The Adventure Hidden in Plain Sight
Rediscovering Your First Love
On Second Thought
There’s a worn leather Bible sitting on my desk that tells a story. The pages are dog-eared, the margins filled with notes from different seasons of my life—some in confident ink, others in tentative pencil. Coffee stains mark pages I’ve lingered over during early morning hours, and highlighted passages track the journey of a soul being shaped by the Word of God. But I’ll confess something: there have been stretches when that Bible sat untouched, gathering dust while I lived off yesterday’s manna, recycling old insights rather than encountering fresh truth.
Paul’s words to Timothy in 2 Timothy 2:15 cut straight to the heart of our spiritual vitality: “Be diligent to present yourself approved to God, a worker who does not need to be ashamed, rightly dividing the word of truth.” These were among Paul’s final instructions to his young protégé, and the weight of that context matters. When a seasoned mentor knows his time is short, he doesn’t waste words on trivialities. He distills a lifetime of wisdom into what matters most.
“Be diligent to present yourself approved to God.” That phrase has haunted me in the best possible way. It’s not about earning God’s love—we know that’s secured through Christ. But there’s something insightful about the idea of presenting ourselves as approved workers, students who have done the work, disciples who haven’t taken shortcuts in our formation.
Part of becoming approved involves learning how to flee from the temptations that keep us from becoming all that God has planned for us to be. And here’s where the connection to Scripture becomes vital: we can’t flee what we don’t recognize, and we can’t recognize spiritual danger without the discernment that comes from immersing ourselves in God’s Word. The Bible isn’t just a collection of religious teachings—it’s a sword, a mirror, a lamp, a fire. It’s living and active, capable of dividing soul and spirit, discerning the thoughts and intentions of our hearts.
When we immerse ourselves in the study of Scripture, we’re preparing ourselves not only for the trials of life but also for the blessings that come our way. That second part often gets overlooked. We understand intuitively that God’s Word equips us for hardship, but we forget that it also prepares us to steward blessing well. God has many blessings stored up for those who walk in the light of His truth, and without biblical wisdom, we’re liable to mishandle those blessings, to grasp them too tightly or value them too highly or use them selfishly.
Think of God’s Word as a road map, a framework, and a blueprint to life. These aren’t merely metaphors—they describe actual functions Scripture serves. As a road map, it shows us where we are, where we’re going, and how to navigate the terrain between here and there. As a framework, it provides the structure within which we build our lives, the boundaries that keep us from collapse. As a blueprint, it reveals God’s original design for human flourishing, showing us what we were created to be and do.
Paul knew something crucial about Timothy’s future: regardless of what challenges he would face, as long as God’s Word was hidden within his heart, he could meet all challenges victoriously. Not easily, perhaps. Not painlessly. But victoriously. That promise stands for us as well. The trials we face today—and the ones lurking just beyond tomorrow—can be faced with confidence when Scripture has taken root in our souls.
But here’s where we need to guard against a subtle distortion. Becoming approved of God is not a work we perform through sheer effort or religious discipline. It’s not about checking off a daily Bible reading plan or accumulating knowledge that puffs up. It requires the guidance of the Holy Spirit. Without the Spirit’s illumination, Scripture remains a closed book even when we’re staring at open pages. We can read the words without hearing the Voice. We can study the text without encountering the Author.
Time spent in genuine study of God’s Word—the kind that engages both mind and heart—teaches us more about Christ’s personal love and desire for us. This is intimate knowledge, not merely informational knowledge. It’s the difference between knowing about someone and knowing them. While God certainly wants us to attend church and participate in corporate worship, His greater joy comes in watching us study His Word personally and then apply it to our lives. Corporate teaching is vital, but it can never replace personal encounter with Scripture.
Through the power of the Holy Spirit, God will teach us how to accurately handle His Word. This is Paul’s concern when he talks about “rightly dividing the word of truth.” We live in an age of biblical illiteracy, where even committed Christians often lack the framework to interpret Scripture faithfully. We pull verses out of context, impose our preferences onto the text, and mold God’s Word into the shape of our own desires rather than allowing it to reshape us.
Charles Stanley writes in his devotional Into His Presence: “If you are ready for a true adventure, pick up the Bible and ask God to breathe fresh life into your love for His Word.” Adventure. When’s the last time you thought of Bible reading as an adventure? Most of us think of it as a discipline at best, a duty at worst. But adventure suggests discovery, surprise, danger, excitement, transformation. It suggests that we don’t know what we’ll encounter on the other side of opening those pages.
Psalm 119:57-64, our accompanying Scripture reading, captures this love for God’s Word beautifully. The psalmist writes, “You are my portion, O LORD; I have promised to obey your words. I have sought your face with all my heart; be gracious to me according to your promise.” There’s desperation in these verses, a hunger that won’t be satisfied with casual acquaintance. The psalmist goes on to say, “I have considered my ways and have turned my steps to your statutes. I will hasten and not delay to obey your commands.”
This is active, engaged relationship with Scripture. It involves self-examination (“I have considered my ways”), repentance (“turned my steps”), and immediate obedience (“I will hasten and not delay”). It’s not passive consumption of religious content—it’s dynamic interaction with the living God through His revealed Word.
On Second Thought
Here’s the paradox that strikes me as I reflect on this call to diligent study of God’s Word: we think of Bible study as work we do for God, but it’s actually rest we receive from God. We approach Scripture thinking we’re the ones who need to perform, to dig deeper, to work harder, to finally unlock its mysteries through our effort. But what if the real invitation is to cease from our striving and let God’s Word work on us?
Consider this: when Paul tells Timothy to “be diligent,” he’s not prescribing exhausting labor that leaves us depleted. He’s pointing to the kind of focused attention that actually restores our souls. Jesus said, “Come to me, all you who are weary and burdened, and I will give you rest” (Matthew 11:28). That rest isn’t found in abandoning Scripture but in encountering Christ through Scripture. The diligence Paul describes isn’t the white-knuckled discipline of religious achievement; it’s the eager attention of someone who has discovered treasure and can’t wait to return to the field.
We’ve made Bible study feel like homework when God intended it as homecoming. We’ve turned it into a task to complete when it was meant to be a conversation to savor. The Spirit isn’t looking for students who can regurgitate information but children who long to hear their Father’s voice. And here’s the beautiful irony: when we stop treating Scripture as an obligation and start experiencing it as invitation, we often find ourselves spending more time there, not less. Not because we have to, but because we want to. Not to become approved, but because we’ve discovered we already are—and that approval frees us to encounter God’s Word with joy rather than anxiety, with curiosity rather than duty, with love rather than fear.
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