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You are here: Home / Archives for Specificity

When the Bible Overwhelms You

September 7, 2015 By Ryan Higginbottom

Rod Waddington (2013), Creative Commons License

Rod Waddington (2013), Creative Commons License

Application is the youngest sibling of the OIA Bible study method family. He is third-born and regularly forgotten. We assume he’ll tag along and join his brothers in the back seat of the car, but too often he’s still hiding under the rack of sweatpants at Walmart.

Application is far from automatic, mostly because application is hard. In fact, application is downright rare.

You’ve probably skipped application in your devotions from time to time. (I know I have.) Many preachers never get to application, and some Bible study leaders only raise the issue during the last two minutes as a conscience-soothing garnish. One of the weaknesses of the American church is a half-hearted commitment to Bible application.

Application Can Overwhelm

We occasionally stick the landing. We discover the author’s central theme through observation and interpretation. We buckle up and start to apply the text.

And then we’re hit with a flash of panic. I can’t do this. We feel overwhelmed.

I see at least two causes. Through his Spirit, God may bring a heavy conviction upon us. Like Peter’s audience at Pentecost, we may feel our guilt acutely and see our disobedience in every shadow. We’re overwhelmed because we don’t know where to turn or where to begin.

We may also feel overcome because of repeated exposure. We listen to sermons, attend Bible studies, have personal devotions, and read “Christian living” books. (You may add: we read ridiculous blog posts.) With each interaction we see a need for repentance. We’re overwhelmed because we think we just can’t handle one more. Our list is long enough!

Poor Reactions to Feeling Overwhelmed

In our flesh, we face temptations in these moments of brokenness.

We might be tempted to sit out this round. This is too hard! I don’t know where to start, so I won’t.

We might be tempted to cut back on our interaction with the Bible. If we leave the Good Book on the shelf, we can pretend all is well. Welcome to the land of the ostrich.

What might it look like to proceed faithfully when we feel overwhelmed by the call to apply the Bible?

Three Steps to Take

I can think of three steps to take.

  1. Recognize there are no more demands on you now than a week ago. When you hear or discover an application of the Bible, you’re not being inventive. You’re seeing more of the law’s demands which were always there. God’s standards are enormously high—he doesn’t lower them when we embrace the gospel. “Be perfect as your heavenly father is perfect” (Matt 5:48). If you’re feeling guilty about missing this standard, cheer up—you should have been feeling guilty about it yesterday!
  2. Remember the gospel. The weight of the law is immense and a proper view of God’s law provokes our feelings of guilt. Why do we feel guilty? Because we are guilty! This is just as true for forgiven sinners in the church as it is for unrepentant sinners everywhere. We all need the death of Jesus in our place, and we all need the works of Jesus credited to our account. If you are a Christian, rejoice! God has embraced you and pledged himself to you, forever. Your behavior didn’t get you in, and your behavior won’t take you out. God’s call to obedience is real, but your lack of growth won’t turn your gracious Father away.
  3. Get specific. Much of the feeling of being overwhelmed results from deep conviction but vague notions of obedience. This is the time to get specific and practical. Has God convicted you that you don’t take enough gospel-directed risks? Identify a specific risk you can take in a conversation with a coworker or neighbor this week. Ask a friend to follow up with you next Sunday. Have you been selfish with your time? Think of a creative and generous way to use 60 minutes this week to bless others.

Filed Under: Method Tagged With: Application, Gospel, Guilt, Specificity

Be Specific in Your Application

March 8, 2013 By Peter Krol

hidingBible study is perfect for people like me who fear exposure.  We who love to mince words and divert attention feel right at home in some churches because it’s easy to deceive spiritual people with high-minded platitudes.

“How are you today?”  “I’m too blessed to be stressed.”

“What did you think of the sermon?”  “It was pretty good.  I like the pastor.  He’s easy to listen to.”

“How would you like to grow this year?”  “I don’t pray enough.  I need to pray more.”

“I need to love my family.”

“I’d like to be a witness to my coworkers.”

And on and on and on.

We hear God’s Word all the time, but we often respond so generally that we rarely change.  But God wants to change specific people in specific ways.  So we must be specific in our application.

The Apostle John wrote a letter to churches infiltrated by false teachers.  These teachers were slick.  They were full of vague platitudes like “We know God” and “We love God’s people,” but something was seriously wrong beneath the surface.  True believers were second-guessing themselves and their assurance of eternal life because these teachers claimed to have critical inside knowledge unavailable to the masses.

John tackles the issue head-on at the beginning of the letter:

If we say we have no sin, we deceive ourselves, and the truth is not in us (1 John 1:8, ESV).

In other words, anyone who refuses to acknowledge that he is a sinner is utterly deceived.  There is no fast-track with God that can eliminate sin this side of glory.  Anyone who claims otherwise does not live in reality.

But notice which error John exposes next:

If we say we have not sinned, we make him a liar, and his word is not in us (1 John 1:10).

In other words, when confronted with a specific sin, anyone who covers it up, shifts the blame, or denies it calls God a liar.  This person does not understand God’s Word.

What is the point?

John says that those who understand God’s Knowable Word will acknowledge two things:

  1. They have sin (as a general fact)
  2. They have sinned (in specific instances)

It’s not enough to trust in Christ to forgive your sin, if you are not willing to ‘fess up to the details.

This means that our application of Scripture must be specific.  Platitudes aren’t enough.  General principles will go only so far.

Skull detailsWhat does it mean to apply the Bible specifically?

  1. Point your finger at yourself before you point it at anybody else.  You’re not qualified to help others grow in Christ unless you are growing in Christ yourself.
  2. Focus on your heart more than on your behavior.  Don’t apply the Bible shallowly.  Figure out what you desire or believe, and work to change those desires and beliefs.  Don’t worry, your behavior will follow.
  3. Know your next steps.  Don’t be satisfied with your application until you’ve identified specific steps you can take to address the issue.  When you close the Bible and walk away, what will you do to put the application into practice?  How will you remember these lessons in the midst of temptation?
  4. Make progress measurable.  How will you know if you did the application or not?  “Pray more” is not measurable.  Next week, can I ask you if you prayed more?  Prayed more than what?  How?  When?
  5. Put off and put on.  Think of application as a process of stopping certain things and starting other things.  Put off the old self and put on the new self.  Don’t focus on stopping sin without actually replacing it with godliness.
  6. Don’t be lame.  It’s easy for application to become mechanical or to miss the point (“tomorrow I’ll set my alarm 10 minutes early and pray…”).  Ask others who know you, “what do you think I most need to grow in?”  Target those areas.  Don’t miss the point of what God wants to do in your life by focusing on irrelevant minutiae.

God’s Knowable Word is a piercing Word.  It rips us apart and puts us back together.  It identifies exactly what is wrong with the world: me and you.  It shows us the solution: Jesus.  It gives us hope that we can break the patterns of brokenness and replace them with more life-giving options.  Let it speak to the details of your life (Heb 4:12-13).

Filed Under: Method Tagged With: 1 John, Application, Bible Study, Hebrews, Specificity

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