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Are you having trouble getting anything out of your personal bible study? Try Inductive bible study!
Methods of Bible Study
* Inductive- “Pulls out facts”
* Deductive- “Starts with premise”
* Springboard- “Shares opinion”
Read 3 methods above
• Inductive…the opposite of the more common form of study which is “deductive” (starting with a premise and trying to build Scripture to teach what I believe). The problem is that my premise can be wrong (“Everyone should remain single”, 1 Cor 7:32-35. Yet miss Ps 127:3-5, Gen 2:18 and 1 Tim 4:1,3).
• Inductive does not require a premise. All that matters is: What does the Bible say? (Not the preacher, or priest [reformation, sola scriptura]) What I think may be irrelevant. I must stay disciplined!
The Inductive Bible Study Method
The inductive bible study method has been used for decades, and has proven to be the most effective way to study and teach the Word of God. This method attempts to discover the facts of a text through careful Obser-vation and then to accurately Interpret these facts to understand what the writer means. The final step is to make Application to our own lives and our culture.
To have an effective Bible study, you must first have an effective method of studying the Bible. It is the goal of this course to develop an inductive method of study, relying wholly on the Scriptures for an accurate inter-pretation of what is written.
The inductive method is a scientific approach to the study of Scripture:
• It begins with only what is actually written.
• It follows with a Biblical interpretation of what is written.
• It then requires that we “be doers of the word, and not hearers only” (James 1:22), by applying the Scrip-ture to our lives.
The inductive method requires the student to examine the smallest details of the text, even down to punctua-tion. It requires the student to determine what form of literature they are reading, where the sentences begin and end and where the paragraph and topical changes occur.
The inductive method is re-creative, in that it requires the student to discover what the author intended to say, and what the original reader understood it to mean. 5
• There are two dangers: “I can do this, its simple…” so won’t do the work. OR “This is too much for me…” so won’t do the work. It is simple and it is difficult because it is mainly about OBSERVATION. Something that we don’t do very well…
• IBS really consists of three steps. Observation, Interpretation, Application
• What is there? What does it mean? What should I do? Example of observing stars, determining position, then charting course. Or observing street sign and missing which way the arrow pointed.
• First step of IBS begins with WHAT DO YOU SEE! Until you do this properly you can’t study/teach.
Observation
What do I see? What can I point to?
• We will only observe WHAT WE CAN POINT TO, not what I think it says or feel it says, or what someone else thinks.
• First we will READ, READ, READ!
• As we are reading we will observe our first impressions and record the MAJOR FACTS: Who? What? Where? When?
• Then we will observe the grammatical structure of the text. Where do sentences begin and end? Where do paragraphs begin and end?
• Finally we will observe specific details about the text. Going over the scripture with specific questions in mind, depending on what literary form we are studying.
Observation is paramount! If the student does not observe well then the rest of the steps will fail. Good obser-vations are the key to every good Bible study. Remember that we are only interested in what the text says, not what we think it says.
Step 1 Read the entire passage:
Read through the text repeatedly, until it becomes so familiar to you that parts of it are committed to memory. Read, Read, Read!!! There is no substitute for reading the scripture repeatedly.
Step 2 Record your first impressions:
Record who is in the text and their relationship to each other. Record what is happening. Record where it takes place (i.e. the sea of Galilee or the Temple). Record when it takes place (i.e the Sabbath, post-resurrection, during the Persian empire).
Step 3 Identify the structure of the passage:
Make a basic outline of the text. Determine what the important elements are. Look for changes in location, people, events, or topics.
A friend gave this to me some time ago. Hope you in enjoy as much as I did the first time read it.
Methods of Bible Study
* Inductive- “Pulls out facts”
* Deductive- “Starts with premise”
* Springboard- “Shares opinion”
Read 3 methods above
• Inductive…the opposite of the more common form of study which is “deductive” (starting with a premise and trying to build Scripture to teach what I believe). The problem is that my premise can be wrong (“Everyone should remain single”, 1 Cor 7:32-35. Yet miss Ps 127:3-5, Gen 2:18 and 1 Tim 4:1,3).
• Inductive does not require a premise. All that matters is: What does the Bible say? (Not the preacher, or priest [reformation, sola scriptura]) What I think may be irrelevant. I must stay disciplined!
The Inductive Bible Study Method
The inductive bible study method has been used for decades, and has proven to be the most effective way to study and teach the Word of God. This method attempts to discover the facts of a text through careful Obser-vation and then to accurately Interpret these facts to understand what the writer means. The final step is to make Application to our own lives and our culture.
To have an effective Bible study, you must first have an effective method of studying the Bible. It is the goal of this course to develop an inductive method of study, relying wholly on the Scriptures for an accurate inter-pretation of what is written.
The inductive method is a scientific approach to the study of Scripture:
• It begins with only what is actually written.
• It follows with a Biblical interpretation of what is written.
• It then requires that we “be doers of the word, and not hearers only” (James 1:22), by applying the Scrip-ture to our lives.
The inductive method requires the student to examine the smallest details of the text, even down to punctua-tion. It requires the student to determine what form of literature they are reading, where the sentences begin and end and where the paragraph and topical changes occur.
The inductive method is re-creative, in that it requires the student to discover what the author intended to say, and what the original reader understood it to mean. 5
• There are two dangers: “I can do this, its simple…” so won’t do the work. OR “This is too much for me…” so won’t do the work. It is simple and it is difficult because it is mainly about OBSERVATION. Something that we don’t do very well…
• IBS really consists of three steps. Observation, Interpretation, Application
• What is there? What does it mean? What should I do? Example of observing stars, determining position, then charting course. Or observing street sign and missing which way the arrow pointed.
• First step of IBS begins with WHAT DO YOU SEE! Until you do this properly you can’t study/teach.
Observation
What do I see? What can I point to?
• We will only observe WHAT WE CAN POINT TO, not what I think it says or feel it says, or what someone else thinks.
• First we will READ, READ, READ!
• As we are reading we will observe our first impressions and record the MAJOR FACTS: Who? What? Where? When?
• Then we will observe the grammatical structure of the text. Where do sentences begin and end? Where do paragraphs begin and end?
• Finally we will observe specific details about the text. Going over the scripture with specific questions in mind, depending on what literary form we are studying.
Observation is paramount! If the student does not observe well then the rest of the steps will fail. Good obser-vations are the key to every good Bible study. Remember that we are only interested in what the text says, not what we think it says.
Step 1 Read the entire passage:
Read through the text repeatedly, until it becomes so familiar to you that parts of it are committed to memory. Read, Read, Read!!! There is no substitute for reading the scripture repeatedly.
Step 2 Record your first impressions:
Record who is in the text and their relationship to each other. Record what is happening. Record where it takes place (i.e. the sea of Galilee or the Temple). Record when it takes place (i.e the Sabbath, post-resurrection, during the Persian empire).
Step 3 Identify the structure of the passage:
Make a basic outline of the text. Determine what the important elements are. Look for changes in location, people, events, or topics.
A friend gave this to me some time ago. Hope you in enjoy as much as I did the first time read it.