Bible Memory Tips & Tricks

Bible Memory Tips and Tricks

One of my New Year’s resolutions this year is to make Bible memory more of a priority. So in January, I started memorizing the book of James. Memorizing scripture doesn’t come quite as easily these days as it did when I was a kid, but the following tips and tricks have helped speed my progress significantly. (Four chapters down, one to go! 📖)

17 Tips for Making Bible Memory Easier:

You needn’t do all of these suggestions for every passage you commit to memory, but the more senses you use in learning the verses, the more firmly cemented they’ll be in your brain.

Write the verses out by hand

Copy each verse you are trying to memorize at least once in your own handwriting. Doing so helps you to clarify the words in your mind and keep them all in the proper order.

Writing James 1 by hand

Pray for God’s help in memorizing

He promises to give wisdom to all who request it. And since memorizing Scripture is one of the best ways I know to acquire wisdom, you should definitely ask God to help you in the endeavor.

Do your part by working on memorizing passages faithfully, then you can rely on the LORD to bring His Word to mind as needed!

Put the verses in prominent places

Print out multiple copies of your memory verses (you may even want to laminate them for durability) then tape them to the bathroom mirror, stick them to refrigerator, or prop them up on the windowsill above the kitchen sink where you’ll be frequently reminded to work on them.

Alternate between reading aloud and reciting from memory until you can recite them without peeking.

Set the verses to music

Assign the words to a familiar tune or make up a new melody of your own. Either way, singing God’s Word makes memorizing it almost effortless.

Guitar

Learn the verses in context

Whenever you’re trying to learn a longer passage, work on a big block of verses at once rather than committing them to memory one at a time. Memorizing in context helps you keep the verses in the proper order and provides a richer understanding of their meaning, as well.

Recite memory verses aloud

When practicing your verses, don’t just rehearse them silently to yourself. Say them out loud if at all possible, as hearing the words while speaking them provides two more channels to get them into your brain.

Do this at least two or three times a day when you are first beginning to work on a new passage to better familiarize yourself with the verses.

Record your own voice reading the verses

Another way to speed up the memorizing and review process is by recording yourself reading the passage. Then you can listen to your recording as you’re washing dishes, folding clothes, running errands, drifting off to sleep, or during any number of other mindless activities that fill your day.

Voice Recording

Use a dry erase board

Write the passage you are trying to memorize on the white board by hand, then read it aloud. Next, erase two or three words at a time, and practice saying it while filling in the blanks. Continue this process until no words remain on the board, and you can quote the entire passage from memory.

Recite verses in rhythm

Try clapping the words to a beat or reciting them to the rhythm of your steps as you walk or run.

Use your hands

Learn sign language to accompany the verses, or create your own hand motions to correspond to the verses. The body movement and muscle memory will reinforce your memorizing efforts.

hand motions

Memorize with a friend

It’s always good to have an accountability partner. Even if you are working on different passages, find a friend or family member and take turns reciting to one another at least once a week whatever verses you are currently memorizing.

If you are both learning the same portion of Scripture, you can just quote the passage together, provided you coordinate in advance which translation you’ll use.

Systematically review verses you’ve already learned

Charlotte Mason’s recommended a method of Scripture memory that allowed for scheduled review of older memory verses. Whatever passage you are currently memorizing gets reviewed once a day. As newer passages are learned, older ones get moved to an increasingly less frequent review schedule: every other day, then once weekly, then once monthly.

Mason recommended writing your verses on index cards and filing them in a box, but if you are memorizing whole chapters, you might try storing full-sized pages in a three ring binder under a similar set of index tabs. These tabs should include one marked “daily,” two marked “odd” and “even,” seven marked with the days of the week, and a set numbered 1-31. (So on Thursday, February 9, I’d review the verses under four tabs: daily, odd, Thursday, and number 9.)

Use the verse in artwork

Doodle the words, color them in, or incorporate them into some other artistic endeavor such as cross-stitch, calligraphy, or wood burning. Doing so provides yet another way to embed God’s Word more deeply in your memory.

To Everything a Season

Build a “memory palace” to assist in memorizing

This centuries-old technique has revolutionized the way I memorize. It takes a little more effort up front, but greatly multiplies the speed with which I can memorize entire chapters of the Bible and vastly improves recall, as well.

To use it, you must associate each verse with a string of mental images. If you picture the book as a house, and each chapter as a room (or — for longer chapters — a series of rooms) in the house, then each verse will be an item in that room.

I group all the items in sets of five (so I can easily fast forward through the chapter if asked to recite a particular verse toward the end of it), and I always take the items in the same order (which I’ve written down so I can refer back to it when memorizing new passages on the same framework).

By way of example, the seventh item in my memory palace is a small china cabinet that stood in the corner of the dining room in a house my husband and I built in 2005 and lived in for many years. (Since it’s already so familiar, it makes the perfect “memory palace” for me.)

