help you understand what a text actually means rather than what you want it to mean or what you fear it might mean. Every careful reader uses hermeneutics whether they know the word or not. Here’s how to do it deliberately.

A man in my congregation came to me once with a Bible question that had been bothering him for years. He’d read Psalm 137:9 โ€” “Blessed is he who seizes your infants and dashes them against the rocks” โ€” and he couldn’t get past it. He’d stopped reading Psalms. He’d told his wife the Bible was too violent to take seriously. He’d nearly walked away from faith over a single verse.

What he needed was not a different Bible. He needed to know how to read the one he had.

Once we talked through what the Psalms are โ€” ancient poetry written by people under extreme duress, expressing raw emotion to God rather than prescribing behavior โ€” and once he understood that reading one verse in isolation from its context, its genre, and its place in the larger story is like reading one panel of a comic strip and concluding that the world is flat, everything shifted. The verse didn’t change. His ability to engage it did.

That’s hermeneutics. Not academic gatekeeping. The basic tools any serious reader needs to do the job well. This post gives you the most important ones โ€” plainly, practically, and with enough examples that you can put them to use immediately.

The Goal: What the Author Meant, Not What You Need It to Say

Here’s the foundational principle, and it sounds simpler than it is: the goal of Bible reading is to understand what the author intended to communicate to his original audience โ€” not to find support for what you already believe, not to receive a personal message that fits your situation, and not to discover secret spiritual codes hidden in the text.

Theologians call this the “author’s intent” or the “plain sense” of the text. It sounds obvious. In practice, it is routinely violated โ€” by people across the theological spectrum, for reasons ranging from laziness to wishful thinking to genuine confusion about how reading works.

There’s a useful pair of terms worth knowing:

  • Exegesis โ€” Drawing the meaning out of the text. Starting with what the author wrote and working toward what it means. This is the goal.
  • Eisegesis โ€” Reading meaning into the text. Starting with a conclusion you want and finding verses that appear to support it. This is the mistake.

Every serious reader tends toward eisegesis at times โ€” it’s the natural human tendency to look for confirmation of what we already think. Good hermeneutics is the discipline that corrects for that tendency and keeps you honest about what the text is actually doing.

Principle One: Context Is Everything

Principle 1 Never Read a Verse in Isolation

The single most common mistake in Bible reading is treating individual verses as self-contained units of meaning that can be extracted from their surroundings without consequence. They can’t. Every verse exists inside a paragraph, inside a chapter, inside a book, inside the larger biblical story. The meaning of a verse is anchored to its context โ€” and changing the context changes the meaning.

There are four levels of context you need to pay attention to:

Immediate context โ€” the paragraph or section the verse appears in. Before you do anything with a verse, read five verses before it and five after it. Ask: what is happening around this statement? What is the argument being made? Who is speaking, to whom, and under what circumstances?

Book context โ€” the literary context of the whole book. What is Paul’s purpose in writing Romans? What has Jonah been establishing before the whale scene? What is the overall argument of Hebrews? Understanding the book’s purpose and structure gives you a framework for any individual section.

Biblical context โ€” how this passage relates to the rest of Scripture. The Bible is a unified story, not a collection of independent documents. Passages illuminate each other. The New Testament interprets and fulfills the Old Testament. A passage in Leviticus reads differently when you understand how Hebrews engages it.

Historical and cultural context โ€” the world in which the text was written. First-century honor-shame dynamics, ancient Near Eastern law, Roman political structures, Jewish religious expectations โ€” all of these shape what words meant and how an original audience would have received them.

Example: Jeremiah 29:11 โ€” “For I know the plans I have for you, declares the LORD, plans to prosper you and not to harm you, plans to give you hope and a future.” This verse is printed on coffee mugs, graduation cards, and church bulletins as a personal promise of prosperity and comfort. In context, it is God’s word to Jewish exiles in Babylon โ€” telling them to settle in, plant gardens, and seek the welfare of the city that conquered them, because they will be there for seventy years before any return. It is a word about communal patience under judgment, not a personal promise that your career will go well. Understanding context doesn’t strip the verse of meaning โ€” it gives it the right meaning, which is actually more powerful.

Principle Two: Genre Determines How You Read

Principle 2 Read Each Book According to Its Type

The Bible is not one kind of literature. It is a library โ€” a collection of texts in multiple genres, each with its own conventions and rules for how it communicates. Reading a poem the same way you read a legal code, or reading prophecy the same way you read history, produces misreadings of both.

