Hassam, a young man from Egypt, just called to remind me
that it is four years since he found Jesus Christ in a Bible study in my house!
Tomorrow he will be baptized. Vasti, Ph.D. candidate from Brazil, recently
reminded me of my first visit to her campus and the Bible study that brought her
to the Lord. She then won her whole family! I have seen more people find God in
evangelistic Bible studies than any other way.
It is better to use the term Investigative Bible Study
(IBS), because you can use it in the hearing of non-believers, who would be
offended or put on guard by the word “evangelistic.”
What Is An IBS?
This remarkable tool is a group discussion, where two or
three believers lead a majority of non-believers in the study of a Bible
passage, usually from the gospels, so they can patiently learn about Jesus
Christ and invite him to be their Lord.
Will non-believers come? Today’s young people have grown
up in a post-modern culture, and have become skeptical of the scientific truth
approach of modernism. But they are open to religion, if it is not Christianity,
which they think has been tried and has failed. (Look at the mess in the Western
world of Christendom!) But they are intrigued by non-Christian religions and
cults — New Age ideas.
The fact that many have never read a Bible makes them
curious. Some welcome a chance to study it in a group, because it is rumored
that you can’t just read it and hope to understand it.
Many other non-believers had some experience in a
Protestant or Catholic church when they were children. We find that many people
will come to a Bible study if it is a genuine IBS. We can invite them to our
Bible studies for Christians, but most do not return because they are not
comfortable as the only outsiders present. But many IBS groups on campuses, in
workplaces and homes, show that seekers who will not attend church or other
Christian meetings, are eager for Bible studies, led by Christian peers, for
groups of mainly outsiders, in non-threatening, non-religious settings.
But the four evangelical students I met at the
University of Coimbra in Portugal did not think so. (At that time the city of
Coimbra probably did not have a total of 100 evangelicals.) I had come to help
these four students start a campus fellowship. They told me that Bible studies
would not work in Portugal — no one would be interested. Finally, I asked if we
could experiment just three times. If it did not work, I would desist. They
asked where we should meet. I asked, “What is the busiest place on the campus?”
So we sat in the cafeteria lounge of the medical school
of this prestigious old university — four believers and two friends — all of us
frightened. I led the study. As people passed our little circle, some turned
back to ask what we were doing. Some pulled up chairs and sat down. A girl,
seated with her back to us, kept scooting her chair closer so she could hear.
Before I finished that short passage, we had one circle of students sitting
around us and another circle standing around them!
I announced we would study a similar passage the next
day — same place and time. You should have heard the protests! One said,
“Tomorrow I am only free at 10.” Another wanted 4 PM. Someone said, “Do it at
noon.” We scheduled more than a dozen studies for those three days!
We analyzed a different passage each hour because some
students came every time — they even cut class!
In the third study, two girls argued that Jesus could
not be God. Then engineering student Carlos Jose surprised us by saying, “It’s
true! I found out last night. I wanted to talk to God so much, and suddenly I
knew he was in my room with me! Then I didn’t know what to say.” We were awed
and convinced he had met God!
Then everyone ran off to class — except for Jorge, also
in engineering. He said nothing. So I asked, “Jorge, have you ever invited Jesus
Christ into your life?” He said, “No, but I would so like to do it!” So we
prayed together. He and Carlos Jose became roommates. The skeptical girls and
others found God in succeeding days.
Usually, our evangelistic conversations lead naturally
into IBS’s, as we answer seekers’ questions. (See GO Paper: Workplace
Evangelism: How to Fish out Seekers.) In Brazil we also posted small ads on
campus bulletin boards. In Spain, where we dared not do that, we gave out papers
with a Bible passage, half a dozen questions, and phone numbers of group members
for information on times and places of studies. But friendships and personal
invitations are the best way to get people to attend.
What Is The Value Of The IBS?
