Inductive Bible study is an important skill for every Christian, but it
is crucial for tentmakers in foreign cultures, who support themselves in
secular work like the Apostle Paul who made tents for a living. In Saudi
Arabia, where Christians may not worship openly, expatriate believers
meet in little house fellowships. In one city, a Christian engineer met
each week with the leaders of twenty little tentmaker groups to prepare
the Bible study each one would lead at his meeting on Friday, the Muslim
holy day.
In Kenya, Bob taught high school science in a
rural boarding school. He was asked to preach every third Sunday in the
village church. He had never preached, but he learned to turn inductive
Bible studies into sermons.
In Spain, Becky, still a new Christian, became a
study abroad tentmaker, as she won fellow international students to
Jesus Christ, mainly through inductive Bible study discussions in
English. At the same time, medical students, Pedro, Pablo and others,
led similar studies in Spanish to nurture their GBU groups and to win
Spanish students to the Lord. Marisa, a teacher who found Jesus Christ
in one of these groups then began studies for secondary school students.
In 1954 I went to Peru to teach in a bilingual
school and God helped me start the first university fellowship group in
Lima. But after a few meetings I panicked—I had already taught
everything I knew! I learned that you cannot regularly give out unless
you regularly take in. Bible study became a lifetime priority, not only
nurturing me, but also enabling me to help others. It is hard to imagine
any ministry that does not center on personal and group Bible study.
This paper consists of four main parts. The
first is an explanation of the inductive Bible study method. The second
is a demonstration of the method on Mt.15:21-28 about Jesus and the
Phoenician woman. The third is the same material turned into a Bible
study discussion guide. The fourth is a set of worksheets you can
photocopy and use for future studies.
1. Benefits of Personal Bible Study
The Bible is, of course, the main way that God
speaks to us. Reading gives us the gist of what he is saying, but study
is necessary for fuller understanding. We should care, because it is
amazing that the Creator of the universe would even take the trouble to
speak to us. In Palestine, Jesus often taught in parables, so that all
the hostile or indifferent listeners could return home with their
prejudices intact. Some probably liked his little stories. But only
those whose hearts were touched, who remained to ask questions, received
explanations of what his stories meant (Mk.8; Mt. 13).
God chose to give us his revelation in the form
of a book, which is now an ancient book, which requires deciphering. The
situation is similar. We can be satisfied with a superficial
understanding, or we can make serious effort to decipher all we can of
his message to us.
A series of metaphors show our utter dependence
on his Word. It is the bread of life, and as essential to our spiritual
well-being as whole wheat or sourdough is to our bodies. But bread
includes all our food, from the milk that is appropriate for infants and
adults to meat for the mature. It is water that refreshes our souls when
they get dry. It is even dessert (honey), for our delight. Jeremiah
discovered this when a long-lost book (Deuteronomy) was found during
temple repairs. He said to God, “Your words were found, and I did eat
them and they were to me the joy and rejoicing of my heart!” So the Word
keeps us healthy, but it also enables us to feed and refresh and delight
believers and outsiders around us. (Mt.4:4; 1 Cor.3:1,2; 1 Pet.2:2;
Is.55:1-3; Ps.119:103; Jer.15:16.)
But note other metaphors. Joshua says we are to
meditate on God’s Word day and night as a recipe for success. The
psalmist says it makes us like “trees planted by streams of water”—
always green and fruitful. (Josh.1:9; Ps.1:2-3.) Isaiah 58:11 says we
become watered gardens and like artesian wells, for the refreshment of
others. Jesus said that the Holy Spirit would use his word to make
rivers of living water overflow from us to others (Jn.7:37-38).
James says God’s Word is a mirror that shows us
our sins, the way a computer spell check program points out errors in
our manuscripts (Jam.1:23-25). God’s Word can keep us from sinning, and
washes us clean when we fall (Ps.119: 9,11; 2 Tim.3:16). It is light
that illumines our daily path in a dark world and guides us in making
decisions (Ps.119: 105)
Paul says his word is also our armor in this
history-long cosmic war in which we find ourselves, and our only
weapon—the sword of the Spirit (Eph.6:10-17).
Bible study is essential for prayer. It is how
we listen to the Lord’s voice, and converse with him, and respond to him
with hearts full of worship. John 15:7 says that if we abide in Christ
and his word abides in us, then we can ask what we will and God will
answer.
How much is available to us if we make time for
Bible study! How much we miss if we don’t. Our family and friends and
colleagues are impoverished by missing out on what we could have given
them, and outsiders around us have less chance to find God.