Genre is the first question: what kind of writing is this, and how does that kind of writing work?

Narrative / History Genesis, Exodus, Joshua, Kings, Gospels, Acts

Tells a story in sequence. Read it as story โ€” with characters, plot, tension, and resolution. Ask: what is the narrator emphasizing? What is this story inside of? Descriptive (what happened) is not always prescriptive (what you should do). The fact that Samson does something does not mean you should.

Law / Torah Leviticus, Deuteronomy, portions of Exodus

Ancient covenant law given to Israel in its specific historical and theological situation. Requires understanding the categories of law (civil, ceremonial, moral) and how the New Testament addresses each. Not every command in Leviticus applies directly to the twenty-first century Christian โ€” context and the sweep of biblical theology determine which ones, and how.

Poetry / Wisdom Psalms, Proverbs, Song of Solomon, Ecclesiastes, Job

Uses parallelism, imagery, metaphor, and emotional expression rather than propositional prose. Psalms in particular are prayers and songs โ€” they express human experience before God, including anger, despair, and confusion. Not every statement in a Psalm is a theological claim about God’s behavior; some are the raw expression of a human heart under pressure.

Prophecy Isaiah, Jeremiah, Ezekiel, Daniel, the Minor Prophets

Frequently misread as a code for predicting future events. In context, Old Testament prophets primarily addressed their own contemporaries โ€” speaking to specific situations in Israel’s history. Some prophecy is predictive and finds fulfillment in Christ. Much of it is covenant lawsuit โ€” the prophet as God’s attorney, calling Israel to account for breaking the covenant.

Epistle / Letter Romans, Corinthians, Galatians, Ephesians, James, Peter

Real letters written to real communities with real problems. Before applying an epistle to your situation, understand what situation it was written to address. What were the Corinthians doing that prompted Paul’s response? What heresy was the letter to the Galatians correcting? Answering those questions helps you understand what is timeless principle and what is specific pastoral instruction.

Apocalyptic Daniel (portions), Revelation, portions of Ezekiel and Zechariah

Symbolic, visionary literature written in times of crisis โ€” typically persecution. Uses numbers, beasts, cosmic imagery, and dramatic scenes as a kind of coded language that spoke to its original audience about historical realities. Reading Revelation as a literal newspaper about future events ignores its genre. Reading it as the early church’s experience of Roman persecution and its ultimate confidence in Christ’s victory is closer to how it works.

Principle Three: Scripture Interprets Scripture

Principle 3 Let the Bible Be Its Own Best Commentary

One of the most powerful tools in Bible reading is using the Bible itself to illuminate what the Bible means. The theological term is the analogia scripturae โ€” the analogy of Scripture. The basic idea: clearer passages shed light on obscure ones, and no passage should be interpreted in a way that flatly contradicts clear teaching elsewhere.

When you encounter a difficult passage, the first question is not “what does my pastor think?” or “what did I feel when I read this?” The first question is: what does the rest of Scripture say about this topic? What does the New Testament do with this Old Testament passage? How do other writers address the same theme?

This principle also applies to the relationship between the Old and New Testaments. The New Testament is the interpretive key to the Old. When Hebrews reads the sacrificial system of Leviticus as pointing to Christ, that is not imposing a foreign meaning on Leviticus โ€” it is reading Leviticus in light of what it was preparing for. The whole Bible is telling one story, and reading any part of it in isolation from the whole distorts both the part and the whole.

Example: Genesis 22 โ€” God commands Abraham to sacrifice Isaac, then stops him at the last moment. Read in isolation, this passage raises serious questions about the character of God. Read in the context of the whole Bible โ€” as a preview of the Father offering the Son, as the event that establishes Mount Moriah as the place where God will provide (the site later identified with Jerusalem and the temple), as a test that points toward faith as the basis of relationship with God โ€” it becomes one of the richest passages in Scripture. The Bible interpreting the Bible produces depth, not confusion.

Principle Four: The Grammatical-Historical Method

Principle 4 Pay Attention to Words, Grammar, and Historical Setting

The grammatical-historical method is the core of responsible biblical interpretation. The name sounds technical; the idea is simple. You are trying to understand what words meant to the people who first read them, in the grammatical structure in which they appear, against the historical background that shaped both writer and audience.

