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How does one become proficient in Christianity?

Bonnie77

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This may sound like a strange question because Christianity is on a personal level with Christ. But how does a person really get familiar with the Christian faith? I just seem kind of lost. I grew up in a Christian household. My mom attended church semi regularly and took me with her. My dad only goes to church on holidays. I was baptized as a young child and always participated in Sunday School, Vacation Bible School and was confirmed.

I wasn't exposed to Christianity much outside of church. Now that I'm grown (26) and out on my own I want to learn more. I am feeling drawn to Christ. I found myself a good church and a nice group of Christian friends. But I feel leaps and bounds behind them because I can't quote scripture. I don't have a favorite verse. Ask me to find a certain book within the Bible and I'm going to fumble through the whole Bible looking for it.

Do you have any advice for me to help become a more knowledgeable Christian? First of all I'm reading the Bible. But at the moment I don't feel like I'm comprehending things all that well. I find this to be true as I usually don't have much to contribute to Bible Study. I know there's more to being a Christian than just being able to quote scripture or going to church. But I feel like I'm severely lacking in the knowledge department.

Thank you for any help or advice!
 

spr

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Gaining knowledge to keep up with the talkers is a bad idea. Read of course, but stick to what you like, or parts of the bible the pertain to what your feeling and going through.

The real power of God isn't in what you know. It is the start of a whole new life on the inside. Wholesome thoughts, patience, love, forgiveness, and God's power to empower you to do those things.
 
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Sketcher

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Christianity isn't a skill you become proficient in. It is a life-long (and eternity-long) walk with our Savior. But to answer your questions as to where you're at, it's good that you're in church and Bible study - that's right where you need to be. Ask questions there. You may not have much to contribute now, but you should be in a good environment where you can learn. Learning is not restricted to head knowledge of the Christian doctrines, but it also extends to learning to put the virtues Christ taught into practice - i.e. becoming more generous, more forgiving, more self-controlled, etc.
 
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Emmy

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Dear Bonnie77. The Bible will tell you " Repent," and " to Be Borne Again."
Change from being selfish and unloving to being loving and caring.
In Matthew 22: 35-40: Jesus tells a Lawyer: " The first and great Commandment is: Love God with all thy heart, with all thy soul, and with all thy mind. The second is like it: Love thy neighbour as thyself." Then Jesus points out: " On these two Commandments hang all the Law and the Prophets." God wants our love, freely given and No conditions tagged on.
We start treating all we know and all we meet, friends and not friends, we treat them as we would love to be treated, always kindly and with friendly words. People around us will treat us the same as we treat people, and Love is very catching. A Christian`s great weapon is Love, with love we will overcome all dislike and wrong behaviour.
Matthew 7: 7-10: tells us: " ask and ye shall receive," then we thank God and share all Love and Joy with all around us. We keep asking for Love and Joy, then share it all around, also the occasional helping hand. God will see our sincere efforts, and God will Bless us. We might stumble and forget at
times, but then we ask God to forgive us, and carry on loving and caring.
God is Love, and God wants loving sons and daughters. We keep on loving and gradually we turn into the men and women which God wants us to become. Jesus our Saviour will help and guide us, JESUS IS THE WAY.
I say this with love, Bonnie. Greetings from Emmy, your sister in Christ.
 
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Peripatetic

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I think it *is* a good idea to pursue Christianity - not as a skill per se, but in the same way that the body needs exercise. The best advice I can give is:

1. Regular scripture reading using slower-paced reading plans and a good study Bible.
2. Seek to understand different interpretations and perspectives - including those that don't match with yours.

I like reading plans because they ensure that I'm not hand-picking what I want to read. I like a slow pace because it ensures that I have a smaller number of passages to consider and "dig into". I'm currently working through a reading plan that focuses on the Epistles.

I think #1 and #2 compliment each other, and each provides protection against distortions that come from too much of one without the other. Reading the Bible without context, history, and different Christian perspectives will be distorted by confirmation bias. But going out and reading a bunch of stuff on the Internet without a strong foundation of scripture will just make you go in circles.

It's an iterative process of shaping and it takes time. No need to rush it! And don't expect distill everything down to simple formulas. Sometimes there are Biblical truths that appear to be contradictory, but we need to accept both and live within the tension.
 