2. Benefits of Group Bible Study
Group Bible study is the best way for Christians
to nurture each other. It is the ideal way for professional people and
students and all lay Christians to help each other, because our peers do
not consider us as religious authorities.
When I started university groups in Peru and
Brazil, I was younger than many of the students, and I was a layperson—a
teacher in an elementary school, taking a few classes at the university.
I related to the students, not as a missionary, but as a fellow student.
It would have been awkward for me to say in a group meeting, “Now I want
to teach you all something.” But I found that through Bible study
discussion groups I could teach volumes without seeming presumptuous,
even when we rotated the leadership—since I prepared all our study
guides! All the benefits of our personal Bible study can be transmitted
to those around us. (Later many of my studies were translated into
foreign languages for other countries!)
Group Bible study is the most patient way to
evangelize outsiders. Seekers have time to discover the truths they need
to make a heart-felt, intelligent commitment to Jesus Christ. Seekers
who will not go to church with us are often eager to study with peers in
a non-religious environment, because it is non-threatening.
Group Bible study is ideal for nurture and
evangelism in hostile countries. Where Christians are not allowed to
meet openly, their survival requires that they meet together for mutual
support. If evangelism is forbidden, we must obey God rather than local
authorities. Good evangelism can never be stopped because it consists
mainly of a godly lifestyle that raises questions in the people around
us, revealing who are the seekers. We get them into home Bible study
groups. My experience in Franco’s fascist Spain and in communist Poland
showed me that these can never be stopped because wherever a handful of
people can sit and talk about sports or music, they can be talking about
Jesus Christ. Instead of big black Bibles, they can use small
Testaments, individual Gospels, or simply pages with typed text and a
few questions—easy to prepare at home with a computer.
Group Bible study and discussion leadership are
skills most Christians can learn, even people whose best skills are
quantitative rather than verbal. Not everyone can become a good
preacher, but all can lead a small-group discussion on a passage.
So we need to learn good Bible study skills for
our own spiritual well-being, for the sake of our families, our friends,
our colleagues, and the outsiders we want to bring into God’s kingdom.
3. Develop Good Study Habits
Choose a regular place and time for study. You
do not find time; you make time for what you consider important. Form a
lifetime habit of Bible study. Plan to spend half an hour a day, or
several longer periods each week. Then analyze just one passage a week,
doing only one aspect of the study each day. It is better to spend a
week in intensive study of one passage than superficial study of
several, because the thoroughness produces insights that enhance all
subsequent study.
For example, I am glad I took long enough on 1
John to learn that he uses light to mean three things: Intellectually,
it is truth; morally, it is righteousness; and socially, it is love and
fellowship. Now every time I find these words in John’s writings, my
understanding is enriched.
For the same reason, it is better to study a
whole book, rather than isolated narratives from several, because each
passage is best understood in its larger context. So it is better to
take one narrative after another, in Mark or Luke or Galatians or
Haggai, because each text builds upon previous ones. Each book touches
on a wide variety of subjects so even your teaching on diverse subjects
can be taken from your main study book for a few months.
Supplement your concentrated study of a single
book with rapid reading of the whole Bible in large chunks. For example,
read all of Isaiah in one sitting. Many passages will illumine the
particular ones you are concentrating on. When you combine the broad
reading with intensive analysis of smaller passages, you are focusing
simultaneously on trees, tree groves and the whole forest ecology.
4. Why Inductive Bible Study?
A Bible study is not inductive because it
consists of questions. Many questions only test if the user can read. Or
they are intended to substantiate conclusions already presented.
Inductive study uses questions to discover facts, then to interpret and
correlate them, and then to conclude how they apply to our lives today.
The facts you discover lead you to conclusions about what the writer
meant and the first readers understood, and what it should mean to us
today.
In contrast, a deductive study begins with
conclusions, with propositions, and then seeks passages in the Bible to
substantiate them. This is a good method for pastors or seminary
professors whose greater knowledge and authority have gained them the
respect and confidence of their Christian listeners.
But inductive study has the following benefits:
You learn and remember much better what you
personally discover in the text. That is a reason why you should not
consult commentaries on any passage until you have first squeezed out
all the meaning you can.
Your group participants, Christians or
outsiders, will remember better what you lead them to discover, than
what you tell them. Their own discoveries make more impact upon them.
Research shows that passive listeners forget about 90% of what they only
hear from others, but they remember as much as 90% of what they hear,
see, talk about and act upon.
It is the best way for lay people to teach
Christians or outsiders—who do not consider their peers religious
authorities. Many nonbelievers would not come to hear a religious
authority, but are excited about Bible study with peers in a
non-threatening environment.