Words matter. The biblical texts were written in Hebrew, Aramaic, and Greek โ€” and the specific words chosen carry specific weight. English translations do their best, but sometimes a single Greek word opens up a passage in ways the translation can’t fully capture. You don’t need to learn Greek to benefit from this โ€” a good study Bible, a Bible dictionary, or even a free tool like Blue Letter Bible will tell you what the original word is and how it’s used elsewhere.

Grammar matters. Is this a command or a description? Is this active or passive? Is the verb past, present, or future? Is Paul asking a question, making an assertion, or drawing a conclusion? Paying attention to the structure of sentences often resolves apparent difficulties before they become real ones.

History matters. When Jesus told the parable of the Good Samaritan, his audience had a visceral reaction to the Samaritan โ€” not fond familiarity. The point of the parable lands with completely different force when you know that Jews and Samaritans regarded each other with centuries of mutual contempt. Historical background is not a luxury for scholars โ€” it’s the soil in which the meaning grows.

Example: In John 21:15โ€“17, Jesus asks Peter three times “Do you love me?” In English this looks like repetition. In Greek, the first two questions use the word agapaล (the highest form of love) while Peter responds with phileล (affectionate friendship). On the third question, Jesus switches to Peter’s word โ€” phileล. Whether this distinction is theologically significant is debated, but it illustrates the kind of depth that opens up when you pay attention to the actual words.

Principle Five: The Redemptive-Historical Framework

Principle 5 Read Everything Inside the Whole Story

The Bible is not a collection of timeless spiritual principles loosely assembled between two covers. It is one unified story with a beginning, a middle, and an end โ€” the story of God creating a good world, humanity breaking it, God working through history to redeem it, and the promise of its full restoration.

That story has four acts: Creation, Fall, Redemption, New Creation. Every passage in the Bible fits somewhere in that story โ€” and knowing where a passage sits in the story is crucial for understanding what it means and how it applies.

This framework answers some of the most common Bible reading confusions. Why do Christians eat shellfish when Leviticus forbids it? Because the dietary laws were part of the covenant God made with Israel in a specific act of the story, and the New Testament โ€” specifically Acts 10 and the letter to the Galatians โ€” explains how those laws function in the new covenant era. Why do Christians not offer animal sacrifices? Because Hebrews explains that the whole sacrificial system was pointing toward the once-for-all sacrifice of Christ, which fulfilled and superseded it. These are not arbitrary decisions. They’re the result of reading the whole story and understanding how later acts address earlier ones.

Example: When you read a psalm of lament โ€” “My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?” (Psalm 22:1) โ€” you are reading a prayer from the Old Testament act of the story. When Jesus cries those same words from the cross (Matthew 27:46), the New Testament is showing you that Jesus entered into the full depth of Israel’s โ€” and humanity’s โ€” experience of abandonment. Reading across the whole story reveals layers of meaning invisible to someone reading each testament in isolation.

The Three Questions: A Simple Framework for Any Passage

Academic hermeneutics can get very elaborate. For practical Bible reading, three questions get you most of the way there. Scholars call this the Observation-Interpretation-Application framework, or OIA.

O Observation

What does the text say? Read carefully, slowly, more than once. Notice who is speaking, who is listening, what is happening, what words are repeated, what contrasts are drawn, what questions are asked. Don’t interpret yet โ€” just observe.

I Interpretation

What does the text mean? Apply the principles above โ€” context, genre, grammar, the whole story. Ask: what was the author trying to communicate to the original audience? What theological truth is being established or developed?

A Application

What does the text mean for me, now? Only after you’ve worked through observation and interpretation is application legitimate โ€” because now you know what the text actually says before you start asking what it means for your life.

The biggest mistake most readers make is skipping straight to application โ€” “what does this mean for me?” โ€” without doing the prior work of observation and interpretation. Application built on misinterpretation is not application. It’s projection. The text is a mirror you hold up to your life, but it has to be a clear mirror โ€” and that requires doing the prior work to understand what it actually reflects.

The Most Common Mistakes โ€” and How to Avoid Them

Mistake 1 Proof-texting: Using verses as ammunition rather than reading them as communication

Proof-texting is the practice of pulling individual verses out of context to support a predetermined conclusion โ€” theological, political, or personal. It’s possible to proof-text the Bible into supporting almost anything, which is why people sometimes do.

