I had the privilege of living in the Holy Land for four years where I
earned two master’s degrees at Jerusalem University College. During my
stay I was able to do some really amazing things like meeting my wife
Sarah, walking around the Sea of Galilee, living with the tent dwelling
seminomadic Bedouins in the desert, and being part of evangelism teams
throughout all of Israel. But the most impactful experience I took away
was being able to rub shoulders with Jews and Christians who are really
serious about memorizing Scripture and gleaning from them the three main
techniques of how they and those who went before them went about
memorizing.
Memorizing is hard, especially for us in the west who
live in a copy, paste, Facebook, Tweet, file and forget world. It might
be hard for you to conceive of 8-year-old children that had all 150
Psalms memorized! But memorizing the Word of God is so important to our
spiritual life and it is achievable with discipline, prayer, and hard
work.
While in Jerusalem, I learned the three pillars of
memorization: Reading, Hearing, and Writing. Let me briefly explain how
each of these techniques or a combination of them can help you achieve
the goal of hiding God’s Word in your heart. These memory techniques
have helped me to memorize 20 complete books and I have used them to
inspire thousands of Christians across this country to do it too.
The first technique is: Reading.
After
you have selected a verse to memorize, read it aloud over and over.
When you read the verse aloud, your eyes work together with your mouth
and ears to give you a much better chance of retaining the verse than if
you were reading it silently. Another technique related to Reading is
the power of Format.
The Jews have really figured this out; every
printing of the Talmud has the exact same format, that is to say page
58, 59, etc. are exactly the same in every printing throughout the
world. This greatly enhances their memorization efforts. I have heard
stories of Jewish students that had a memory so strong that you could
put a pin through any word say on page 58 of the Torah and without
looking they could tell you the very word and letter the pin went
through on page 59. That is amazing!
To
apply the principle of Format, read aloud the verse you want to
memorize while looking at the verse in your Bible, using the same Bible
every time. I know it might sound too easy to be true but the principle really does work. When we use the same Bible long enough, we know where
certain verses are on the page and where certain chapters start, don’t
we? This is the power of Format. So read the verse aloud over and over
while looking at your Bible.
The second technique to memorize is: Hearing the Word of God.
While
living in Jerusalem I was often told that the Bible was originally
meant more for the ears than the eyes. It’s kind of like reading Mozart
versus hearing Mozart. You can read Mozart on the page all the day long
and imagine how beautiful it would sound, but when you hear someone play
the piece well on the piano, the document almost takes on a different
life, doesn’t it? The Bible repeatedly tells us that faith comes by
hearing (Romans 10:17), to hear O Israel (Deuteronomy 6:4), to be doers
of the Word and not hearers only (James 1:22), etc. So, if we can listen
to the Word of God a chapter at a time while we are in the car, doing
errands around the house, etc. we can hear the spoken Word of God with
all the emotions, drama, etc. over and over. This is probably the most
ancient way to memorize.
I have a friend who had a two hour
commute every day; for part of the trip he would listen to a chapter
from Romans. About a year later he had memorized the entire book of
Romans while driving to work. What an excellent way to redeem the time.
Hearing the Word of God is also the best way for children to memorize.
Before we put our kids to bed, I will recite a few chapters dramatically
from memory and you know how quickly kids pick things up, now they can
practically tell the chapters themselves just from hearing them over and
over. A great way for you to implement this technique is to play the
Word of God to your kids when they are in bed on a CD or an App.
The last memorization technique is writing the verse out.
Let
me briefly explain. Every Bible in the world is printed in such a way
that doesn’t foster memorization. That’s why I created a version of the
Bible called The Memorization Study Bible. The method of the Bible goes
something like this.
1. Prayerfully select a verse.
2.
Divide the verse into several lines. Count the words in each line and
write the number in the right-hand column as a memory aid. When the
ancients used this technique, they would always keep eight words or less
on each line. They called this an eye’s glance; it was a phrase short
enough that you could keep it in your short-term memory.
3.
Copy the right-hand column’s numbers onto a fresh sheet of paper. Write
out the verse with pen and paper just the way you’ve divided it using
the numbers as a crutch. If you draw a blank, you can look at the number
column as a cheat sheet to help you know how many words go on that
line.
4. While you are writing the verse, try speaking it aloud.
That way your mind, eyes, mouth, hand, and ears are working together in
unison. You can’t use any more of your members than that.
Finally,
whether you memorize Scripture by Reading, Hearing, or Writing, or a
combination of those techniques, the way to retain it is to review it.
We know that if we don’t use it, we lose it. The process of reviewing Scripture you have memorized is called meditation
in the Bible (Joshua 1:8) and is critical to our spiritual life. If we
can let the Word of Christ “abide” or remain in us (1 John 2:14), then
we can draw upon it in times of need. This will give you or your kids
the best fighting chance to overcome the world. With the Word of God
hidden in our hearts we can now have the mind of the living God in
reach, we can provide words of comfort from the Scripture to ourselves
or others in a time of need, we can continually remind ourselves of who
we are in the light of God’s Word, and we can be like Jesus who quoted
the Word of God from memory when he was under attack from our enemy
(Matthew 4:1-4).
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