The IBS is useful even for strangers we meet in travel,
but is ideal for co-workers, clients, fellow students, neighbors, acquaintances
from affinity groups — people with whom we have sustained contact. The IBS is an
essential tool for tentmakers — who support themselves abroad, making Jesus
Christ known, on the job and in free time — like the Apostle Paul. The IBS is
essential for local believers in hostile countries.
The IBS is a building block for pioneer student work and
church planting. As seekers find God, the IBS becomes a DBS, a discipleship
Bible study — for mutual instruction and encouragement. The campus DBS is the
core of a new student group. A home IBS grows into a small house church.
Churches and campus fellowships can be revitalized by giving members IBS-DBS
training.
An IBS is an easy way to evangelize. Although not
everyone can preach, almost everyone can learn to lead studies — even new
believers. If the following guidelines are observed, a leader does not need to
be a veteran church member or have formal Bible training.
An IBS-DBS program is designed for multiplication — for
cell division. If a group has two experienced leaders, each can choose an
untrained partner and start new IBS’s. Seekers who find God in an IBS become
familiar with the ideal tool for the immediate evangelization of their family
and friends!
Some start doing this before making a profession of
faith, like Marisa, in Spain, who took a set of leader’s questions so she could
guide her father through a passage we had just examined. Seekers Juan and Teresa
took, questions to share the passage with another couple.
Both the DBS and IBS consist mainly of inductive Bible
study, not theological discussion, apologetics or the sharing of experiences.
Both consist of question-oriented discussions — not talks or sermons, because
people usually do not accept their peers as religious authorities. Participants
examine the text for themselves. (Sermons are effective in the church because
the congregation respects the pastor’s spiritual authority and greater
theological knowledge.)
An IBS discussion is excellent communication, because
participants are not passive listeners. (When people only listen they forget
about 90% of what they hear.) Group members are fully absorbed in analyzing the
text and sharing their findings. A leader skillfully guides them with questions.
A truth they discover in the text makes more impact on them than a truth we
present to them. The IBS enables God to speak to seekers directly through the
pages of his Word.
Consider the following IBS characteristics in more
detail.
1. The composition of the group
An IBS may have from 5 to 13 people, but not more than
half should be believers. Preferably there should be only two believers for
every six to ten who do not yet know God.
So a study group for believers does not become an IBS
because a couple of non-believers attend. They may find God, but when seekers
are outnumbered, many fail to return. Or they become defensive, or then, afraid
to speak. A decision may owe more to the pressure of the majority or a
particular friendship than to spiritual conviction. The majority must be
seekers.
2. Two frequent questions
a) How can you keep the majority non-believers from
agreeing on a wrong interpretation? Ground rules are set. At the beginning of
every session, the leader says, “Are we agreed that although it is interesting
to exchange religious opinions, our purpose today is to see what we can discover
about Jesus Christ in this passage?”
Then, if Jim gives a wild answer, the leader can say,
“That’s a fascinating comment, in which verse did you find it?” It gives him an
easy way to back down and the discussion proceeds. (But you may want to chat
with Jim afterward, since his comment reveals what is going on in his mind and
heart.)
b) What if the participants do not believe the Bible is
true? Few seekers will believe the Bible is infallible or God’s absolute truth.
Today’s post-modernists do not believe there is absolute truth. Should you try
to convince them? Usually, not at this time. They need only believe that this
primary source document of the Christian faith is sufficiently trustworthy to
merit investigation. They don’t have to believe it — just see what it says.
The Bible has the “ring of truth” (J.B. Phillips). It is
self-validating. The Hebrew word for truth means reality — that which actually
is, the world the way God made it. Non-believers cannot live by their agnostic
world views because they keep bumping up against God’s reality. Even as they
argue against Bible truth, their conscience says, “You know it’s true.” You can
count on God’s Spirit! God’s Word not only informs but is powerful to convict
and to give life and to transform!
As someone pointed out, “What is the best way to defend
a lion? Just let him out of his cage!”
3. IBS advantages for seekers
a) Seekers do not feel threatened by a believing
majority, so they are more comfortable and discussion is more spontaneous. When
most participants are novices, they lose their fear of giving foolish answers.
