by Tim Challies
There are few areas of the Christian life where there is a wider gap
between what Christians want to do and what Christians actually do than in this
area: memorizing Scripture. We all know that we should, we all have some
appreciation of the benefits, and we would all love to be released from the
guilt of doing it so little. Here, courtesy of Donald Whitney and his book
Spiritual Disciplines for the Christian Life (now in a brand new edition), are
5 great reasons to memorize Scripture today.
Memorization Supplies Spiritual
Power. “When Scripture is stored in your mind, it is available for the Holy
Spirit to bring to your attention when you need it most.” No wonder, then, that
David write, “I have stored up your word in my heart, that I might not sin
against you.” “A pertinent scriptural truth, brought to your awareness by the
Holy Spirit at just the right moment, can be the weapon that makes the
difference in a spiritual battle.”
Memorization Strengthens Your
Faith. “Memorization strengthens your faith because it repeatedly
reinforces the truth, often just when you need to hear it again.” But it can
only reinforce truth that you have already committed to memory.
Memorization Prepares Us for
Witnessing and Counseling. “Recently, while I was talking to a man about
Jesus, he said something that brought to mind a verse I had memorized. I quoted
that verse, and it was the turning point in a conversation that resulted in him
professing faith in Christ. I often experience something similar in counseling
conversations. But until the verses are hidden in the heart, they aren’t
available to use with the mouth.”
Memorization Provides a Means of
God’s Guidance. David wrote, “Your testimonies are my delight; they are my
counselors.” “Just as the Holy Spirit retrieves scriptural truth from our
memory banks for use in counseling others, so also will He bring it to our
minds in providing timely guidance for ourselves.”
Memorization Stimulates
Meditation. “One of the most amazing benefits of memorizing Scripture is
that it provides fuel for meditation. When you have memorized a verse of
Scripture, you can meditate on it anywhere at any time during the day or
night.” Then you can be like David who exclaimed, “Oh how I love your law, it
is my meditation all the day.”
Here is a final call to action:
The Word of the Word is the “sword of the Spirit,” but if there is no
Bible physically accessible to you, then the weapon of the Word must be present
in the armory of your mind in order for the Spirit to wield it. Imagine
yourself in the midst of a decision and needing guidance, or struggling with a
difficult temptation and needing victory. The Holy Spirit enters your mental
arsenal and looks around for available weapons, but all He finds is a John
3:16, and Genesis 1:1, and a Great Commission. Those are great swords, but
they’re not made for every battle.
The only solution is to commit to memorizing the Word of God. For God’s
sake, as an expression of your desire to be used by him, fill up that arsenal.
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