Sunday, June 19, 2016

Memory Verse: Study

Study to show thyself approved unto God, a workman that needeth not to be ashamed, rightly dividing the word of truth.” -2 Timothy 2:15 (KJV).

Today is Father’s Day, a day when we honor fathers. My father encouraged me to study and do well. I remember his encouragement and admonitions with gratitude.

In the “memory verse” emphasis I am now writing about in these devotionals, I am selecting one by one (and day by day) those that I have memorized over the years. I am also using suggestions from the book by Robert J. Morgan entitled 100 Bible Verses Everyone Should Know by Heart (Nashville: B&H Publishers, 2010). Today’s selected verse, 2 Timothy 2:15, is not one in Dr. Morgan’s list of 100. I was encouraged early in my life, when I was in first grade at Choestoe School, to memorize this verse. It was not “against the law” then for school children to memorize Bible verses, or for the class to have the Pledge of Allegiance, a Bible reading and the Lord’s Prayer to begin public school in those days. My first grade teacher was Mrs. Mert Shuler Collins. She was also my teacher at Sunday School. She encouraged us at both places—school and Sunday School—to memorize Bible verses. As incentive, she had a chart with her pupils’ names at both locations, and would place a shining star by each child’s name who could repeat the memorized verse to her correctly. Her method may not be recommended by modern-day educators for the feelings of lack of accomplishment it might engender in those who do not earn the stars. But for me, both what this verse from 2 Timothy 2:15 teaches, and the very fact that it was safely lodged in my memory to give me more incentive to study set me on a course to work hard in all my lessons and be on that special road we called “Achievement in Studies.” And my father and mother at home encouraged and helped me to do likewise.

Paul, Timothy’s teacher, and the one who called Timothy his “son in the gospel,” knew that Timothy needed to study well the law and the prophets, but also Paul’s own letters that gave much of the new Way of Jesus as Lord that Paul preached and that he commissioned Timothy to teach and to preach to the churches he sent the younger Timothy to encourage. This verse, although meant to encourage study of the scriptures, can also apply to whatever challenges we have to study that which is good and beneficial. We study in school at first to grow proficient in reading, writing and arithmetic. Then we add sciences and the social studies, more erudite studies in specific fields we want to pursue which will help us in our careers. But the same principle Paul gave to Timothy still prevails, regardless of what pursuit of knowledge we follow, so long as the study is honorable and beneficial. The Amplified Bible gives additional insight into 2 Timothy 2:15: “Study and be eager and do your utmost to present yourself to God approved (tested by trial), a workman who has no cause to be ashamed, correctly analyzing and accurately dividing—rightly handling and skillfully teaching—the Word of Truth.” I take the advice in this verse very literally when I teach a Sunday School class or lead a group in Bible Study. Being a teacher by profession, I sought to apply the principles of this verse in the classroom. The teacher must first study hard and diligently before teaching. A teacher should not be afraid to say: “I don’t know the answer to your question. But keep it in mind. Together we will seek to find the answer.” Eugene Peterson in his modern-language The Message Bible renders 2 Timothy 2:15 this way: “Concentrate on doing your best for God, work you won’t be ashamed of, laying out the truth plain and simple.”’ His translation further admonishes: “Words are not mere words, you know. If they’re not backed by a godly life, they accumulate as poison in the soul” (v. 16). -Ethelene Dyer Jones 06.19.2016

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