Biblical Interpretation, Editor's Picks, Kingdom Discipleship

How to Read the Bible — Returning to the Way of the Bereans and the Ante-Nicene Church

How to Read the Bible Series

You hold the Bible in your hands.
Sixty-six books. One Author. One Spirit. One unfolding story of redemption. And yet, for many, it’s a confusing book—wrapped in mystery, buried under layers of tradition, or filtered through man-made systems. But that was never God’s design.

The earliest Christians didn’t read the Bible through denominational creeds or theological filters. They read it with open hearts, under the teaching of the Holy Spirit, and in the context of their Jewish and first-century world. They tested everything by the written Word—and followed it with their lives.

It’s time to return to their way.


Scripture Focus:

“Your word is a lamp to my feet and a light to my path.”
Psalm 119:105, NASB1995


Reading with the Author, Not Just About Him

The Bible is not a dead text. It is living and active (Hebrews 4:12) because it is breathed out by the Holy Spirit (2 Timothy 3:16). Without the Spirit, Scripture becomes information. With Him, it becomes transformation.

The Bereans didn’t rely on theological systems or traditions to interpret the Word. They relied on the Spirit and the Scriptures themselves. Their example calls us to read with reverence, discernment, and dependence—not on man, but on God.


The Early Church Read the Word as One Unified Story

They saw the Old and New Testaments not as opposites but as one unfolding plan of God. They understood the Jewish idioms and culture behind the text. They read the Word in its historical context, through Hebraic lenses, and with spiritual hunger.

They didn’t force Scripture to fit their beliefs. They submitted their beliefs to the Word.


Principles for Spirit-Led, Scripture-Faithful Reading

  1. Context Is King
    Who wrote it? To whom? What is happening? What covenant are they under? Read what’s there, not what tradition has imposed.
  2. Culture and Language Matter
    Jesus spoke as a Jew to Jews. Many truths are deeply rooted in Hebrew idioms and first-century thought. Misreading the cultural setting leads to misapplying truth.
  3. Scripture Interprets Scripture
    Isaiah 28:10 and 1 Corinthians 2:13 remind us: truth is confirmed in multiple witnesses across God’s Word. Don’t hang doctrines on isolated verses.
  4. Avoid Allegory Unless the Text Demands It
    The early Church read Scripture literally unless it clearly indicated symbolism (such as in visions or parables). They let the Spirit—not philosophy—determine meaning.
  5. Reject Traditions That Override Scripture
    Jesus warned about this (Matthew 15:9). When tradition silences the Word or redefines its meaning, we must return to the text and the Spirit.

Walking as the Early Church Walked

To read the Bible rightly, we must return to how it was written: in context, by the Spirit, and for the Church. The Bereans searched the Scriptures daily to test everything. The Ante-Nicene believers treasured the Word, often at the cost of their lives.

They didn’t read to affirm a system. They read to know and follow Christ.


Return to the Word. Return to the Spirit.

The Bible is not meant to be interpreted by the wisdom of men, but by the One who wrote it. The Holy Spirit still teaches, still convicts, still opens eyes. You don’t need a new method—you need the old path.

Read with prayer. Read with surrender. Read with the Spirit. And you will find Christ in every page.

2–3 minutes

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Devotions, Family Devotionals

🏡 Kingdom Family Devotional — Day 70

“Beware of the false prophets… you will know them by their fruits.”

Matthew 7:15–16 NASB1995

🍇 Teaching Discernment to Our Children

As mothers raising older children, we must teach them how to discern truth from deception. The world is full of voices—but not all lead to Christ. Jesus calls us to examine fruit, not follow feelings.

We model discernment by asking, “Does this teaching match God’s Word?” and “Does this person walk in humility, love, and obedience?”

🗣 Family Conversation:

  • How can we tell if someone is teaching truth?
  • What fruit should we look for in ourselves and others?

👣 Kingdom Practice:

Practice testing messages or social media content together. Look at the message and the messenger.

🙏 Prayer:

Lord, protect our family from deception. Help us love truth and walk in it. Let our lives produce good fruit that honors You. Amen.


Devotions, Teen Devotions

😎 Kingdom Teen Devotional — Day 70

“You will know them by their fruits.”

Matthew 7:15–16 NASB1995

🎭 When Looks Deceive

It’s easy to trust influencers, leaders, even pastors—because they sound good, quote Scripture, or seem sincere. But Jesus says: check the fruit.