Nonbelievers prefer examining the Bible and
coming to their own conclusions about what to believe. Don Posterski
tells about a man who told him, “The big problem with religion ... is
that it is a deductive system ... you have to accept what is already
decided for you.” Inductive study helps skeptical people.
So how do you do inductive study?
5. Detective Work is Required
You seek clues, like coroner Quincy, in an old
TV series. His students found a suspicious human bone as the foundation
was dug in a large construction site. He led his students in the
analysis of that single, long-buried thigh bone, and determined that the
person had been a tall, big-boned, blond, blue-eyed, Scandinavian male,
and a professional football player. They determined his age, year of
death, time of death, and the cause of his death—a gunshot wound! The
large concentration of fluoride pinpointed the man’s long-time residence
as Lubbock, Texas. He had been killed, but the angle of the wound showed
the gun had been fired in self-defense. So Quincy and his team go to the
town, and rather easily locate the perpetrator of the crime. They have
him exonerated after two decades of hiding from the law. By exhaustive
examination of one small bone they solved a mystery and restored an
innocent man’s life!
Good Bible study requires sleuthing, and you
will marvel at how you can reconstruct a whole incident through what
seem like insignificant words. Each time Luke says that Jesus “turned”
and spoke, it tells us that Jesus was walking along with other people.
But he walks first. Why? Your research will show that disciples never
walked ahead of their rabbi. It also shows that the crowd probably
considered themselves disciples of Jesus. But Jesus decides when to sit
down for a rest and to teach his followers. None of this becomes clear
unless you notice the word “turned.”
In Matthew 15, it doesn’t say that the needy
woman cried to Jesus and the disciples for help, but that she cried
after them. What difference does that make? That one little word shows
us they were all walking, almost certainly single file, on a narrow path
diagonally through a field. (Walkers didn’t go on right angle roads.) So
she was at the end of the line of disciples, and had to shout because
there were 12 people between her and Jesus!
Your basic inductive tool is the question. A
good exercise is to turn the statements in your passage into questions,
like TV’s Jeopardy. What question does each detail answer? This shows
what role that word has in the sentence. Take Luke 19:1, 2. Jesus
“entered Jericho and was passing through. And there was a man named
Zacchaeus ...” This gives you the location, the occasion and the new
main character. To ask “Where was Jesus?” only tests ability to read.
Rather, ask, “Why was he going there? What can we know about it? Where
had he been? Why didn’t he plan to stay there? What was his destination?
Who was this man Zacchaeus?” Etc.
Just this simple exercise alone can break a
problem of habit focus—always seeing the same thing in a familiar
passage—and can give us new insights. When I began my studies at Chico
State, Alice Alter, the IVCF staff worker, took a couple of hours to
show me how to turn facts into questions, and I don’t think I went to
bed that night. I read through one passage after another, turning facts
into questions. I couldn’t believe how the Scriptures opened up to me.
Those two hours with Alice forever changed my life! I sometimes stop in
the middle of a study to thank God for her and her gift to me.
It made me eager to learn more specific question
tools, of the kind we will consider below. If you use questions, you
will find the Bible inexhaustible. Learning is not transferring blocks
of data from a book or a person to your brain. No matter what material
is presented, your brain will assimilate only those concepts that
connect with concepts you already know—with data already stored in your
brain.
So the inductive approach is especially useful
for two kinds of passages—the most familiar ones and the most difficult.
a) Take
familiar passages. The better we know them the more we are likely to
suffer from habit focus. We see in them the same things we have always
seen. They become old stuff. But even if you think you have squeezed all
the meaning you can from a passage by inductive study, when you return
to it in six or eight months using inductive questions, you will wonder
at how much you missed. Why?
Because meanwhile you have been reprogrammed in
two ways. All the other Bible studies you have done during those months
have given you new insights that now affect the meaning of your former
study. Your understanding of John 3 will be enriched if meanwhile you
have worked on Numbers 21, about Moses and his bronze serpent. Your
understanding of the rider on the white horse in Rev. 6 may change
significantly if, in your broad reading you came across Psalm 45,
Hab.3:8, 9 or Isaiah 63:3.
Second, you have had new experience. Your
perception of the widow of Nain in Luke 7 will be significantly affected
if meanwhile you have had a death in your family. Luke 14:25-35 will
have new meaning if you have spent time with persecuted believers from
China.
b) Take
difficult passages. They are like hard nuts to crack. But they are
always worth opening, and many can be opened with inductive tools. They
are also like gold nuggets, not lying on the surface, but hidden deep
down, where digging is required. The effort we make to understand them
shows what value we place upon God’s Word. God’s Spirit does not help
lazy minds.
