Kota Kemuning Church of Christ

Read Carefully

There is a huge difference between (1) reading  the Bible and (2) studying the Bible. Reading God’s word is, however, a part of the process of studying  it. One cannot dig into/investigate its meaning  without reading what it actually says, correct?

There is a blessing for those who read the  Scriptures with a noble and good heart. God charged  the kings who reigned over the Israelites to read  from His law all the days of their lives  (Deuteronomy 17:18,19). Blessed/happy are those  who read God’s inspired message (Revelation 1:3).  On one occasion, Ezra and other Levites “read in  the book of the law of God distinctly, and gave the  sense, and caused them to understand the reading”  (Nehemiah 8:8). Reading, reading clearly, reading  with understanding. All of those are matters of great  significance. 

As we read the word of God, it is important that  we read carefully. It is so easy for our mind to get  distracted. When we are distracted, even in the  slightest way, it affects our concentration. When our  concentration is affected, we tend to miss things or  make mistakes in our reading or hearing.  

 “Belteshazzar,” another name for the prophet  Daniel (Daniel 4:8), is not the same as “Belshazzar,”  king of Babylon (Daniel 5:1). We must read  carefully. “Zephaniah” the prophet (Zephaniah 1:1)  is not the same as “Zechariah” the prophet (Zechariah 1:1). Stay focused when reading.  “Simeon,” a Spirit-guided man who held Jesus in his  hands when He was an infant (Luke 2:25-28), is a different person than “Simon” the leper, in whose  house Jesus dined near the end of His life (Mark  14:3). Read carefully.  

God’s desire for Christians is to “pray without  ceasing” (1 Thessalonians 5:17), not “pay” without  ceasing. Focus. “Anna,” a prophetess (Luke 2:36), is  different from “Annas,” who was high priest of the  Jews (Acts 4:6). Read carefully, and if you read out  loud in the presence of others, read distinctly.

Through the years, I have observed in myself  and others that, in reading the English Bible, our  mistakes often are with small words, not the longer  ones. It is as if our eyes see a big word coming up in  a sentence and our mind focuses on it, so we “slip  up” on some tiny prepositions which precede or follow it. It can happen to any of us. What we need  to do is slow down, take our time, and do our best to  read carefully. I know. In our private lives, we all  are busy. We are in a rush to do this and do that.

Let  us not allow our hurried-up lives affect our  concentration as we read the words of life! I know.  In a public assembly of God’s people, there are  some clock-watchers, so we do not want to drag our  feet in our reading. But, in order to get the fullest  benefit out of reading the Bible, we need to read  carefully. 

When one reads Romans 6, he can get into a  heap of trouble by not paying attention to the  prepositions. What did Paul write? Did he say that  Christians are dead “in” sin or dead “to” sin? There  is a mighty big difference! He said that God’s  children are dead “to” sin (Romans 6:2). We have  separated ourselves from sin in the sense that we no  longer are sin’s slaves.

If I am a Christian, there was a time when I was  “dead in trespasses and sins” (Ephesians 2:1). When  was that? Before I obeyed the gospel, while I still  walked in darkness. Before conversion, we were dead in sin . . . after conversion we are dead to sin.  

What about believing “in” the Christ and  believing “into” Him? The difference in those  prepositions is two English letters. We often read in  the New Testament about believing “in” Jesus (John  3:16) or believing “on” Him (Acts 16:31). But, we  never read in God’s truth of believing “into” Him.  

Per God’s arrangement, all spiritual blessings,  including redemption (Romans 3:24) and no  condemnation (Romans 8:1), are in the Christ  (Ephesians 1:3). Again, the Bible never says that we  believe “into” the Christ. What does it say? That a  person is “baptized into” Him (Galatians 3:27). That  is not some so-called “church of Christ doctrine.”  That is Bible doctrine. Read it for yourself. If the  Bible says it, it cannot be wrong.  

Note also that the Bible says a person is baptized  “into” the Christ, not baptized “in” Christ. Read  carefully, friend. Being baptized “into” Him makes  baptism the point of transition . . . from darkness to  light . . . from being lost to being saved. Reading is  important. How we read is, too. Read carefully.

— An article written by Roger D. Campbell