Menu
(Clip) Is the Bible Your Treasure Book
Michael Durham
0:00
0:00 4:19
Michael Durham

(Clip) Is the Bible Your Treasure Book

Michael Durham · 4:19

Michael Durham emphasizes that the Bible is not merely a book to read for knowledge but a treasure to experience and interact with God personally.
This sermon emphasizes the importance of not just reading the Bible for knowledge but for a deeper interaction with God. It highlights the need to see the Bible as a means to know, experience, and encounter God's greatness, grace, and goodness personally, rather than just gaining information. The speaker shares a transformation in their approach to reading the Bible, shifting from seeking knowledge to seeking a revelation of God's character and love.

Full Transcript

I, too, like a lot of pastors, well-intentioned, used to encourage and exhort my church, read your Bible, read your Bible, read your Bible, read your Bible. We even would have printed in our bulletin McShane's reading schedule so we all could be reading the same thing together. And then one day God just showed me the foolishness of that. I discovered that there's not one text of scripture that commands me to read it, not one verse. You'll search your concordance in vain to find it, but you will find exhortations and commands to study it, to meditate on it, to muse, to think about it, to hide it in your heart. But why no command to read? Because just reading the Bible is insufficient. It has some benefit. I don't want to discourage you from reading a chapter a day to keep the devil away because that's how most of us read. But that's not what you need. That's not interacting with Jesus. You don't read your Bibles to gain information either. Now, we need information. We need knowledge. But that's not the purpose of why God gave you a Bible. He gave you a book so that you might know Him, interact with Him, and see His greatness towards you. And when the Lord showed me that, it revolutionized my Bible reading. Until then, I have to confess that I studied the Bible like most of us do, to learn, to learn more facts, to gain knowledge. And that's about all that happened. I could impress people with that knowledge, but that's about the only thing that happened. I could certainly help somebody by giving them a verse, and I don't demean that or try to minimize that, but it usually had no power, no life. Why? Because it was just coming from my brain. When the Lord showed me that I'm to open this book, not with the intent of just learning knowledge and facts about Him, but I am to open this book to hear Him, to see Him, to experience Him, this book became a treasure. It no longer was my textbook, it was my treasure. And so, I get up in the morning and I open my Bible, and I now read to see this big God. I read to see just how big and great this God is, because I know today the enemy's going to come and he's going to lie to me about my God. He's going to try to persuade me that my God is not as good as He claims to be, not as gracious as He claims to be, not as great as He claims to be, nor is He as glorious as He says He is. Therefore, I need to see it for myself. I need to experience the glory. I need to experience His greatness, His vastness, His omnipotence, and oh yes, His great grace toward me and His goodness. So now, I get up in the morning and I read, not just to see how big He is, but how big He is to me and towards me. That's what Jesus is saying. If my words abide in you, it's the means by which we interact, but there's yet another and necessary thing. Because once again, even studying and meditating on the Word of God apart from the Holy Spirit, there will be no help. It will be black ink on white paper.

Sermon Outline

  1. I
    • Common exhortations to read the Bible
    • No explicit command to just read scripture
    • Importance of studying and meditating instead
  2. II
    • Reading Bible for knowledge is insufficient
    • Bible as a means to know and experience God
    • Transformation from textbook to treasure
  3. III
    • Reading to see God's greatness and grace
    • Combatting enemy's lies about God
    • Need for personal experience of God's glory
  4. IV
    • Jesus' words abiding in us as interaction
    • Necessity of the Holy Spirit in Bible reading
    • Without Spirit, scripture is just ink on paper

Key Quotes

“I discovered that there's not one text of scripture that commands me to read it, not one verse.” — Michael Durham
“I am to open this book to hear Him, to see Him, to experience Him, this book became a treasure.” — Michael Durham
“Without the Holy Spirit, it will be black ink on white paper.” — Michael Durham

Application Points

  • Approach Bible reading as an opportunity to experience and interact with God, not just to gain knowledge.
  • Meditate on scripture daily to internalize God's greatness and grace.
  • Rely on the Holy Spirit to bring life and understanding to your Bible study.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is there a command in the Bible to read it daily?
No, the Bible contains commands to study, meditate, and hide it in your heart, but not a direct command to simply read it.
Why is just reading the Bible not enough?
Reading alone is insufficient because it often leads only to knowledge without the personal interaction and experience of God.
What does it mean to treat the Bible as a treasure?
It means approaching the Bible to encounter and experience God's greatness and grace, not just to gain facts.
How does the enemy influence our perception of God?
The enemy tries to lie and persuade us that God is not as good, gracious, or glorious as He truly is.
Why is the Holy Spirit necessary when reading the Bible?
Without the Holy Spirit, the Word remains lifeless and ineffective, merely black ink on white paper.

Everything we make is available for free because of a generous community of supporters.

Donate