They say what they think. They are less likely to become defensive. You do not
want people to do much arguing because it will be harder for them to admit they
were wrong.
b) The Bible study will be more genuine — not artificial
as it often is when the majority know God and are subtly phrasing all their
answers for the benefit of the outsiders. The visitors soon detect they are
everyone’s targets!
c) The study can be less complicated. Theological
controversies are not raised unless the participants ask, because they confuse.
But study of the text must be thorough, not shallow. English majors may be
skilled at literary analysis, so we must do thorough analysis of our passage or
lose credibility. Some may be history majors. Bill Moyers led a TV series of Old
Testament studies with participants who were writers mainly from different
religions. They did superb literary analysis, but completely missed what God was
saying through the passages. Do good study, but don’t split theological hairs.
d) Everyday language is used, avoiding evangelical
jargon, and unnecessary theological terminology. Exception: Terms like
justification or salvation, which are rich with content and have no exact
equivalent in everyday speech should be explained and used.
e) Seekers can patiently learn the core truths of the
gospel in a non-threatening atmosphere. Maria told her sister, “At first it may
seem confusing then everything begins to make sense.”
f) It is easier to make a commitment to Jesus Christ in
a group where others are doing it too.
g) New believers can immediately evangelize others,
using the same passages and questions that won them!
h) For tentmakers it is important that the IBS/DBS
provides the ideal matrix for a new house church that should develop.
4. IBS advantages for believers
a) The IBS is better use of your human resources, time
and effort. Rather than bring two non-believers into a group of twenty members,
divide the twenty into ten teams of two, each leading a study with six seekers.
They are evangelizing sixty seekers!
b) No pastor or campus staff worker need be present,
since even a new believer can lead a study, if ground rules are followed, and if
prepared study guides are used.
c) Believers learn effective personal evangelism as they
listen to seekers’ comments in the study. They are often surprised at what they
hear! The Christians meet the seekers during the week and continue discussing
points that arose in the group. Several Christians asked me to teach them how to
evangelize — that is, techniques — not realizing they were already doing
effective, natural evangelism, in these conversations between scheduled studies.
d) Study leaders quickly develop spiritual leadership
and responsibility. This is superb training. Reproduction is a mark of maturity,
and spiritual parenting brings rapid growth. Pair a mature leader with a new
believer. It is good training for a lifetime of ministry, at home or abroad —
training that is difficult to acquire any other way.
e) The fellowship’s larger group activities are more
fruitful. Rather than struggle to bring a handful of miscellaneous outsiders to
a larger evangelistic meeting, each IBS leader easily brings 6 to 8 already
half-evangelized seekers. Expect good response to a gospel appeal from such
select group.
f) The IBS is effective for commuter type,
non-residential campuses, These usually have few social organizations. It is
effective also for the workplace and the neighborhood.
g) The IBS is ideal where larger group meetings are
inconvenient or not allowed. A small study group can meet almost anywhere.
h) The IBS is essential in spiritually hostile
countries. Many restrict all open religious activity of Christians. But if small
groups can sit together anywhere to study math, or talk about soccer, they can
talk about Jesus Christ. Instead of large Bibles, use pocket Testaments, small
Gospels, or even just a page with the typed text and a few questions..
i) Special care can be given to the seekers, because
co-leaders have responsibility for only a few. The personal interest is crucial
in winning people. Jesus met seekers’ families, and took them to meet his, even
before his own brothers believed in him — helpful to seekers whose conversion
would alienate their families.
The IBS is a patient, realistic kind of friendship
evangelism, backed up by personal concern for each individual’s needs. Seekers
see the difference Jesus makes in the lives of their Christian friends, as they
study, or work or relax or play together.
They receive Jesus Christ and continue to be discipled
by the leaders, even as they begin their own IBS’s, and disciple their converts
to the level they have been taught. When several find the Lord in a small social
group (like the local bank, freshman biology, or the English-as-foreign-language
class), the impact is big. A chain reaction of conversions may occur.
