đ Reading: Video Transcript: Bible Study
Lecture 5: Bible Study in Menâs Ministry
Professor Steve Elzinga
All right, welcome back. My name is Steve Elzinga, and youâre in the How to Have a Successful Menâs Ministry course. Whether youâre leading it or whether youâre starting it, it doesnât matter. Hopefully youâre getting something out of it.
And in this lecture, I want to talk about Bible study. I mean, this is probably the heart of a menâs group. Obviously, somehow, we have to get to the Bible. We have to do prayer. We have to do these basic disciplines of the Christian walk. And so this is probably one of the most important lectures in this series.
And I think this is an area where a lot of menâs groups sort of flounder. I think this is an area where a lot of leaders feel inadequate. This is where the menâs group looks to the pastor. âPastor, you lead our Bible study part. We can do everything else, but we donât know how to do this Bible thing.â So a lot of guys are pretty intimidated.
And I want to start thereâwith your own fear.
Facing Our Fears
All right, letâs just be honest, and letâs just go through a few fears that we have.
I think a lot of men, a lot of leadersâperhaps youâyou feel like you lack knowledge or expertise. You didnât go to Bible school. You didnât go to seminary. Now maybe youâre here at CLI, and youâre getting some confidence, but even pastors sometimes feel like they just never know enough, like they have to be experts in the Bible. And who really is that expert?
Or maybe you just have a fear of being judged or criticized. âIâm leading, and maybe Iâm leading it poorly. Maybe I give a bad interpretation. Maybe I donât ask the right questions. Maybe I dominate the group. Maybe I donât know how to discipline the group, how to rein people in.â
And if the Bible study doesnât go well, for whatever reason, then you feel like youâre failing.
Another fear: public speaking. Some men have great thoughts in their heads. They prepare, they have all these points written down, but when they start speaking, itâs like their mind goes blank. Maybe thatâs you. Youâve got great things to say in the solitude of your own room, but when you speak publicly it just comes out as mumbo jumbo. And then you fear people are thinking, âThis guy doesnât really know what heâs doing.â
Thereâs also the fear of rejection or resistance. You try to make a point and people donât follow it, or they resist it. Or maybe someone else is doing better than you are.
Then thereâs insecurity, self-doubt. âI canât do this. I canât lead. Who am I to think that I can lead a menâs group?â
And then the fear of failure. Failure of the Bible study itself, or failure of the menâs ministry as a whole. Maybe attendance dips. Guys are busy with other things, they donât show up. And so every menâs meeting youâre nervous, looking for the cars in the parking lot, and your worth feels dependent on how many men show up.
Another fear: you donât know what to study. You had a study that lasted six weeks and went pretty well, but now what? What are you going to do next week? You go to the Christian bookstore or online, but there are so many options. You order one and itâs not very good. A lot of Bible studies just arenât good. So thereâs tension around what to study.
Fears of the Men in the Group
But itâs not just the leader with fears. The men themselves have fears when they come to Bible study.
Why do some men not like Bible study? Why do they not look forward to it? Not all men, but many men.
First, men fear they lack knowledge. You ask a question and want participation, but no man wants to stand up and risk giving the wrong answer. âWhat if I donât know what Iâm talking about? What if I look foolish?â
Second, men fear being judged. Even if others donât criticize out loud, they worry people are thinking, âThat was dumb. He talks too much. Heâs a blowhard.â
Third, men fear public speaking. Even in a small group, if youâre asked directly, âJohn, what do you think?â suddenly the spotlight is on you. Some men freeze, lose their train of thought, and get embarrassed.
Fourth, men fear rejection or isolation. If I share honestly, people might judge me politically or personally and then avoid me.
Fifth, insecurity and self-doubt. âI donât know if I can succeed in this setting. I donât know if I can contribute.â
Sixth, the fear of vulnerable expression. Sharing your personal story opens you up. âWhat will they do with this information? Will they gossip? Will my weakness be used against me?â
Seventh, men fear lack of relevance. âWeâre studying Ezekiel, but how does this help me deal with my marriage or my family tomorrow morning?â
So both leaders and participants have fears. Thatâs why Bible study can feel like walking through a minefield.
Mitigating Fears: Ground Rules
So what do we do? We admit the fears, and then we set some basic ground rules.
- No fixing unless asked for. If a man shares something personal, donât immediately jump in with advice unless he asks. Otherwise, men feel like theyâre being attacked.
- No sharing outside the group. Whatâs said in the group stays in the group. Trust is essential.
- No wrong answers. Let opinions be shared. The group will naturally gravitate toward the best answers. Donât shut men down.
- No arguing. Men are competitive, and arguments shut others down. Encourage input without turning it into a contest.
- Yes to encouragement. Even if someoneâs answer is off, thank them for sharing. Encourage risk-taking in conversation.
- Yes to participation. Draw out the quiet men. Go around the circle with a simple question. Allow men to âpassâ if they want.
These rules lower the temperature and build safety.
Approaches to Bible Study
There are two basic ways: topical or passage-based.
- Topical. Ask men what topics they want to studyâwork, parenting, marriage, money, social issues. Then find where the Bible speaks about that. Send men home to look up passages. Next week, youâll have plenty of material. Keep it simple.
- Passage or book study. Pick a book of the BibleâActs, Ephesians, the parables. Read together, underline what stands out, and ask each man why he underlined it. Then ask, âWhat do you think God might be saying to you through this?â This allows even men with little knowledge to succeed.
The goal is not to produce theological experts but to help men talk about the Bible and connect it to their lives.
Easing Into Application
One of the biggest challenges in Bible study is application. Many pre-made studies ask questions that are too broad and too deep too quickly. âWhen were you depressed like Elijah?â Thatâs overwhelming.
Instead, ease men in. Start with surface-level, simple questions. For example:
- âTell me three jobs youâve had.â
- âWhich one did you enjoy the most, and why?â
- âWhich one did you dislike the most, and why?â
- âWas there a specific incident that illustrates that?â
Men can answer those. Then slowly go deeper. âHow did you feel when you lost that job? How does Elijahâs story connect with that?â
See, you start wide, then narrow, then apply. Men need help easing into the deeper water.
Conclusion
Bible study in menâs ministry doesnât have to be complicated. Itâs about creating a safe, encouraging space where men can read Scripture together, talk about what stands out, and slowly connect it to their real lives.
Leaders donât have to be experts. Men donât have to have all the answers. What they need is a framework of honesty, encouragement, and relevance. If you can do that, your menâs Bible study can move from intimidating to life-changing.