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You are here: Home / Reviews / What the Olympics Taught Me about Bible Study

What the Olympics Taught Me about Bible Study

August 4, 2012 By Peter Krol

This week marked a significant milestone for me: the first time since 1994 that I’ve gotten to follow the Olympic games with any regularity.

I love the drama.  Ryan Lochte wins gold in the Men’s 400 meter individual medley, but Michael Phelps fails to medal in the event.  Phelps goes on, however, to win more medals and become the most decorated Olympian in history.  The USA women’s gymnastics team wins gold, but reigning world champion Jordyn Wieber fails to advance to the all-around competition.  Four badminton teams are thrown out of the games for throwing their games.  A Korean archer with poor eyesight helps his team win bronze.  22-year-old Kayla Harrison overcomes a history of sexual abuse by a previous coach and wins the first ever US gold medal in judo.

The drama is inspiring, but also challenging.  Why isn’t our study of God’s Knowable Word equally inspiring?

Why is it that we’d often rather do anything other than read God’s Word?  When we do read it, why does it feel like such a chore?  When we get together in groups to discuss the unbreakable Scripture, why can’t we think of anything to talk about?  Why can church seem routine and lifeless?  Where is the drama that inspired a generation to turn the world upside-down (Acts 17:6)?

God has revealed his Son to us through the Bible written by his Spirit.  In the Bible He lets us in on what he’s thinking.  He tells us what to expect about the future.  He fills in the back story to our existence.  He advises us about how life works best.  His Word is the most influential book in history.  How can we recapture the drama?

Here are some ideas:

  1. Read a lot of Scripture.  Keep the big picture in mind.  Consider taking an afternoon to read a whole book of the Bible in one sitting.   Just read lots of it and keep going.  As you understand the scope of the whole, each detail takes on new life.
  2. Read it lots of times.  Over the past two weeks, I’ve read the same two chapters over and over again.  I read them and didn’t understand them at first.  So instead of moving on, I decided to try it again and again.  I’ve now read them dozens of times in a row, and they’re starting to make sense.  What was once confusing has become exciting and impactful!
  3. Talk to others.  God puts us in community on purpose.  Others will have insights you don’t have.  So plug into your church, find a Bible study group, talk about the sermons.  Ask people what they’re learning from the Word, and share what you’re learning.  The drama of God’s glorious plan through Christ will infect you with joy.
  4. Put yourself into the story.  Picture what the characters went through.  How would you respond in similar circumstances?  What would you feel, desire, fear, or hope?  Remember that Bible characters were real people, experiencing life much as we do.
  5. Focus on Jesus.  You don’t have to be innovative.  You don’t have to make the Bible exciting.  All you have to do is get out of the way and let Jesus show his glory.

The Olympics are exciting, and I can’t wait to see what will happen over the next week.  But the glory of men will wither; does anyone even remember the medalists from 1994 anymore?  God’s Knowable Word will remain forever (1 Peter 1:24-25).

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Filed Under: Reviews Tagged With: Bible Study, Drama, London 2012, Olympics

Comments

  1. Kirk Fatool says

    August 7, 2012 at 1:43 pm

    The other thing that I've found is just plain getting in there and reading the bible everyday. Not every reading of God's word is going to be exciting. But if you keep at it some of those readings will be VERY exciting.

    You can have quality time with God's word unless you have quantity time.

    Reply
  2. Peter Krol says

    August 7, 2012 at 2:05 pm

    Great point, Kirk! It's just like real life: there's not always an emotional high, but faithfulness really pays off. I'm sure that the road to the Olympics is filled with much routine and difficulty for most world-class athletes. But those who persevere receive the reward.

    Reply
  3. Jake Swink says

    October 28, 2012 at 1:38 pm

    Continuing the Olympic example…
    Read a lot of Scripture. – I see this like a LOT of training for an athlete.
    Read it lots of times. – Repetition is the key to memory (muscle memory as well).
    Talk to others. – Search others to help you train.
    Put yourself into the story. – Mentally prepare for the competition visualize what you are about to do.
    Focus on Jesus. – Focus on the finish / focus on the gold.

    All of these are great practices for a Christian as well as the athlete.
    2 Tim 2:5 – studying this passage of the bible, shows how similar these traits can be. (Without taking the analogy too far).

    Reply

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