Category Scripture Memorization

Excellence is the Harvest

When trying to deliver excellence in any endeavor, talent matters. But talent is rarely the deciding factor in whether or not people will achieve excellence in their field. What usually separates the competent from the truly capable is commitment to the right tools +  the right structure + repetition + application. With regard to structure, to time and a well-defined regimen. This is huge. Why? The people who become good at anything master and maintain a regular review of the basics:

  • Musicians – A violinist, pianist, or horn player runs scales. Three different instruments. One common underlying routine. Scales are basic stuff. But they cannot be overlooked; a constant return to scales is required for the maintenance of skills and growth in a field where all of the art is built upon scales. The tools are the instrument and other supports for practice (tuner, metronome, piano/guitar/kazoo). The structure is in the scales, the time set aside to do them, and some way of gauging whether or not they are being performed correctly. The repetition is the routine practice of the scales. Finally, the application is seen in playing songs that use the scales. Eventually an earnest commitment to tools, structure, repetition, and application will yield the harvest of excellence

  • Athletes – A basketball player runs drills. That is, an indispensable part of their growth and sustained excellence focuses on being able to do basic things with the ball – dribbling, passing, and simple shots. High-flying theatrics are cool to see. But the ability to get near the basket demands dribbling and passing. And height-challenged players cannot be anything short of extraordinary with the basics; what they lack in height has to be compensated for in a mastery of ball handling. (Think about John Stockton.) The tools are a basketball, a place to practice, and set of drills. The structure is in the set of drills, the time set aside to do them, and someone to provide feedback. The repetition is in the routine practice of the drills or the adherence to the scheduled practices and required drills.

  • Hebrew Students – A student of Biblical Hebrew reviews paradigms: verb stems, strong verb forms, weak verb irregularities, pronominal suffixes. The alphabet was exciting at first and parsing felt like real progress. But real fluency is built in the daily return to charts that seem elementary. The qal perfect. The imperfect. The participle. Again and again. Not because the student has forgotten them. The student returns because Scripture is written on that scaffolding. A sermon insight, a theological nuance, a subtle wordplay in a Psalm — these all rest upon patterns internalized through repetition. The one who skips paradigms may read devotionally; the one who drills them reads with precision. What starts mechanical becomes musical. And the voice of God’s text becomes easier to unpack and explain with excellence.

  • Software Architects – A seasoned architect revisits patterns and clean code principles like dependency inversion, separation of concerns, cohesion, testability, and naming conventions. (On naming conventions see Roderick Notation.) At first, writing code is about making it work. Later, it becomes about making it clear. Then about making it durable, secure, and scalable. The fundamentals—design patterns, refactoring discipline, thoughtful abstractions—feel basic. But systems decay when fundamentals are neglected. A brilliant new framework cannot compensate for poor boundaries. An elegant UI cannot redeem chaotic domain modeling. The architect who regularly returns to foundational principles builds systems that scale and teams that flourish. What looks like creativity on the surface is usually craftsmanship underneath. And craftsmanship is built on disciplined repetition of design truths that never change.

In different domains excellence demands the same dedication to the basics. The fundamentals are not “beginner stuff.” They are the well you will keep drawing from as you grow and perform. This aligns strongly with what Anders Ericsson (deliberate practice researcher) discovered. Mastery is not repetition. It is structured, feedback-driven repetition of fundamentals (Ericsson, et al, 2016).

How does this apply to ministry? Scripture subtly affirms what has been previously presented. Paul says to Timothy:

“Give yourself entirely to them, that your progress may be evident to all.” (1 Tim 4:15 NKJV)

When there is a dedication to the fundamentals of the faith the progress is observable. It comes from immersion and discipline. Even spiritual gifts require:

  • Stirring up (2 Tim 1:6)

  • Training (Hebrews 5:14; Ezra 7:10)

  • Practice (Hebrews 12 imagery)

Talent is the seed given to us by God. By virtues of God-given talent some will find it easier to produce excellence when given the same amount of time and putting in the same effort. But time will still be required. Repetition is a non-negotiable. In the disciplined return to the basics and spending time doing reps is the cultivation of that seed. Excellence in application is the harvest.