5. The IBS objective
The ultimate objective of the IBS is to enable
non-believing friends to receive Jesus Christ as Lord.
But the immediate objective is to enable them to make
any positive response to Jesus Christ. It is a good IBS if a participant:
realizes that he or she is not a real Christian, or that sincerity is not
enough, that indifference to God is rejection of him, or that Jesus really is
God, is alive and sees and hears.
In Brazil, Guaracy said, “Now I know why I have never
found God. It was never my priority.” Edgar came early to our study in Lima,
Peru. He said, “I hope you don’t mind that I cheated. I just had to peek at the
next chapter!”
Rejoice over your group participants’ intermediate steps
toward God. Let their partial response encourage and inform your intercession
for them.
6. The IBS content
Mainly gospel passages are studied, to see who Jesus
really was, and to watch him in action. Observation of Jesus is the shortcut in
all evangelism. He is the way to the Father — Jn.14:6. (To prove the existence
of our Creator God, don’t begin with Genesis, but with Jesus.) The gospels are
the evangelistic literature of the Bible. Jn.20:30-31; Lk.1:1-4.
It is significant that the gospels are not a modern
biography of Jesus, but a series of moving pictures that show him in action, so
seekers can interact with him vicariously through the characters in the
narratives — like rich Zacchaeus, the woman at the well, Nicodemus, the Syro-Phoenician
woman, blind Bartimaeus, the widow of Nain, etc. (Today, as in ancient times,
story-telling is the traditional method of communication in non-Western
cultures, rather than linear, logical arguments.) Lead the studies in such a way
as to feel the suspense and emotions in the original encounters.
Let seekers discover who Jesus was, in the same way that
he guided his disciples in John 1. If Jesus had said, “Now I want you men to
know that I am God,” these fanatically monotheistic men would have charged him
with blasphemy and left. When John and Andrew first asked him who he was, Jesus
said, “Come and see.” Jn.1:39, 46. As they accompanied him and observed his
humanity, his deity stood out in sharp contrast. When he calmed the storm at sea
they exclaimed, “What kind of a man is this?” They knew Psa.65:5-7 says that
only God can calm a stormy sea!
They had quickly became convinced that Jesus was
Messiah, but it took longer to be convinced that Messiah was God. Jesus gives
them time, until near the end of his ministry when he asks, “Who do you say that
I am?” Only Peter has courage to say the awesome words out loud, “We have become
convinced that you are the Messiah, the Son of the living God!” Mt.16:13ff. (The
God who intervenes in history. This was not just a repetition of “Son of God” —
the messianic title and synonym for “King of Israel,” which Nathanael used in
Jn.1:49.) You probably could have heard a pin drop, until Jesus confirmed
Peter’s confession.
Lead seekers to make the same discovery by causing the
narratives to live for them. To explain away Jesus’ humanity is to rob the
incarnation of its meaning. Do not say Jesus took no risk when he touched the
leper, because he was God. Or that he always knew people’s thoughts. The gospels
make clear that only sometimes he used his prophetic insight and power. Jesus
became one of us, and accepted our limitations, but without sin. The gospels
show him thirsty, hungry, sleepy, tired, hurt, and in need of prayer. We can
identify with him only because he became man.
As seekers observe Jesus in action, he draws them to
himself through the gospel narratives, exactly as he did in the first century
when physically present. Imagine Jesus’ gentle voice and the compassion in his
eyes as he speaks harsh words to the Syro-Phoenician mother in Mt. 15. The harsh
words were meant for his disciples, not for her. I have seen seekers already
loving this man Jesus, even before they know that he is God or that he died for
them.
Plan short units of study — not 28 chapters of Matthew,
but series of three to eight narratives. Then see if individuals are ready to
receive Jesus Christ.
However, there is great advantage in choosing
consecutive narratives, as they appear in a gospel. Each story builds upon
concepts from previous ones, so introductions can be shorter and explanations
fewer.