The fix: Never use a verse without first understanding its context. Ask: does this verse actually teach what I’m claiming it teaches when read in its paragraph, its book, and the whole biblical story? If it doesn’t, either your conclusion is wrong or you need a different text to support it.
Mistake 2 Ignoring the testamental context: applying Old Testament commands directly to New Testament life without asking what changed

The Old and New Testaments are not the same covenant, though they tell one story. Rules that governed Israel’s relationship with God under the Mosaic covenant do not all apply directly to followers of Jesus under the new covenant. The Reformers distinguished ceremonial law (fulfilled in Christ), civil law (specific to Israel as a theocratic nation), and moral law (reflecting God’s unchanging character, reaffirmed in the New Testament). This framework isn’t perfect, but it’s a start.

The fix: When you encounter an Old Testament command, ask: does the New Testament reaffirm this, fulfill it, or explain how it functions now? Jesus and the apostles are your guides to how the Old Testament works in the new covenant era.
Mistake 3 Confusing description with prescription: assuming that because the Bible records something, it endorses it

The Bible describes genocide, polygamy, slavery, deception, and betrayal โ€” and does not always immediately editorialize. Narrative describes what happened. It does not always prescribe what you should do. Abraham’s lie about Sarah being his sister is described; it is not presented as a model to follow.

The fix: Ask whether the narrator is presenting a behavior as exemplary or simply recording that it happened. Often the context makes this clear โ€” the consequences of bad decisions, the narrator’s subtle signals, and the overall moral framework of the book guide the reader’s judgment without requiring an explicit verdict on every scene.
Mistake 4 Reading the Bible like a personal horoscope: treating every passage as a direct message addressed specifically to you

God does speak through Scripture โ€” that’s the whole point. But not every passage is a personal promise or a direct instruction to you specifically. God’s promise to Abraham to make him the father of a great nation is not a promise that you personally will have many descendants. The instructions Paul gives to Timothy about church leadership are addressed to Timothy as a church leader in a specific situation.

The fix: Ask who the text was originally addressed to and in what situation. Then ask what timeless principles or truths it establishes that do apply across contexts. The route to personal application runs through original meaning, not around it.
Mistake 5 Reading in isolation from the community of interpretation: treating Bible study as a purely private exercise

The Bible was written for and read by communities, not isolated individuals. The history of interpretation โ€” what careful readers across two thousand years have made of these texts โ€” is a resource, not a constraint. When your reading of a passage leads you to a conclusion that no serious reader in two thousand years has reached, that’s a signal to slow down and check your work, not a mark of spiritual insight.

The fix: Use commentaries, study Bibles, and the work of serious interpreters. Read Scripture in community. Bring your questions to people who have studied longer than you have. Humility about your own interpretation is not weakness โ€” it’s wisdom.

The Tools Worth Owning

๐Ÿ“–
A Good Study Bible

The ESV Study Bible, the NIV Study Bible, or the CSB Study Bible give you maps, introductions to each book, footnotes explaining context and cross-references, and articles on key theological topics. This is the single highest-value investment for a new or developing reader.

๐Ÿ“š
A Bible Dictionary or Encyclopedia

The New Bible Dictionary (IVP) or the Zondervan Illustrated Bible Dictionary give you background on people, places, customs, and terms that don’t make sense without historical context. When you encounter a reference to a Pharisee, a Gentile, or the Temple Mount and you’re not sure what the significance is, a Bible dictionary is where you go.

๐Ÿ–ฅ๏ธ
Blue Letter Bible (free online tool)

Blueletterbible.org lets you look up any verse, see the original Greek or Hebrew word with its definition, and find every other place that word is used in Scripture. No Greek or Hebrew knowledge required. This tool brings serious word-study capability to any reader for free.

๐Ÿ—บ๏ธ
Bible Maps and a Timeline

Geography and chronology matter. Knowing where Babylon is relative to Jerusalem, what the journey from Galilee to Jerusalem would have meant for Jesus’s followers, or how the exile fits into the sweep of Israel’s history transforms passages from abstract text into located events. Most study Bibles include maps; a visual timeline of biblical history is also worth finding.

