Useful Directions for Reading and
Searching the Scriptures.
1. Keep an ordinary in reading of them, that ye may be
acquainted with the whole; and make this reading a part of your secret duties.
Not that ye should bind up yourselves to an ordinary, so as never to read by
choice, but that ordinarily this tends most to edification. Some places are more
difficult, some may seem very bare for an ordinary reader; but if you would
look on it all as God's word, not to be slighted, and read it with faith and
reverence, no doubt ye would find advantage. 2. Set a special mark, one
way or other, on those passages you read, which you find most suitable to your
case, condition, or temptations; or such as ye have found to move your hearts
more than other passages. And it will be profitable often to review these.
3. Compare one scripture with another, the more obscure with that which is
more plain, 2 Pet. i. 20. This is an excellent means to find out the sense of
the scriptures; and to this good use serve the marginal notes on bibles. And
keep Christ in your eye, for to him the scriptures of the Old Testament (in its
genealogies, types, and sacrifices) look, as well as those of the New. 4.
Read with a holy attention, arising from the consideration of the majesty of
God, and the reverence due to him. This must be done with attention, Ist, to the
words; 2nd, to the sense; and, 3rd, to the divine authority of the scripture,
and the bond it lays on the conscience for obedience, 1 Thess. ii. 13. 'For this
cause also thank we God without ceasing, because, when ye received the word of
God which ye heard of us, ye received it not as the word of men, but (as it is
in truth) the word of God, which effectually worketh also in you that believe.'
5. Let your main end in reading the scriptures be practice, and not bare
knowledge, Jam. i. 22. 'But ye doers of the word, and not hearers only,
deceiving your own selves.' Read that you may learn and do, and that without any
limitation or distinction, but that whatever you see God requires, you may
study to practice.
6. Beg of God and look to him for his Spirit. For it is the Spirit that
dictated it, that it must be savingly understood by, 1 Cor. ii. 11. 'For what
man knoweth the things of a man, save the spirit of man which is in him? even so
the things of God knoweth no man, but the Spirit of God.' And therefore before
you read, it is highly reasonable you beg a blessing on what you are to read.
7 Beware of a worldly fleshly mind: for fleshly sins blind the mind from
the things of God; and the worldly heart cannot favour them. In an eclipse of
the moon, the earth comes between the sun and the moon, and so keeps the light
of the sun from it. So the world, in the heart, coming betwixt you and the light
of the word, keeps its divine light from you.
8. Labour to be exercised unto godliness, and to observe your case. For an
exercised frame helps mightily to understand the scriptures. Such a Christian
will find his case in the word, and the word will give light to his case, and
his case light into the word.
9. Whatever you learn from the word, labour to put it in practice. For to
him that hath shall be given. No wonder they get little insight into the bible,
who make no conscience of. practicing what they know. But while the stream runs
into a holy life, the fountain will be the freer.