Take Mt. 16, a passage Catholics use to
legitimize the papacy. Is Jesus telling Peter he is the foundation rock
on which the church will be built? Jesus is that Rock! The steps of an
inductive study will lead you back to the word “rock” in Isaiah 51:1-2,
where Abraham was the “rock”—the man of faith on whom God built his O.T.
people of God. Jesus sees Peter as the first man of faith in his N.T.
church, because he was the only one who had confessed Jesus as God. All
the disciples believed Jesus was Messiah, but it took them a long time
to realize he was also God. So Peter was first in time, but not in
authority.
Take the glorious pregnant woman in Revelation
12, who is clothed with the sun, wears a crown with 12 stars, and has
the moon under her feet! She cannot be Eve or the Virgin Mary. All the
symbols in Revelation come from elsewhere in the Bible. Your study will
show she represents the O. T. people of God, who gave birth to the
Messiah and to the N.T. people of God, who are called “the rest of her
offspring.”
The inductive approach always gives new
insights—for a more basic reason. It is the appropriate way to approach
the Bible because of the nature of the Bible.
6. The Bible is Literature
God chose to give us his revelation in the form
of literature. It is more than literature, so we pray that the Holy
Spirit will open the Scriptures to our minds and our minds and hearts to
the Scriptures (Lk.24:27, 45) But it is literature. So God expects us to
approach the Bible as we would other literature—especially, ancient
writings— like Greek tragedies.
That the Bible is literature means it is made up
of words and sentences, and we must know how the parts of a language
work. We must be concerned with grammar and syntax—although not in a
highly technical sense. You can do good Bible study even if you do not
know grammar, but I recommend that every serious Bible student learn the
basics—at least the parts of speech. It has not been popular to teach
this for decades, but I am glad one of my English teachers was
old-fashioned enough to teach us how to diagram sentences. This has been
invaluable for my Bible study. (Grammar is also an enormous help for
foreign language learning and English teaching.)
There are not dozens of Bible study methods. I
have descriptions of a dozen kinds—but all are ways to deal with the
data in the text, and most are superficial because they begin at this
point, without doing an inductive study first. Unless you do the digging
first, you have only surface facts to deal with, and some of them may be
wrong.
The Bible is a whole library of different kinds
of literature, so we must determine what genre our chosen passage is,
because that makes a difference in how to deal with it. Is it a
historical narrative? a letter? a sermon? a collection of proverbs? a
poem or a song? a prophecy? a parable?
Expect more figurative language in the last
three. Daniel and Revelation contain visions. Remind yourself often that
a vision never describes what really is, but only symbols of what really
is. The vision may be bizarre, but the reality it describes is not. Many
Christians think that all Scripture must be interpreted literally, so
they fear figurative language. But symbols, far from diminishing
biblical content, usually give us much more content than literal
language could. We are not free to give the symbols meaning, but must
discover what they already mean elsewhere in Scripture.
Regardless of the genre, we need four basic
steps to understand Scripture and communicate it effectively to others.
7. The Main Steps
A. Observation is scrutinizing the text, for
data, not meaning. You ask, “What does it say?” This step is crucial and
is too often omitted. Most people jump from reading, or misreading, to
application, and so deal mainly with surface data that has not been
properly interpreted. Most of us read badly. We miss an enormous amount
of detail, much of it significant.
Bible study is like preparing a meal.
Observation is gathering together your raw materials. You cannot cook
food you do not have, nor study data you have not found. You will notice
some meanings immediately, but do not yet try to interpret or apply.
Just collect data. Turn statements into questions, and ask how or why
about the details.
B. Interpretation is cooking the raw products
for easier assimilation. Ask, “What did this mean to the writer and his
first recipients in that ancient culture?” Resist the temptation at this
stage to jump into application.
We could read the Bible like a contemporary
novel, except that it was written from 2000 to 4000 years ago, and in
diverse cultures. So in 1 Cor.9, we must determine why Paul made tents
to know when it is appropriate today. In 1 Cor.11, we must discover what
a woman’s head covering meant in ancient Greece, to know what
application this passage has for us today. If we notice in Mt.9:35-38
that Jesus sent his disciples to reap a harvest among people who had
ample chance to know him, we will not apply his instructions to a
pioneer situation where hardly anyone has heard of him.
C. Application is eating what has been gathered
and cooked. We ask the question, “What does this mean to me today?” What
point is there in preparing a meal and then not eating it? Meditating is
chewing it well, for better digestion.