Select only the most appropriate narratives, and
summarize the material between them in the introductions.
Some O.T. passages make good IBS’s, like Psa. 1 and 23.
For Jewish Vera, I began with Psa. 139. Some N.T. are helpful when people are
ready for commitment, like 1 Pet.2:18-25; Rev.3:20, 21. The gospels tell how
Jesus lived and died; the letters explain why. Mainly we need to break seekers’
wrong stereotypes of him.
It is helpful to use prepared Bible study guides, but
few are evangelistic — with content suitable for seekers. Not all are inductive,
because the questions only test people’s ability to read, which is boring, and
does not lead to discussion. Inductive questions help members discover,
understand and correlate the facts in a text, and apply them to their individual
situations.
Start with Jesus the Disciple Maker, by Ada Lum — 8
studies from John. See other suggestions in the bibliography.
But leaders need to learn how to prepare their own Bible
study guides, in order to lead the passages most suitable for their friends,
especially, if these are of Muslim, Hindu or Buddhist background. (See GO Paper
Inductive Bible Study Preparation.)
7. The time and place
The IBS could be in your home or the seeker’s home. But
ideally you should meet in a religiously neutral location in or near your place
of work or study. It should not be in a church. As to time, it should be during
an interval you and the seekers share — coffee break, lunch hour, etc., so it
takes the minimum time and effort. But interested seekers will even come to work
or campus early or remain later, to study.
You may be able to use an empty office or classroom, a
coffee shop, or nearby home. In good weather, many groups meet outdoors. Some
American students led studies in their cars. Engineering students in Brazil met
on the roof of a campus building. I spoke to a group of aeronautical engineers
who brought sack lunches to their factory once a week. Even Pizza Hut employees
found a time and place to meet.
Time and place are rarely an unsolvable problem, but
reflect the fear of believers. But in Brazil, Walter and Tietje, the only
believers in their chemistry classes, were bussed to their new campus building
just in time for the first class, and brought home after the last one, with no
free time in-between. There was no other transportation. We prayed for them at
our Saturday meeting. That week the administration rearranged the whole
schedule, leaving a two-hour block of free time! We knew they had to do it
because we prayed!
It is advantageous to find a quiet place without too
many distractions, unless you wish to attract new seekers. Then find exposure in
a crowded place.
A home has more warmth and it is easier to serve light
refreshments. But don’t let refreshments become burdensome. Take turns bringing
cookies. At lunch meetings in Cambridge, students served themselves to bread,
cheese and apples, and put coins in a dish.
8. Hosting an IBS
a) New participants should be made welcome and
comfortable. See that all are introduced, and initial conversation helps
everyone relax. (We did not object that some seekers smoked. They were nervous,
and we were not at church. Today people are more sensitive to the practice, so
do what your group wants. )
b) All should use the same New Testament to avoid the
confusion of varying translations. You can indicate passages by page number. A
paragraphed, modern language N.T. is ideal, like the RSV or NIV in English —
even Good News for Modern Man (simplified English). If you are working with
internationals, bilingual Testaments are popular if you can find them in modern
translation. English is on one side and another language on the opposite page.
Paraphrases like Phillips N.T. or the Living Bible, are good for reading, but
are too freely translated for study.
c) The atmosphere should be relaxed and reverent, but
not Church-like. It should be loving and accepting. A drunk medical student
walked into our Bible study group, noisily, and fell onto the sofa. She was so
disruptive, that I summarized the rest of the passage and served refreshments.
But Joao Olavo, angry at her, was convicted by our gentle dealing with this
needy young woman, and received Jesus Christ that evening.
d) If believers feel spiritually superior, seekers will
sense it. Believers are forgiven, but sinners still. They should be honest about
struggles and failures. A desperate couple went to church for help, but left,
disillusioned, saying, “Those happy smiling people could never understand our
problems.” Honesty about our struggles helps seekers share theirs.
e) Light refreshments add warmth to the meeting. Even
more important, if served at the end of the study, they keep participants around
long enough for socialization and for individual chats about points in the
study.