๐ŸŽง
Audio Bible

Reading large sections of the Bible at a stretch โ€” hearing the flow of a Gospel or an epistle in one sitting โ€” changes how you understand it. The Bible was originally heard, not read in private. An audio Bible (YouVersion, Dwell, or any Bible app with audio) lets you take in the whole shape of a book in a way that verse-by-verse reading doesn’t.

๐Ÿ“
A Reading Journal

Writing down what you observe, what questions the text raises, and what you think it means disciplines the mind and keeps you honest. You can’t fool yourself as easily in writing as you can in passive reading. Even a few sentences after a reading session โ€” what struck you, what confused you, what you need to find out โ€” builds interpretive skill over time.

A Practice Passage: Walking Through John 3:16 Slowly

Applying the Principles to a Familiar Verse

“For God so loved the world that he gave his only Son, that whoever believes in him should not perish but have eternal life.” โ€” John 3:16

Observation: The verse begins with “For” โ€” which means it’s continuing an argument. It’s inside a conversation (Jesus with Nicodemus, a Pharisee who came at night). The key terms: God, loved, world, gave, only Son, believes, perish, eternal life. The verse contains a contrast: perish vs. eternal life. The subject acting is God. The human response is believing.

Interpretation: In context (John 3:1โ€“21), Jesus has been explaining to Nicodemus the necessity of being “born again” โ€” a new birth from the Spirit. The “world” here is not just Israel but all of humanity. “Gave” points forward to the cross โ€” the giving is the death of the Son. “Perish” is the word used elsewhere for final destruction/judgment. “Eternal life” is not just life that lasts forever but life of the age to come โ€” the life of God’s kingdom. The verse is saying that God’s motivation for sending his Son was love, the means was sacrifice, and the result for those who believe is rescue from perishing and entry into the life of the coming kingdom.

Application: Now โ€” and only now โ€” the application is grounded. This verse doesn’t just mean “God loves you” in a vague comforting sense. It means that the God who made you acted, at the cost of his Son, to deal with the problem that would otherwise leave you perishing. The question the verse presses on you is not “doesn’t that feel good?” but “do you believe in the Son he sent?”

Reading as a Spiritual Discipline, Not an Academic Exercise

Everything above is in service of something bigger than intellectual competence. The Bible is not a text to be mastered โ€” it is the living word of the living God, through which the Spirit speaks to the minds and hearts of those who engage it honestly.

Hebrews 4:12 describes it as “alive and active. Sharper than any double-edged sword, it penetrates even to dividing soul and spirit, joints and marrow; it judges the thoughts and attitudes of the heart.” The goal is not to become a skilled analyst of an ancient document. The goal is to encounter the God who speaks through it.

The principles in this post make that encounter more likely, not less โ€” because they clear away the misreadings and projections that prevent you from hearing what the text is actually saying, as opposed to what you want it to say or what you fear it might say. A man who reads the Bible well is a man who is willing to be surprised by it, challenged by it, corrected by it, and sometimes unsettled by it. That openness is itself a spiritual posture โ€” the posture of someone who believes there is a God who speaks, and who is paying attention.

“The Scripture is not a dead letter but a living word, and it needs to be read the way any living thing is engaged โ€” with patience, attention, and a willingness to be changed by the encounter.”

โ€” Adapted from the tradition of Augustine and the Reformers

Key Takeaways

  1. The goal is the author’s intent, not your preferred meaning. Exegesis (drawing meaning out) is the goal. Eisegesis (reading meaning in) is the mistake. Good hermeneutics is the discipline that keeps you honest about which one you’re doing.
  2. Context is everything. No verse is an island. Read every passage inside its immediate context, its book’s context, the whole Bible’s context, and the historical-cultural context of its original audience. Jeremiah 29:11 on a coffee mug is not the same thing as Jeremiah 29:11 in Jeremiah 29.
  3. Genre determines how you read. The Bible contains narrative, law, poetry, prophecy, epistle, and apocalyptic literature โ€” each with its own conventions. Reading a psalm the same way you read a law code produces misreadings of both.
  4. Scripture interprets Scripture. Clearer passages illuminate obscure ones. The New Testament is the interpretive key to the Old Testament. The whole Bible tells one story, and any passage read in isolation from that story is at risk of distortion.
  5. The Observation-Interpretation-Application sequence matters. Most Bible reading mistakes happen when readers skip straight to application without doing the work of observation and interpretation first. Application built on misinterpretation is projection, not encounter.
  6. The five common mistakes are avoidable. Proof-texting, ignoring testamental context, confusing description with prescription, personalizing every promise, and reading in isolation from the community of interpretation โ€” all are correctable with deliberate attention to what the text is actually doing.
  7. The goal is encounter, not mastery. The principles exist to clear away obstacles to hearing what the text is actually saying. A man who reads the Bible well is a man willing to be surprised, challenged, and changed by what he finds โ€” not one who has learned to make the text confirm what he already believed.

