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What is Biblical Christianity?
DAY 2 — Why The Bible Matters
Thanks for joining us today as we continue to discover What is Biblical Christianity.
Yesterday we settled something foundational: God has spoken.
If that’s true, then today’s question becomes unavoidable: Where do we actually hear Him—clearly, reliably, and truthfully?
Because here’s the reality most people don’t say out loud: You can believe God speaks…and still live confused, anxious, reactive, and spiritually worn down.
Not because God is silent —but because you don’t know where to listen. And when the inner life goes unattended, eventually something else fills the space.
Paul writes to Timothy: “All Scripture is breathed out by God and profitable for teaching, for reproof, for correction, and for training in righteousness…” (2 Timothy 3:16–17)
That phrase “breathed out by God” is not poetic language. It means Scripture carries God’s own life and intention.
And here’s the benefit people underestimate: If Scripture is God-breathed, then when you take it in, you don’t just receive information — you receive formation.
Scripture doesn’t just answer questions. It reorders the interior life.
Psalm 19 says:
- it restores the soul
- rejoices the heart
- enlightens the eyes
Which tells us something important.
God gave Scripture not to dominate people —but to heal what constant pressure has disoriented.
Some of you aren’t sinful in the dramatic sense. You’re unformed in the interior sense.
- Tired.
- Scattered.
- Pulled in ten directions.
- Spiritually alive, but internally foggy.
Scripture speaks directly to that condition.
Let me ask you something uncomfortable but clarifying: If Scripture truly restores the soul, what part of your life is still unrestored because you won’t let it speak there?
- Not because you hate the Bible.
- Not because you reject truth.
- But because letting it speak would require surrender.
And surrender always feels risky before it feels safe.
Paul doesn’t say Scripture is useful sometimes.
He says it’s profitable for teaching, correction, and training.
That means Scripture:
- tells us what is true
- challenges what has drifted
- trains us toward wholeness
But notice the goal: “…that the person of God may be complete, equipped for every good work.”
Complete doesn’t mean perfect. It means integrated.
- Whole.
- Aligned.
- Able to live coherently.
In other words: Scripture helps you become the same person in public and in private.
And here’s the critical distinction: When we use Scripture to fix ourselves, it produces pressure. When we let God use Scripture to form us, it produces peace.
That’s the difference between religious fatigue and spiritual health.
This line captures it exactly:
“The Bible was not given to make us smarter sinners, but healthier saints.”— J. I. Packer
Spiritual health should be the goal. We desire spiritual formation, not spiritual performers.
If Scripture regains authority in your life — not as a weapon, but as a means of restoration — something changes over time.
Six months from now:
- your reactions will slow
- your discernment will sharpen
- your decisions will carry less regret
- your faith will feel less frantic and more settled
Not because life got easier. Because your interior life got ordered.
People who stay rooted in Scripture don’t avoid storms. They just aren’t defined by them.
CONCRETE ACTION STEP
Today’s step is intentionally simple and deeply formative.
Action Step: Read for Restoration
- Set aside 10 uninterrupted minutes today. Phone down. Notifications off.
- Open Psalm 19:7–11. Read it slowly — twice.
- Don’t ask: “What should I do?” Ask instead: “What is God restoring in me through this?”
Write down one word that rises: clarity, peace, conviction, joy, courage, direction. Ask God to complete the work he has started in you.
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