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Water Cross

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As a Christian you have a relationship with the Holy Spirit inside you. Meditate, find a quiet time, take a walk, whatever brings you peace away from the everyday, and find that spirit inside you. Christ isn't someone that comes to you because you read the Bible. He isn't only found there either. Jesus is a spirit and he knows his flock. If you were called to be one of the church of Christ, a Christian in other words, you're interlinked with Jesus. Now, you just have to listen for his word to you. In matters of the Bible, if you want to learn more about that, there are a great deal of free online Bible study sites. Search, free Bible study courses, and see what pops. Trust your heart. God will never lead you wrong.
This may sound like a strange question because Christianity is on a personal level with Christ. But how does a person really get familiar with the Christian faith? I just seem kind of lost. I grew up in a Christian household. My mom attended church semi regularly and took me with her. My dad only goes to church on holidays. I was baptized as a young child and always participated in Sunday School, Vacation Bible School and was confirmed.

I wasn't exposed to Christianity much outside of church. Now that I'm grown (26) and out on my own I want to learn more. I am feeling drawn to Christ. I found myself a good church and a nice group of Christian friends. But I feel leaps and bounds behind them because I can't quote scripture. I don't have a favorite verse. Ask me to find a certain book within the Bible and I'm going to fumble through the whole Bible looking for it.

Do you have any advice for me to help become a more knowledgeable Christian? First of all I'm reading the Bible. But at the moment I don't feel like I'm comprehending things all that well. I find this to be true as I usually don't have much to contribute to Bible Study. I know there's more to being a Christian than just being able to quote scripture or going to church. But I feel like I'm severely lacking in the knowledge department.

Thank you for any help or advice!
 
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Harry3142

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Bonnie77-

First, get a Bible that you understand. Personally, I recommend the NASB Study Bible, as it is an accurate translation that people of today understand, as well as its having copious notes which can help you understand the passages more clearly.

Begin your reading with The Gospel of St. Mark, and then go to The Gospel of St. Luke and The Gospel of St. John (Matthew's gospel was written primarily for Jews who were familiar with the Mosaic Law, so in order to read and understand that book you need to first become familiar with the Mosaic Law). After reading those books, read Romans more than once, as it is identified as teaching the basics of Christian theology.

A word of caution: If someone tries to convince you that you need for them to tell you what Scripture 'really teaches', do not accept this as fact. There are those who would have us put our Bibles into drawers and instead let them tell us what Scripture is teaching. In each and every case where I have encountered such people (and in my 68 years I have encountered quite a few of them) their leaders' real agenda has been to promote their own desire for wealth and power or promote the agenda of a special-interest organization, even if that means leading others astray. You are perfectly capable of understanding what Scripture teaches. Don't let anyone tell you differently.
 
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Bonnie77 said in post 1:

Do you have any advice for me to help become a more knowledgeable Christian?

The best way to become a more knowledgeable Christian is to read every word of the Bible (Matthew 4:4), over and over again. It ends up explaining itself once what it says has become engrained in your memory, and you see the connections between verses regarding something in one place in the Bible and other verses regarding that same thing in other places in the Bible. It's by comparing and combining related verses from different places in the Bible that we arrive at correct doctrine (Isaiah 28:9-10; 1 Corinthians 2:13).

It's also a good practice to always start and end each reading session with a prayer for understanding and remembrance of the whole Bible.

One great way to read the whole Bible, over and over, is to think of it as 7 volumes:

1. Genesis to Deuteronomy
2. Joshua to Esther
3. Job to Song of Solomon
4. Isaiah to Malachi
5. Matthew to Acts
6. Romans to Philemon
7. Hebrews to Revelation

You can read a chapter in each volume every day. This will keep you current in every part of the Bible. After a while, there won't be any part that you haven't read recently enough to remember what it says. When you reach the end of a volume, simply start again at the 1st chapter of that volume. In this way, you will be cycling through smaller volumes like #6 and #7 much more often than larger volumes like #2, but the smaller volumes are so much more dense with doctrine that it can be profitable to read them over and over more often.

Also, you can listen to recordings of people reading the Bible whenever you need to keep your eyes on something else while you listen (such as keeping your eyes on the road while you drive, or on a cutting board while you're preparing food, or on your clippers while you're trimming a hedge). In this way, you can listen to the Bible throughout the day, whenever you don't need to be thinking about something else (such as at your workplace). Also, you can listen to the Bible even while you're going to sleep, so it will become part of even your subconscious mind.

Bonnie77 said in post 1:

I know there's more to being a Christian than just being able to quote scripture or going to church.

That's right.

If people haven't become Christians yet, all they need to do in order to become Christians is believe Jesus of Nazareth is the Christ and the human/divine Son of God (John 20:31, John 3:36; 1 John 2:23), and that he died on the Cross for their sins and rose from the dead on the 3rd day (1 Corinthians 15:1-4, Luke 24:46-47, Matthew 20:19, Matthew 26:28).

