A few days ago I announced Memorizing Scripture Together—a program or effort dedicated to committing to memory passages and verses of Scripture. I had hoped to have at least thirty people agree to participate in the program. I was surprised and delighted to find that hundreds had signed up to participate. This shows, I think, how much we as Christians crave the Word but how our lazy, sinful natures draw us away from our hearts’ desire.
How it Works
There are two “tracks” you can follow. The first will provide a weekly “fighter verse”—a verse or two that will be profitable for you to memorize, ponder and reflect on. These verses will be the ones my church memorizes together (twenty-six verses repeated twice through the calendar year). The second track will provide a longer passage that will be memorized over a period of weeks or even months. You are free to participate in either or both of these.
Every Sunday I will send an email reminding you of the verses we are memorizing and providing some kind of challenge or encouragement. I hope to provide tips for memorizing these passages, interviews with people who have memorized vast quantities of the Scripture, and other useful information. I will also post this weekly information on my blog where we can discuss it.
I will be using the English Standard Version (ESV). You may, of course, use whatever translation you prefer.
This Week’s Fighter Verse
“All Scripture is breathed out by God and profitable for teaching, for reproof, for correction, and for training in righteousness, that the man of God may be competent, equipped for every good work.”
2 Timothy 3:16-17
This Week’s Passage
As we begin this effort together, I think it will be valuable to begin by committing to memory some passages that are prayers to God. These are Scriptures you can use as you pray, simply praying them back to God as an act of worship to him. The first of these is Psalm 8, a prayer of worship or adoration, declaring the glory of God. It seemed to strike the right balance between applicability and length. We will start slowly, by memorizing this over the next 3 weeks, which means you’ll want to master at least three verses per week. You can proceed through it at whatever pace fits you—just target December 14 as a completion date. Next week I’ll begin providing help and advice on memorizing passages like this one.
O Lord, our Lord,
how majestic is your name in all the earth!
You have set your glory above the heavens.
Out of the mouth of babies and infants,
you have established strength because of your foes,
to still the enemy and the avenger.
When I look at your heavens, the work of your fingers,
the moon and the stars, which you have set in place,
what is man that you are mindful of him,
and the son of man that you care for him?
Yet you have made him a little lower than the heavenly beings
and crowned him with glory and honor.
You have given him dominion over the works of your hands;
you have put all things under his feet,
all sheep and oxen,
and also the beasts of the field,
the birds of the heavens, and the fish of the sea,
whatever passes along the paths of the seas.
O Lord, our Lord,
how majestic is your name in all the earth!
Psalm 8
Join Us!
We would love for you to join us. I plan on sending out weekly emails (every Sunday) to remind you of the commitment and to tell you about the new verse. If you’d like to participate in the program, I ask as well that you sign up for these emails (though you certainly do not have to if you don’t want to). Otherwise, just keep an eye on this blog and dedicate time to memorizing the Scripture passages.





Comments (9) »
1. Laura
November 23, 2008
2:06 PM
Hey Tim, may I recommend psalters to the group as we memorize Psalm 8? It’s much easier to memorize a song than a passage!
2. Jackie
November 23, 2008
2:38 PM
What do you mean by psalters?
3. Witsius
November 23, 2008
2:43 PM
Tim:
Thanks!
Ps.8 was the first (and one of the few) Scripture(s) I memorized over ten years ago with my children when they were attending an ACE school. It should come back easier than a new one and possibly encourage me to stick with it.
One issue: Nothing happens when I try to “Forward to a Friend.”
Maybe take a look at that button.
Thanks!
4. Curtis
November 23, 2008
7:14 PM
Tim, I’m glad you chose a verse I already have memorized as it gives me more opportunity to read various commentaries on it as I refresh my memory with the verses.
Jackie, a psalter is a book which contains sometimes all the psalms, and other material like prayers, songs, and devotional readings. It started in the middle ages and has be revised and changed over the years to be in various languages, and layouts. But the same idea in it’s structure has found it’s way throughout the centuries. Though you may find some Latin psalters (Roman Catholic)to which you would not use to teach sound doctorine also there are heavily Eastern Orthodox psalters which have some aberrant teaching. My suggestion is stick with sound devotional books, and the scriptures themselves. Always know what your reading is true and in line with scripture, and the theology of the one who wrote it.
Laura, maybe I’m misunderstanding your suggestion, psalms are already songs. Myself, whenever I read the psalms by myself, I always tend to read them as lyrics in a song, but when I read them outloud I revert to a flatter reading, probably because I don’t want to pretend that I know how to sing… :) Some people are given the gift of song, and others are like me, just not quite as bad.
5. Sarah
November 23, 2008
11:18 PM
I’m excited about this! What a great Psalm to begin with.
6. Elaine
November 23, 2008
11:56 PM
I’m excited about hiding God’s Word in my heart! Psalm 8 is a good one to start with!
7. maryanne
November 24, 2008
7:54 AM
Wonderful. A familiar passage to begin with. I made myself memorize Psalm 8 in college. I’ve been so thrilled since then to be able to pull it from my memory when I’m climbing a mountain, walking trails or looking up at the night sky. I need a refresher though as I tend to mix up the phrases.
8. Lilieth
November 24, 2008
2:35 PM
Hi Tim,
I was just browsing and found your blog. I would love to participate in this program of Memorizing Scripture Together.
Thanks!
Have a great day and God Bless!
9. Colin Rowley
November 24, 2008
5:23 PM
What a great initiative. You’ve got me brainstorming on how to take this initiative and evolve it into our own church-wide initiative (at Bethel).