9. IBS discussion guidelines
You lead an IBS in much the same way as a DBS, but with
significant differences.
a) You need not begin a new group with prayer. Paul did
not pray aloud at the Areopagus. Your discussion could be about football — but
happens to be about Jesus. It might be appropriate to say, “Since we are
studying God’s Book, let’s ask for his help.” Or you could pray at the end. Ask,
“Why don’t we talk to God about what we have seen today?”
b) Leaders should guide with reverent enthusiasm. The
gospel is so fantastic, it demands excitement, or seekers will never believe we
believe it.
c) The leader sets the ground rules. “Are we agreed that
our purpose is to see what this passage shows us about Jesus Christ?” If anyone
gives a wild answer the leader can ask “In which verse did you find that?”
d) The leader gives an introduction — not on the lesson
of the passage, but on its historical-geographical background. Do not spoil the
element of surprise, of discovery, by announcing the lesson in advance! (Too
often study guides make this mistake.)
Also, God may intend different lessons for different
people. Dr. Martyn Lloyd Jones told us he did expository preaching of
consecutive passages because there would always be something for everyone.
Inductive study shares this “cafeteria” advantage. I do not like introductions
that predispose seekers to expect a certain lesson so they fail to see others.
Application is important. But the most important outcome of Bible study, is
gaining a new perspective on the Lord that leads us to worship, and to a deeper
relationship with him.
Let the introduction provide historical-cultural
background and build suspense for the narrative. Imagine yourself in the story
and feel it.
e) Have participants read the passage aloud, by
paragraphs, not by verses. Verses interrupt the thought.
f) A well-prepared Christian leads the discussion
firmly, but sensitively, with flexible use of written questions. But if someone
refers to a point that comes later in the passage, comment on it briefly, and
resume your planned, more logical order. When you come to the out-of-order
question, say, “Now as we already noted ...,” and then proceed.
g) Leaders ask the main questions, using supplementary
ones only to help the group dig more deeply. If answers are superficial, add
questions. Don’t be nervous over silent moments — people need time to think.
h) If they answer by reading a verse, ask them to
restate the answer in their own words. Mere reading can be dull, and you must
see if they understood.
i) Pace the study well — not too fast or slow. Plan to
reach the midpoint before mid-time, so there will be enough minutes to summarize
the story and discuss the applications at the end.
j) Encourage the timid to speak, asking them to read a
verse or answer a simple question. But not an embarrassing, simplistic one. Once
the ice is broken, they often speak again.
k) Tactfully restrain the too talkative participant.
Refer questions to others by name. Ask the repeat offender to help you involve
the less talkative.
l) Get the participants to ask questions, then refer
these back to the group. The leader does not throw the ball to each person in
turn and receive it back. Rather, anyone may catch his ball and throw it to
anyone else. Let group members interact. When the ball drops, the leader
summarizes the discussion and throws out a new question.
m) Define terms and give sufficient historical and
cultural information to clarify points in the passage. The leaders provide this
data. Less is needed if consecutive passages are studied.
n) Keep the discussion within the limits of the passage,
and summarize frequently. If an extraneous subject comes up, jot it down, for a
private conversation. If everyone is interested, suggest a future study of a
relevant passage on that subject.
o) Avoid unnecessary references to other parts of the
Bible since participants will have trouble following. This point is often
misunderstood. Christians who do not know inductive study, often substitute
cross-references, ranging from Genesis to Revelation, instead of determining
what the basic text means. This misses the point of the study. It also
discourages participants from reading the Bible on their own, because they think
you have to be an expert on the whole Bible to understand any part of it.