Next Steps โ€” 7-Day Practice Plan

  1. Day 1 โ€” Mark 1:1โ€“45 โ€” Narrative Practice
    Read the whole first chapter of Mark in one sitting. Apply the OIA framework: What do you observe? (Who does what? What words repeat? What contrasts appear?) What does it mean? (What is Mark establishing about Jesus in his opening chapter?) What does it mean for you now? Notice how reading a large chunk at once changes your sense of the book.
  2. Day 2 โ€” Psalm 22 โ€” Poetry Practice
    Read Psalm 22 as poetry โ€” not as a theological proposition but as a human being’s cry to God. Notice the emotional arc: despair to confidence. Read it again knowing that Jesus quoted its opening words from the cross. What does reading the psalm in the light of the New Testament reveal? What does reading Jesus’s cry in light of the full psalm reveal?
  3. Day 3 โ€” Romans 5:1โ€“11 โ€” Epistle Practice
    Before reading, note: Romans is a carefully argued letter, and chapter 5 follows chapters 1โ€“4’s argument about justification by faith. The opening “Therefore” means Paul is drawing a conclusion from what came before. Practice Observation: list every claim Paul makes. Practice Interpretation: what theological truth is being established? What is the logical flow of the argument?
  4. Day 4 โ€” Genesis 22:1โ€“19 โ€” Context Practice
    Read the binding of Isaac. Then read Hebrews 11:17โ€“19 โ€” how does the author of Hebrews interpret this event? Then read John 3:16 alongside Genesis 22. What connections appear? This is Scripture-interprets-Scripture in action. What does seeing these passages together do to your understanding of each one separately?
  5. Day 5 โ€” Jeremiah 29:1โ€“14 โ€” Context Rescue Practice
    Read the full passage that contains Jeremiah 29:11 โ€” not just the famous verse. Who is this letter addressed to? What are they being told to do in verses 4โ€“9? What is the promise in verses 10โ€“14, and how does knowing its context change what it means? Does understanding the original meaning strip it of power, or does it give it a different kind of power?
  6. Day 6 โ€” Revelation 1:9โ€“20 โ€” Apocalyptic Practice
    Read John’s vision of the risen Christ. This is apocalyptic โ€” symbolic, visionary, deliberately evocative rather than literal. Don’t try to decode it yet. First: what do you observe about this portrait of Jesus? What does it make you feel? Then: what Old Testament imagery is John drawing on? (Look for the connection to Daniel 7 and 10.) What is John communicating about who Jesus is to people under Roman persecution?
  7. Day 7 โ€” Hebrews 4:12โ€“13 and 2 Timothy 3:16โ€“17 โ€” Reflection Practice
    Two passages about what Scripture is and does. Read them slowly. Then sit with this question: over this week of reading, did the Bible read you as much as you read it? Did anything surprise you, challenge you, or press on something you didn’t expect? That โ€” more than intellectual competence โ€” is the point of reading well.

The Book Opens When You Know How to Open It

If the Bible has felt opaque, confusing, or like a collection of contradictions โ€” the principles in this post are why. Not because the Bible is obscure, but because it’s ancient literature in multiple genres written across fifteen centuries, and reading it well requires some basic tools that most people were never handed.

Now you have them. The next step is to use them โ€” to open the book and let it say what it actually says, rather than what you’ve heard it says or fear it might say.

If you want to go deeper โ€” into a specific book, a specific question, or how to develop a regular reading practice โ€” Mountain Veteran Ministries is here for that. Reach out.

Key Scriptures: 2 Timothy 3:16โ€“17 ยท Hebrews 4:12 ยท Luke 24:44โ€“45 ยท John 5:39 ยท Romans 15:4 ยท 1 Corinthians 10:11 ยท 2 Peter 1:20โ€“21 ยท Psalm 119:105

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