You Have a Bible. The Question Is — Are You Ready to Open It?
Most Christians who struggle with Bible reading do not struggle because they lack a Bible, a reading plan, or a method. They struggle because of what they bring to it. The distracted mind. The hurried heart. The vague sense that Bible reading is a duty to be checked off rather than a conversation to be entered into. The unconscious assumption that the text will yield its meaning simply because they have opened the cover.
Before You Open Your Bible by Matt Smethurst is a short, brilliant, and deeply practical book that addresses this overlooked dimension of Bible reading — not the methods of Bible study but the posture of the heart that makes genuine encounter with God through his Word possible.
It is, as Glen Scrivener puts it simply and accurately: a little gem of a book.
The Battle of Bible Study Is a War for the Reader’s Heart
Paul David Tripp names the book’s central insight with characteristic precision: “No one ever comes to God’s Word empty-handed. What you bring with you will shape how you receive it, understand it and live it. The battle of Bible study is really a war for the reader’s heart.”
This is the conviction that drives every page of Before You Open Your Bible. Matt Smethurst is not writing about how to do inductive Bible study, how to interpret different genres, or how to apply Scripture systematically. He is writing about the nine heart postures that every Christian should cultivate before opening their Bible — the attitudes, orientations, and preparations of heart that determine whether a Bible reading session is a genuine encounter with the living God or merely a religious exercise that leaves the reader essentially unchanged.
These are not complicated or specialist postures. They are the habits of heart that the Bible itself commends — humility, reverence, expectancy, dependence, attentiveness — and Smethurst opens them up with the clarity, warmth, and genuine spiritual depth that endorsers from Tim Keller to Joni Eareckson Tada to Rick Warren to Paul Tripp have praised.
Nine Heart Postures Before You Open Your Bible
The book is structured around nine short chapters, each addressing one heart posture that Christians need to bring to their reading of Scripture:
1. Remember it’s a gift — approaching Scripture with gratitude rather than obligation, recognising that the privilege of having God’s Word is extraordinary
2. Be humble — coming without agenda, without the assumption that we already know what the text says, open to being surprised and corrected
3. Be prayerful — asking the Spirit who inspired the text to illumine it, recognising that Bible reading is not a self-sufficient intellectual exercise
4. Be expectant — coming with the confidence that God speaks through his Word — that something genuinely life-altering may be in the next passage
5. Meditate — slowing down enough to let the text sink below the surface of the mind and into the heart
6. Remember the big picture — reading every passage within the one story that the whole Bible tells — the story of God’s redemption through Jesus Christ
7. Apply it — reading not merely for information but for transformation — asking what this text demands of how I live
8. Be patient — trusting that God’s Word is doing its work even when the reading feels dry or difficult
9. Community — remembering that Bible reading is not a purely private act but one that connects us to the whole people of God across time
The Most Endorsed Short Book on Bible Reading You Will Find
Few short Christian books arrive with an endorsement list like this one. Tim Keller. Joni Eareckson Tada. Rick Warren. Paul David Tripp. Russell Moore. Burk Parsons. Glen Scrivener. Shai Linne. These are not endorsements of courtesy — they are the enthusiastic commendations of Christian leaders who found something in this book that they had not found elsewhere and felt compelled to say so.
Burk Parsons captures the consensus: “This book is a treasure. It is precisely what the church needs. I know of nothing else quite like it. I want to get this book into the hands of Christians of all ages.”
And Tim Keller names its precise cultural moment: “Today there has been a movement toward a ‘spiritual reading’ of the Bible that puts the greatest emphasis on one’s own experience of the text rather than on a careful, close reading and study of it. Yet Bible study must never be a merely academic exercise either. Matt Smethurst’s little book is a needed re-orientation so that Christians can genuinely hear God’s voice through his written Word.”
Addressing the Two Failure Modes of Bible Reading
Keller’s endorsement identifies the two failure modes that Before You Open Your Bible navigates between — and this is one of the book’s most important contributions.
The first failure mode is subjectivism: the kind of Bible reading that treats the text primarily as a mirror for personal experience, where what I feel as I read is the primary measure of a meaningful reading and where careful attention to what the author actually wrote is a secondary concern. This kind of reading is warm but shallow — it confirms what the reader already believes and rarely generates genuine surprise or challenge.