Because it is so easy to read the Bible and not
put into practice what it says, we emphasize practical application. The
lessons should be practical, and should be worked out in first person,
singular, present tense, so your obedience can begin at once. The
process is not complete until the truths have been digested and
transformed into Christ-like character, strength for temptation,
fruitful service and effective evangelism. Regular, nutritious meals are
essential.
But by far the most important result of Bible
study is not learning practical lessons, but gaining new insight about
God that leads us to spontaneous worship.
D. The final form is what recipe books call the
presentation of your meal. How do you make it attractive and easy to
serve to others? You turn your data into an inductive group discussion
guide, to help others discover quickly what it took you longer to ferret
out. Or turn your data into an inductive sermon—easy to preach because
while you have your listeners looking in the text for the answer to your
question, you can peek at your notes, at the answer you will give. Your
audience is never bored because you have them wholly absorbed. Or turn
your data into one of the other creative forms suggested below.
8. The Enclosed Material
Note that four items are included in this GO
paper. The first is an explanation of the inductive Bible study method.
The second is a demonstration of the method on Mt.15:21-28—about Jesus
and the Phoenician woman. The third is that material turned into a Bible
study discussion guide. The fourth is a set of worksheets you can
photocopy and use for future studies. You might want to try blind
Bartimaus in Lk.18:35-43, the Roman centurion in Lk.7:1-10, or Jesus’
sermon in Lk.14:25-35.
Using the 4 steps on Mt. 15:21-28
With your Bible open at the text, you can see
why certain details were recorded on the data sheet as observation. We
are not concerned with meaning at this point. After each newspaper
question in the left column, I jot down details I see. In the right
column I jot down the immediate implication—so what? What does it
matter? And I jot down my questions. The implications need to be
verified and the questions researched.
The observation section has two parts, like all
literature. The first is content and the second composition. The first
is facts and the second form. The first, What is said? and the second,
How is it said? Both are essential for meaning. Notice all the literary
devices in the composition. The writer emphasizes points by repetitions,
contrasts, or the amount of space he gives to them.
In a story, like the Phoenician woman, the
content questions are more important. But in Stephen’s sermon in Acts 7,
Jude’s letter or Psalm 24, the composition questions will be more
important. But we need to ask both kinds in every passage.
All literary genre have a narrative component,
but when the genre is not a story, you find answers to questions mainly
in the context and elsewhere in the Bible. For example, who was Jude, to
whom did he write, when and where did he write, how did he present his
message, why did he write, and what were the consequences?
With your Bibles open to Mt.15:21, notice the
observation details that have been quickly jotted down on the worksheet,
both content and composition. Then see the suggested steps for
interpretation, and note how they have been followed. Note the study
tools, the resource books that were used. Then see the steps for
application, and examples of the final form.
Then read through the completed inductive
discussion guide on this Mt. 15 story.
—Ruth E. Siemens
GO Papers:
Investigative Bible Study: Studying with
Seekers.
Workplace Evangelism: Fishing out Seekers
Books on inductive Bible study:
Jeffrey Arnold. Discovering the Bible for
Yourself. IVP. 151 pp.
Kay Arthur: How to Study Your Bible. Harvest.
126 pp.
Jack Kuhatschek. How to Study the Bible. IVP, 32
pp.
James Nyquist. How to Lead a Bible Study Group.
IVP.
Basic Bible study resources:
A few basic recommendations from a wealth of
available resources:
New Bible Commentary. IVP. 1340 pp. Won
Christianity Today’s 1995 award.
New Bible Dictionary, 3rd Ed. Downers Grove:
IVP. 1326 pp. Includes an atlas, etc. John Stott says: AI doubt if there
is any better value for the money today. As a basic book for every
thinking Chris-tian’s library, it is indispensable.@
New Strong’s Exhaustive Concordance of the Bible
(Nelson), 1545 pp., or one that suits your Bible, maybe Nelson’s
Complete Concordance of the Revised Standard Version of the Bible
(Nelson), or The NIV Exhaustive Concordance (Zondervan), 1850 pages.
Tyndale New Testament Commentaries, 20 volumes.
Grand Rapids: Eerdmans. Tyndale Old Testament Commentaries, 27 volumes.
Downers Grove: IVP.
Both sets are excellent—much more than
devotional commentaries, less technical than critical commentaries.
Craig Keener. IVP Bible Background Commentary of
the New Testament. 800 pp. Award winner.
R. C. Sproul. Knowing Scripture. IVP. Excellent
on rules of interpretation.
©1995 Ruth E. Siemens