May 1, 2016 John 20:1-18
“On the third day He rose again, according to the Scriptures.”[1]
What would seem like the low point of the entire Bible, the crucifixion of the central Character, is followed immediately by the high point. Read the text and think about the story John is telling. Why did he include some details and leave out others? What other parts of the story are you curious about? How did people react to the risen Lord, and how did He respond to them?
You may notice that there is no handout to download this week. Hopefully the handouts we have been using in our study and discussion group have been helpful. Having a convenient way to read and mark up a passage, all using the same translation, is helpful in the process of learning the skills of inductive Bible study. However, some situations (an impromptu conversation over coffee, for example) may not have a readily-available handout prepared. Also, looking at different translations together can add another layer to a discussion – sometimes helpful, sometimes confusing, usually profitable. This week use your own Bible translation (or several) to read and study the passage. The suggestions in the article on Methodical Bible Study provide good reminders of the kinds of questions that will stir your thinking in the Observation, Interpretation, and Application phases of study. Read the passage and come to the group ready to ask questions to help all of us learn from this text.
A note about marking: Handouts are especially helpful in being able to mark up a passage (“circle all the verbs” or “underline all the people mentioned” or to write notes or questions about the text). Without a handout (or a photocopy of the passage from your Bible) you face the decision: To mark or not to mark? The main problem is practical. Marking in the Bible itself is very helpful (just like using a handout). But only for the first time you read a passage. Next time you come to the passage (in a week or in five years) you may find it difficult to see the text with “fresh eyes.” What God the Holy Spirit shows you in the text today may not be the same thing He wants to use in your life at another time in the future. All those helpful circles and underlines and notes can become a distraction the next time you read the passage. Ask yourself: When you come to a marked-up passage, which do you read first, the inspired text or your previous notes? (The same concern applies to study Bibles and printed footnotes – helpful but possible distractions away from what God actually said in the text.) As mentioned above, one option is to make a photocopy of the page you are studying and use that for marking your observations and insightful interpretations. Or even use a blank sheet of paper to make notes and comments as you read the passage. Or mark in the Book itself – whatever is most helpful in being spiritually formed by God’s word, both today and in the future.