But to rule out all cross-references is to impoverish
the study. The leader should use relevant references from the immediate context,
from chapters the group has already studied, and from anywhere in the Bible — if
they quickly resolve problems in the text or enrich a lesson. Don’t make
excessive use of them. But it is good to show how we let the Bible interpret
itself. This is especially important for Catholics who charge Protestants with
interpreting the Bible as they please.
p) Listen carefully to what seekers say and the intent
behind their words. (I list names of seekers on a little paper, and jot down a
word or two to remind me of their significant comments so that I can follow up
in personal conversations.) Watch body language. At what point does a bored
seeker lean forward and give total attention?
q) Do not correct all wrong answers immediately. Never
say an answer is wrong. Because seekers rarely know much about the Bible, they
fear looking foolish. Say “That’s interesting. What do some of the rest of you
think?” Receive several right and wrong answers without comment. Then ask the
group if any verse in the text clarifies the point. It is not humiliating when
several people are wrong.
r) Do not attack the faith of participants, but do not
soften the text if it contradicts their beliefs. Allow it to make its full
impact.
s) Do not raise theological problems, but be prepared to
answer those that seekers raise. Don’t split hairs. But make sure the study is
substantial. You must dig under the surface of the text for a credible study,
interesting study. The seekers are not children.
t) If there is controversy, first seek a solution in the
text and context, or refer to some other part of the Bible. If it is a
history-long theological issue, summarize both positions, and proceed. For
example, whether Jesus had brothers, or just cousins — as Catholics insist. If a
subject like predestination is of interest to everyone, suggest a special
meeting with a speaker.
u) The leader must finish the passage at the set time.
Or some may be reluctant to come next time. So if the study has lagged behind,
summarize the whole story, then its main lessons.
The main lessons cannot be fully appreciated until the
whole story has been understood and felt. In a time crunch, it is better to
finish the whole story first, and let seekers make their own applications, than
to have spent time discussing lesser applications and never finish the story and
main lesson.
v) The leader should be prepared to continue the
discussion with those who can stay. Our Saturday Bible studies in Curitiba,
Brazil, with medical students, were to last an hour, but would often go two or
three hours after the closing. When the group had become much too large, we had
people sign up for one of three different time slots. But almost everyone then
came three times a week! We couldn’t keep enough Testaments on hand. Even
faculty in the medical school carried them around.
10. The crucial step to God
When is a seeker ready to receive Jesus Christ? If you
reap too soon or wait too long you spoil the harvest. When a seeker has
understood the facts about Jesus, expect response. Eventually, the seeker should
understand most of this 3-point checklist:
1) God created everything — by whatever means. (Do not
get drawn into a discussion of evolution.) God is love, but he is also holy
(like fire). His love keeps us away from him so we won’t be destroyed by his
holiness, until we allow him to change us, by putting his Spirit into us. 2)
People are guilty before God, spiritually dead and doomed. 3) Jesus is God and
man. He lived a perfect life and then voluntarily gave his life as our
substitute to pay our sins and give us life. Jesus arose bodily from the grave,
and lives today.
Commitment involves 3 essential steps: 1) Believe the
facts of the gospel. 2) Repent — accept God’s verdict that they are guilty and
dead. 3) Invite Jesus Christ to come into their lives through his Spirit, to be
their Lord and King. His Spirit in them assures them of eternal life. The test
of commitment is loving obedience to God’s Word.
The seekers’ comments in the study tell you when they
have found God — a new light in their eyes, a new joy, a new thirst for his
Word. Make sure their faith is based specific promises.
If you think a seeker is ready, ask the crucial
question: “At this stage, what do you think is the most important reason Jesus
died?” (Leave room for several answers.) If they say he died for their sins, ask
if they have thanked him and invited him in. If they say “yes,” ask for details.
Pray together, and start their follow-up program about assurance, life in
Christ, forgiveness, prayer, Bible reading, obedience, witnessing and Christian
fellowship.
If they don’t know how to invite him, explain a Bible
passage like Rev.3:20-21. Don’t pray a prayer for them to repeat. But talk with
them about what they might like to tell God. Then let them find their own words
— God will understand. Focus on Jesus’ promise.