References

Ericsson, A. K., & Pool, R. (2016). Peak: Secrets from the new science of expertise. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt.

Five Reasons for Scripture Memorization

It is more than a little cool to hear someone recite Scripture as they answer a question, deliver a sermon, or when praying. (Sometime it is done in a way that is showy and with the aim of drawing attention to themselves. Those times are not more than a little cool. At other times, though, the word-for-word recalling of Scripture in conversations can be helpful in unpacking an argument, encouraging the listener, or ensuring that the language and aims of prayer are in line with the will of God.) Consistently memorizing scripture offers several spiritual, mental, and other day-to-day practical benefits. Here are five:

Reason 1 — Strengthening Faith and Promoting Spiritual Growth

Memorizing Scripture helps internalize God’s Word. When the words of the Bible are readily available, they becomes easier to apply in daily life. Memorizing Scripture also helps to deepen our understanding of God’s promises, increasing trust and faith. How? In meditation we should talk out loud about Scripture with God and ourselves (Psalm 1; Joshua 1:8-9; 1 Timothy 4:15). This is what the writers have in mind when they use the word meditate. When Scripture has been memorized we are able to ruminate over it to ourselves and with the Lord without having to have a physical Bible on hand. This could be while walking, during exercise, or in the midst of chores around the house (yard work, dishes, or cleaning).

Reason 2 — Provides Strength in Trials and Temptations

When faced with challenges, having Scripture in our hearts provides comfort, wisdom, and encouragement. Jesus Himself used Scripture to resist temptation (Matthew 4:1-11). As the enemy of all mankind attacked Jesus, full of the Holy Spirit, responded with quotes from Deuteronomy. He had memorized those passages and was able to readily recall them in His moment of need. The Spirit was also involved; He assists believers in using and wielding the Scriptures as a sword (Ephesians 6:17; Hebrews 4:12). Memorized Scripture will help us in the ongoing effort of pursuing holiness. Hear King David on the matter:

Psalm 119:11 – “Your word I have hidden in my heart, that I might not sin against You.” (NKJV)

Reason 3 — Enhances Prayer and Worship

Memorized scripture allows you to pray more effectively, aligning your prayers with God’s will. It enriches personal and corporate worship, as scripture-filled prayers and songs become more meaningful.

Reason 4 — Equips for Sharing the Gospel and Encouraging Others

Knowing scripture makes it easier to witness to others, defend your faith, and offer biblical encouragement. Dr. Kyumin Whang, a godly man and friend of mine were reconnecting yesterday. After catching up I reached out this morning to ask him for a reason for Scripture memorization. This is what Dr. Whang had to say:

[Scripture Memorization] helps substantiate what you are saying to people.

Dr. Whang has served as a pastor, currently teaches medicine, and is a solid thinker. I appreciate is clear and brief reason on a practical reason for Scripture memorization for people who want to be effective in giving an answer for the faith that is in them; it is part of being ready to share our faith (1 Peter 3:15).

It allows you to give wise, scriptural advice in conversations. Whether offering words of biblical teaching (doctrine), reproof of ungodly attitudes or actions, or guidance for godliness, the Scriptures should be a primary source. Paul put it this way

2 Timothy 3:16-17 – “All Scripture is given by inspiration of God, and is profitable for doctrine, for reproof, for correction, for instruction in righteousness, that the man of God may be complete, thoroughly equipped for every good work.” (NKJV)

Reason 5 — Improves Mental Focus and Cognitive Health

  • Memorization is an excellent exercise for the brain, improving mental discipline, focus, and memory retention.
  • Studies suggest that engaging the mind in memorization helps with mental clarity and long-term cognitive health.
  • Example: Isaiah 26:3 – “You will keep him in perfect peace, whose mind is stayed on You, because he trusts in You.” (NKJV)

References