The second failure mode is academicism: the kind of Bible reading that is technically competent, exegetically careful, and theologically accurate — but leaves the reader’s heart untouched because it never gets past the intellect. This kind of reading is rigorous but cold — it produces knowledge without transformation.
Before You Open Your Bible charts the path between them: a reading that is both careful and devotional, both exegetically serious and spiritually alive — because it is done by a person whose heart is in the right posture before they open the cover.
A Book to Give Away
One of the most striking features of the endorsements for this book is how many of them express an immediate desire to give it to others. Burk Parsons: “I want to get this book into the hands of Christians of all ages.” Glen Scrivener: “Give Matt Smethurst an hour and he will send you back to your Bible with renewed awe and expectancy.”
This impulse is well-founded. Before You Open Your Bible is short enough to read in a single sitting and rich enough to reward multiple readings. It is accessible enough to give to a new believer and substantive enough to challenge a mature one. It is the kind of book that changes how a person reads every subsequent chapter of Scripture — which makes it one of the most valuable gifts a Christian can give to another Christian.
What This Book Covers
- Why what we bring to our Bible reading matters as much as what method we use
- Nine heart postures that prepare the reader to genuinely encounter God through Scripture
- The two failure modes of Bible reading — subjectivism and academicism — and the path between them
- The role of humility, prayer, expectancy, and patience in genuine Bible reading
- How to read Scripture within the big picture of the one story the Bible tells
- The connection between Bible reading and Christian community
- How to approach God’s Word not as duty but as gift — not as religious exercise but as genuine encounter
What Readers Will Gain
- A renewed sense of the majesty and gift of having God’s Word — and a richer desire to read it
- Nine concrete, cultivable heart postures to bring to every Bible reading session
- Freedom from both the shallow warmth of purely experiential Bible reading and the cold competence of purely academic Bible reading
- A deeper, more devotionally alive, and more transforming engagement with Scripture
- A short, giftable resource that will genuinely change how a person reads the Bible for the rest of their life
- The endorsement and encouragement of some of the most trusted voices in contemporary evangelical Christianity
- A book that genuinely delivers on its promise — readers who have an hour to spare will find themselves sent back to their Bibles with renewed awe and expectancy
Who Should Read This Book
- Christians who feel their Bible reading has become dry, dutiful, or thin
- New believers wanting to establish heart-shaped habits of Bible reading from the very beginning
- Mature Christians whose Bible knowledge is solid but whose Bible reading has lost its devotional warmth and wonder
- Bible study leaders and small group facilitators wanting to help their groups approach Scripture more fruitfully
- Pastors and church workers wanting a short, giftable resource that reorients Christians toward God’s Word
- Anyone about to begin a new Bible reading plan who wants to start with the right heart posture
- Christians in India for whom the discipline of daily Bible reading is established but whose engagement with the text has become routine
- Anyone who has ever finished a Bible reading session and felt that something important was missed — and wanted to understand why
What Endorsers Are Saying
“Matt Smethurst’s little book is a needed re-orientation so that Christians can genuinely hear God’s voice through his written Word.” — Tim Keller
“If you wish to hear the Spirit of Jesus speak life-altering words to you, read this and be renewed!” — Joni Eareckson Tada
“Before You Open Your Bible is filled with great wisdom about how you can reconnect with the power of the Christian life: God’s Word.” — Rick Warren
“The battle of Bible study is really a war for the reader’s heart. I love this book! I need this book and so do you.” — Paul David Tripp
“This book is a treasure. It is precisely what the church needs. I know of nothing else quite like it.” — Burk Parsons
“Give Matt Smethurst an hour and he will send you back to your Bible with renewed awe and expectancy. A little gem of a book.” — Glen Scrivener
About the Author
Matt Smethurst is the Managing Editor of The Gospel Coalition and author of Deacons: How They Serve and Strengthen the Church in the Building Healthy Churches series from 9Marks and Crossway. He is a widely trusted voice in contemporary evangelical Christianity — known for his thoughtful, accessible, and Christ-centred writing and his commitment to helping ordinary Christians engage the Word of God with the reverence, expectancy, and depth it deserves. Before You Open Your Bible is his most widely read and widely gifted work — a book that has been described by multiple endorsers as precisely what the church needs and unlike anything else available on its subject.
Anonymous –
Very good
SANAGA NAGAIAH –
Book is Good but cost is high
Sujay Thomas –
N.A.
Susan –
A short book on how to read your bible
David Zahid –
David Zahid –
Sabeela Alexander –