If they say Jesus died to give us the supreme example of
love, use 1 Pet.2:18-25, which agrees with them. But show that we cannot succeed
in following his example, so Peter goes on to say Jesus died on the cross in our
place. Then suggest a prayer of invitation.
If a seeker drops out, he has probably just understood
the cost of discipleship. Inner struggle begins. Go after him. Show
unconditional love. Pray.
11. The preparation of leaders
Many study guides are available — see bibliography. But
leaders should be trained in inductive Bible study so that they can also prepare
their own. It pleased God to give us his revelation as literature. It is more
than literature, but not less. So we must observe the writer’s literary devices.
The form is as important as the content; how something is said is as important
for meaning as what is said.
Ancient literature requires these 4 steps: 1) Observe
what the passage says. 2) Interpret — discover what it meant for the writer and
the first recipients in their milieu, and correlate the data. 3) Apply —
determine how it applies to us today. 4) Organize this data for sharing, as a
question-based discussion guide, a sermon, an article, a play, a poem, a song,
etc. (See GO Paper Inductive Bible Study: How to Prepare a Passage, with
worksheets and a sample study.)
In an inductive study — you examine details, and let
them lead you to conclusions. (A deductive method begins with conclusions and
seeks proofs.)
A study guide consists of questions and notes to assist
leaders to help participants to discover inductively and quickly what it took
someone much longer to dig out.
Leaders will need to prepare study guides because not
enough evangelistic guides exist, although excellent guides for believers exist
on every Bible book and on many subjects. (See IVP’s Life-guide series, and the
Neighborhood Bible Study series. Quite a few of these studies and others are
available in foreign languages.)
Even when using a Bible study guide, leaders should
prepare the passage first, as though they have no guide. They should have the
joy of making their own personal discoveries. Then they can look at the guide to
see what they missed or misunderstood, and add their own findings. Then they can
change the discussion questions, but they should do it with care. One of the
hardest tasks in preparing a guide is designing good questions that will help
participants dig under the surface and make their own discoveries — and
questions that lead to good discussion.
When you are training new leaders it can help to have a
small form with discussion leadership guidelines which the trainee can use for
self-evaluation. If other Christian participants also fill it out it can help
the trainee improve leadership skills. Trainees can serve as co-leaders, helping
the leader pace the study and involve participants, and by praying. Then they
take their turn for leading and evaluation.
I sometimes brought all the leaders together once a week
to study the passage and to pray for their respective groups. (See attached
sample study.)
I hope you will discover what an exciting and fruitful
evangelistic tool an Investigative Bible Study is!
--Ruth E. Siemens
Bibliography
Marilyn Kunz and Catherine Schell, How to Start a
Neighborhood Bible Study. Also, study guides on many B ible books,available in
40 languages. Neighborhood Bible Studies, Dobbs Ferry, NY: NBS.
Ada Lum, Jesus, the Disciple Maker. IVP.
Ada Lum, How to Begin an Evangelistic Bible Study.
Downers Grove, IL: IVP.
Ada Lum and Ruth Siemens, Creative Bible Studies, on how
to prepare passages inductively and how to lead studies for believers and
seekers. English edition, Bombay, India, Jyoti Pocketbooks. Spanish edition, El
Estudio Biblico Creativo, Buenos Aires, Argentina, Ediciones Certeza. English
and other languages, International Fellowship of Evangelical Students, 55
Palmerston Road, Harrow, Middlesex, HA3 7RR, England, UK.
James F. Nyquist, Leading Bible Study Discussions,
Downers Grove, IL, IVP. Excellent guidelines.
Peter Scazzero, Introducing Jesus. All you need to know
for starting an IBS, with six lesson guides and leader’s notes. Downers Grove:
IVP. The author found God in an IBS and pastors an exciting, self-reproducing,
inner city church with IBS’s.
Lifeguide Series on the whole Bible and many subjects.
IVP.
(IVP, IFES and NBS have studies translated into many
languages.)