After people become Christians, to help develop and keep up their relationship with God, they should pray to him every day, such as with the Lord's prayer (Matthew 6:9-13), praising and worshipping him (Revelation 4:11), confessing their sins to him (1 John 1:9), asking him for what they need today (Luke 11:3), and thanking him for all he's given them (Philippians 4:6). And throughout the day, they should immediately bring to him in prayer anything they become worried about at anytime (Philippians 4:6-7).

They should also fellowship with other Christians every day (Hebrews 3:13, Hebrews 10:25), at least in some fashion (Matthew 18:20), such as on this forum, being exhorted by them and exhorting them in turn (Hebrews 3:13).

They also need to examine themselves to make sure they're truly in the faith (2 Corinthians 13:5, Proverbs 28:26, Proverbs 14:12). The way to do this is to read every word of the Bible (Hebrews 4:12, Matthew 4:4) and see if they accept everything it teaches as having come from God (John 8:47; 2 Timothy 3:16). For just as a true faith will initially come from reading (or hearing) what the Bible teaches (Romans 10:17; 2 Timothy 3:15), so people can know they're remaining in the true faith if they continue to believe everything the Bible teaches came from God (John 8:31b; 2 Timothy 4:2-4; 1 Timothy 4:1, Mark 8:35-38).

In order to have any real relationship with Jesus, God the Father, and the Holy Spirit (Matthew 28:19), most importantly people must believe the right things about Jesus (John 14:6-7): that he's God the Word made flesh (John 1:1,14), that he's the Christ (1 John 5:1; 1 John 2:22), and that he's the only begotten (only born) Son of God (John 3:16,36; 1 John 2:23), meaning he's the only person ever born without any human father (Luke 1:34-35). And people must believe Jesus lived a perfectly sinless life (Hebrews 4:15; 2 Corinthians 5:21) and so could die on the Cross for people's sins and rise from the dead on the 3rd day (1 Corinthians 15:1-4). He rose and will remain forever in an immortal flesh and bones human body (Luke 24:39; 2 John 1:7) as saved people's eternally-human high priest/mediator (1 Timothy 2:5, Hebrews 2:16-17, Hebrews 7:24-26).

Once people come into faith in Jesus, they must obey him, God the Father, and the Holy Spirit by repenting from their sins and getting water-immersion (burial) baptized into Jesus (Acts 2:38, Romans 6:3-5, Galatians 3:27). And they must partake of the divine flesh and blood of the bread and wine of communion (John 6:53, Matthew 26:26-28; 1 Corinthians 10:16; 1 Corinthians 11:27-30). And they can get hands laid on them to receive Holy Spirit baptism (Acts 8:17) and one or more of the Holy Spirit's wonderful Spiritual gifts (Acts 19:6; 1 Corinthians 12:8-10). Then, washed from their sins by water baptism (Acts 22:16) and empowered by the Holy Spirit within them (Acts 1:8, Ephesians 3:16), they must each and every day for the rest of their lives deny themselves, take up their crosses and follow Jesus (Luke 9:23; 2 Corinthians 5:15), by continuing in the faith to the end (Hebrews 3:6,12,14, Hebrews 6:4-8, John 15:6; 2 Timothy 2:12), by repenting to the end from every sin they commit (Hebrews 10:26-29; 1 Corinthians 9:27, Luke 12:45-46), and by doing to the end the particular spiritual works which he's given them as individuals to do (Mark 13:34, Romans 12:6-8, Titus 3:8).

But if they as believers wrongly employ their free will to refuse to do these things, then they can't expect to have any continued real relationship with Jesus, God the Father, and the Holy Spirit. For a continued real relationship with them requires people not only continue to believe in them, but also continue to obey them (John 15:10, John 14:21,23). Faith without works is dead (James 2:20), and can't ultimately save people (James 2:14-26, Romans 2:6-8, Matthew 7:21, Hebrews 5:9).
 
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It sounds like you are headed in a good direction. In addition to what others have said -- especially the ongoing nature of the faith walk -- start with what interests you. You will find people who insist memorization is important, or church history, or end time awareness, or asceticism, or street evangelism -- but that is because God knows each of us individually, and expects us to carry out our lives uniquely.

That might leave you feeling more uncertain, but pay attention to what you are curious about, impassioned by, convinced of. Start pursuing those directions, and they will take you further. Learning will feel more focused if you pursue what's already on your mind.

Ask His Holy Spirit to lead you.
 
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