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Expository Preaching: Sermons, Thoughts, and Resources of Todd Linn

Preaching Post Fridays

Why Pastors Should Memorize Scripture

Before I entered the ministry, I worked for many years as a parole officer for the state of Georgia. I have frequently joked that being a parole officer prepared me for pastoral ministry (haha). People nearly always chuckle at that remark, but the more I’ve reflected on those earlier years, the more I’ve come to believe my tongue-in-cheek statement has proven true. Being immersed in what I would later understand as “the doctrine of depravity” on full display prepared me for future ministry challenges.

But there is another way those earlier years were helpful: I had begun memorizing scripture during my lunch hour. God used a conference speaker to awaken my desire for the Word, and over the next couple of years, the Lord enabled me to commit to memory over 300 verses of scripture. That season blessed my soul as I grew in my Christian faith. And I would later discover how God would use those scriptures as a foundation for future ministry and seminary studies. While I no longer follow as strict a plan as in those earlier years, I still believe in the value of scripture memorization and recommend the discipline for all Christians, especially pastors. Here are three reasons why:

1) Memorizing Scripture Can Strengthen Your Preaching

While preaching styles and convictions vary, any preacher may improve by ongoing scripture memorization and meditation. For example, I prefer expositional verse-by-verse teaching through passages of scripture. Thus, I’ll have one primary text I’m preaching, the “preaching passage,” but I will usually include parallel or relevant scriptures that supplement the text. Often, in the very act of preaching, the Holy Spirit will bring to my mind a memorized Scripture that complements the thoughts and ideas of the sermon.

2) Memorizing Scripture Can Supplement Your Pastoring

Just as in preaching, when pastors have been regularly memorizing and meditating upon scripture, they find the Spirit frequently bringing particular verses to mind helpful to pastoral care and counseling. For example, verses recently recited in one’s quiet time become useful later while praying during a hospital visit. While counseling church members, memorized scriptures addressing the very issues at hand often leap from the pastor’s heart, bringing further clarity to the counseling session.

3) Memorizing Scripture Can Safeguard Your Purity

In that wonderfully poetic psalm on the Word, the Psalmist joyfully declares to God, “Your word I have hidden in my heart, that I might not sin against You” (Psalm 119:11). Memorizing scripture is no guarantee we will never stumble in the faith, but it certainly will help us stay on the right path. Perhaps greater than any other temptation, pastors seem especially vulnerable to the pitfalls of personal purity. Regularly memorizing and meditating upon scripture fosters healthy thinking (Philippians 4:8) and arms us with crucial weaponry to withstand the Enemy’s attacks (Ephesians 6:11-17).

“How sweet are Your words to my taste, sweeter than honey to my mouth! Through Your precepts I get understanding; therefore I hate every false way.”
(Psalm 119:103-104)

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