5 Questions to Ask Before Leading Your Next Bible Study
How to Lead a Bible Study Without Lecturing: Lessons from Years of Facilitating Groups
The Biblical Pattern: Why Inductive Study Isn’t Modern—It’s Scriptural
Nehemiah 8:8 records one of the most significant moments in biblical history — and it looks remarkably like what we call inductive Bible study. Read, give the sense, help them understand. This isn't a modern method. It's the biblical one.
How to Study the Book of Ezra
A good Ezra Bible study works through all ten chapters in sequence, handles the text faithfully with attention to historical and biblical context, and uses the inductive method — asking what the text says, what it means, and how to live it — rather than doing the thinking for you.
Why Is the Book of Ezra So Important?
The book of Ezra is more than ancient history. Its three great themes — return, rebuild, restore — are the recurring movements of every serious walk with God. Here's why this overlooked book may be exactly what you need right now.
Why Bible Study Doesn’t Always Change You
What was Ezra’s Bible Study Pattern?
Ezra's Bible study pattern is captured in a single verse — Ezra 7:10. He prepared his heart, sought the Law of the Lord, put it into practice, and then taught others. That four-part sequence — Prepare. Seek. Do. Teach. — is as practical today as it was in 458 BC.