Fruit is how they treat people. How they handle sin. Whether they glorify themselves—or God. Don’t be fooled by sheep’s clothing. Look deeper.

🔎 Real Talk:

  • Who do you listen to online or at church?
  • Are their lives marked by Christ or just catchy words?

🙏 Prayer:

God, help me pay attention to the fruit, not just the show. Teach me to discern truth from lies. Amen.

Kingdom Discipleship, Love In Action

Love Your Neighbor as Yourself

From the series “The Commands of Christ — Love in Action”

“You shall love your neighbor as yourself.”
Matthew 22:39, NASB 1995

This is not a peripheral command—it is the second greatest, according to Christ Himself. Everything written in the Law and the Prophets hangs on it. And yet it may be the most quoted, least obeyed words in the Church today.

Loving your neighbor is not a theory. It is not a metaphor. It is a command.

Not to admire others from afar.
Not to tolerate them from behind a smile.
But to love them—genuinely, practically, sacrificially.

“On these two commandments depend the whole Law and the Prophets.”
Matthew 22:40

The first command is to love God with all your heart. The second is the evidence that the first is true.


We cannot love God and hate people.
We cannot worship Christ and despise His image-bearers.
We cannot call ourselves faithful disciples while walking past the wounded, the poor, the lonely, or the inconvenient.

The command to love our neighbor is not based on their worthiness, but on God’s worthiness—on what He has done in us and what He now wants to do through us.


“For the entire Law is fulfilled in one word, in the statement: ‘You shall love your neighbor as yourself.’”
Galatians 5:14

This is love that walks across the street.
Love that listens when it would rather speak.
Love that gives when no one is watching.
Love that welcomes the stranger, feeds the hungry, prays for the broken, and seeks peace when offended.


The early Church did not love in theory. They loved in deed and truth.

The Epistle to Diognetus (2nd century):
“They share their table with all, but not their bed. They love all men, and are persecuted by all. They repay hatred with kindness… and do good to those who harm them.”
Chapter 5–6

Clement of Rome (c. AD 96):
“Let us be kind to one another according to the compassion and gentleness of Christ… let the strong care for the weak, and the rich provide for the poor, without boasting.”
1 Clement, Ch. 38

Their faith was visible. Their love was active. And their neighbors knew it.


Loving your neighbor means loving the people God has placed near you.
Not just your friends.
Not just the ones who think like you.
But the ones who inconvenience you.
The ones who have nothing to give you in return.
The ones who test your patience, hurt your pride, or sit in silence right next to you.

And yes, it includes the stranger.
Because you were once a stranger to God.
And He welcomed you.


Love your neighbor.
Not with mere sentiment, but with sacrificial mercy.
Not for recognition, but for Christ’s glory.
Not only in the easy moments, but especially in the hard ones.

This is the love that fulfills the Law.
This is the love that reflects our King.


📚 Sources & References

Love Your Neighbor as Yourself

Scripture (NASB 1995):

  • Matthew 22:39–40 – “You shall love your neighbor as yourself…”
  • Galatians 5:14 – “The whole Law is fulfilled in one word…”

Ante-Nicene Sources:

  • The Epistle to Diognetus, Chapters 5–6.
    “They love all men, and are persecuted by all… repay hatred with kindness.”
    [Available at: EarlyChristianWritings.com/diognetus.html]
  • Clement of Rome, 1 Clement, Chapter 38.
    “Let us be kind… let the strong care for the weak…”
    [Available at: NewAdvent.org/fathers/1010.htm]
2–4 minutes

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Devotions, Teen Devotions

🏡 Kingdom Family Devotional — Day 69

“For the gate is narrow and the way is constricted that leads to life…”

Matthew 7:13–14 NASB1995

🚧 Preparing Our Children for the Narrow Path

As mothers guiding older children, we are equipping them for a lifetime of choices. Jesus calls His followers to a constricted, narrow path—a way that isn’t always easy or popular, but one that leads to life.

In a world of options, we help them discern the road that honors Christ. We model perseverance, not popularity. Conviction, not convenience.

🗣 Family Conversation:

  • What does the narrow way look like in our home decisions?
  • How can we support each other when walking it feels lonely?

👣 Kingdom Practice:

Share examples from your life when the narrow way was hard—but right. Ask your children what narrow choices they’re facing.

🙏 Prayer:

Lord, help our family walk the road that leads to life. May we not fear being few, as long as we walk with You. Amen.

Devotions, Teen Devotions

😎 Kingdom Teen Devotional — Day 69

“Enter through the narrow gate…”

Matthew 7:13–14 NASB1995

🛤 Not the Easy Route

Everyone wants to belong, to go with the flow—but Jesus flips the script. The easy road isn’t the right one. The narrow gate means making choices that may cost you—friends, attention, status. But it leads to life.

It’s okay to be different if it means being right with God. Don’t be afraid to walk the unpopular road when you know Jesus is ahead of you.

🔎 Real Talk:

  • Are there ways you’ve been tempted to take the easy road?
  • What does the narrow gate look like in your school or online life?

🙏 Prayer:

Jesus, give me courage to take the narrow way. Help me live for what lasts, not what’s loud. Amen.

Children's Devotionals, Devotions

🧒 Kids Devotional — Day 69

“The road that leads to life is narrow, but the wide road leads to trouble.”

Matthew 7:13–14 (Paraphrased)

🛣 Two Roads

Jesus tells us there are two roads: a big, busy one that lots of people take—but it leads to trouble. Then there’s a smaller road, harder to find, but it leads to life!

🎈 Kingdom Tip:

The right way isn’t always the popular one. Following Jesus means sometimes saying no to what everyone else is doing.

💬 Think About It:

  • Have you ever had to choose the right thing when it was hard?
  • What helps you follow Jesus even when others don’t?

✨ Let’s Pray:

Jesus, help me choose the narrow road. I want to follow You, even when it’s tough. Amen.

Devotions, Women's Devotionals

🌿 Kingdom Living Devotional — Day 69

“Enter through the narrow gate; for the gate is wide and the way is broad that leads to destruction, and there are many who enter through it. For the gate is narrow and the way is constricted that leads to life, and there are few who find it.”

Matthew 7:13–14 NASB1995

🚪 The Narrow Way

Jesus doesn’t paint a rosy picture here. He describes a difficult, unpopular path—constricted and narrow. But it’s the way to life. That narrowness isn’t legalism. It’s loyalty. It’s letting go of our way to follow His.

Culture invites us to the wide path: comfort, compromise, crowd-pleasing. But the narrow way presses us to walk by faith—not sight, not approval, not ease.

🕊 Ante-Nicene Insight:

The early believers understood the narrow way. Their lives, choices, and even their deaths testified to a path that cost much—but gained Christ.

💭 Reflect:

  • Am I trying to widen God’s road to fit my lifestyle?
  • What must I leave behind to walk through the narrow gate?

✨ Prayer:

Lord, lead me on Your narrow path. Even if it’s lonely, help me walk in truth, eyes fixed on You. Amen.

Devotions, Family Devotionals

🏡 Kingdom Family Devotional — Day 68

“So if you, despite being evil, know how to give good gifts…”

Matthew 7:11 NASB1995

🎁 Shaping Our Children’s View of God

As mothers raising older children, we have the opportunity to shape how they understand God’s character. Jesus’ words remind us that God’s heart is generous, wise, and good.

Our children will form their theology not only from sermons—but from how we speak about God in our homes. Let our language be filled with trust in His goodness, even in trials.

🗣 Family Conversation:

  • How do we define “good” in our home? Is it comfort or Christlikeness?
  • Share a time when a hard moment later proved to be a gift in disguise.

👣 Kingdom Practice:

Talk through the difference between earthly gifts and spiritual ones—how peace, forgiveness, or courage are some of God’s greatest blessings.

🙏 Prayer:

Lord, let our family treasure the gifts You give. Teach us to desire what You call good. Amen.

Devotions, Teen Devotions

😎 Kingdom Teen Devotional — Day 68

“So if you, despite being evil, know how to give good gifts…”

Matthew 7:11 NASB1995

🎯 God Is Better Than Good

This verse cuts through every doubt about God’s character. He’s not reluctant. He’s not waiting for you to deserve blessings. He is better than the best version of a human parent.

But those gifts aren’t always status, success, or stuff. Often, they’re strength, clarity, and peace in chaos.

🔎 Real Talk:

  • What kind of “good gifts” are you hoping for?
  • Are you open to receiving what God knows is good—even if it’s different from what you expect?

🙏 Prayer:

God, I’ve expected certain things—and felt let down. But help me see what You give as better. Grow my trust in who You are. Amen.