China Cabinet

That china cabinet was an unexpected gift, which is what I remember when quoting James 1:7 (“Let not that man expect that he will receive anything from the Lord.”)

But I also used the cabinet to store and protect my fine china, which is the aspect I think about when quoting Psalm 121:7 (“The Lord shall preserve the from all evil; He shall preserve thy soul.”).

And when quoting Philippians 2:7 (“but emptied himself, by taking the form of a servant, being born in the likeness of men.”), I picture a maid taking all the china out of the cabinet so that it stands empty.

In each of these instances, I’m still picturing the seventh item in the room, but the meaning shifts slightly from one passage to the next. Do you see how that works?

Draw tiny pictures

Okay, I’ll admit that last trick is a little advanced. The first several times I read about it, it sounded way too complicated to me, too. Here’s a similar but more concrete idea for you: Sketch little pictures for different words in the verses you’re trying to memorize — like a rebus book.

If I were going to use this technique on John 3:16 (“For God so loved the world, He gave…”), I might replace the word “For” with a number 4, draw a heart for the word “loved,” a globe for “world,” a present for “gave,” and so forth.

The important thing is to draw these little pictures yourself, even if you aren’t artistic. The process of doing it is as big a help to memorizing the passage as reviewing the rebus verses that result.

Rebus Verses

Abbreviate your memory verses

For purposes of review, it is sometimes helpful to write just the first letter of each word in a verse. That way, you’ll have a little prompt when practicing, especially if you are reciting your verses without anybody around who can check you.

Use technology to make memorizing easier

There are lots of computer programs and phone apps out there designed to help you commit Bible verses to memory. Some are even free.

One of the apps my daughters introduced me to is called Verses. I think the original version is free — just click the (very small) link at the bottom of the page that says you aren’t interested in upgrading to basic or pro. It includes KJV plus three other translations, with lots of different tasks to help you memorize (to access more versions of the Bible, you’d have to pay an annual fee).

You can work on single verses at a time, longer passages, or entire chapters. The app includes several different activities (such as listening to the verses, reading them aloud, typing them out, or filling in the blanks) to aid you in memorizing them.

Arms with Bible

6 Benefits to Memorizing Scripture:Hides God’s Word in your heart

This is something we are commanded in Scripture to do.

“Therefore shall ye lay up these my words in your heart and in your soul, and bind them for a sign upon your hand, that they may be as frontlets between your eyes.” (Deuteronomy 11:18)

Boosts mental health

Memory work establishes new neural pathways and improves brain function. And, since memorizing Scripture involves learning new skills and engaging in cognitive stimulation, it may even help protect against Alzheimer’s.

“And do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind, that you may prove what is that good and acceptable and perfect will of God.” (Romans 12:2)

Provides comfort in trials

Having the Truth of God’s Word cemented in your memory provides a guiding light and firm rock of refuge during life’s inevitable storms.

“You will keep him in perfect peace, whose mind is stayed on You, because he trusts in You.” (Isaiah 26:3)

Proves useful for spiritual warfare

Jesus quoted Scripture to combat Satan’s temptations in the wilderness, and we’d do well to follow His example. The more verses you memorize, the more you’ll have in your arsenal when you’re forced to do battle.

“Take the helmet of salvation and the sword of the Spirit, which is the word of God.” (Ephesians 6:17)

Helps you view the world through a Biblical lens

What better way to see things from an eternal perspective than to look at them through the filter of God’s unchanging Word?

“Then the eyes of those who see will not be blinded, And the ears of those who hear will listen.” (Isaiah 32:3)

Enables you to pray with the mind of Christ

We can trust that when we are praying the words of Scripture over a matter, we are praying in accordance with God’s revealed will.

“You may ask me for anything in my name, and I will do it.” (John 14:14)

Pretty Bible Memory Card

Free Scripture Memory Resources:

I hope by now you are realizing that Scripture memory is entirely doable and is a great way to invest your time and attention. Are you ready to get started? If so, check out the following printable resources. They’re all available for FREE through my family website and will provide further guidance if you aren’t sure where to begin.

Pretty Bible Verse Cards – a free printable set of 16 verses for you to memorizeCopy Writing Worksheets – 60+ penmanship practice sheets featuring select Bible verses (in your choice of manuscript or cursive)Scripture Memory Cards – these 60+ memory verse cards correspond to the copy work sheets above; each has a Bible verse on one side of the card and a memory-prompting illustration on the reverseBible Verse ABCs – 26 more Bible memory verses — one for each letter of the alphabet, chosen especially with children in mindBeautiful Bible Bookmarks – these eight memory verses are printed with gorgeous graphics, perfect for posting throughout your home (or for marking your place in the book you’re reading)50 Bible Verses Everyone Should Know – this handy checklist will keep you busy memorizing for a whileOne-Year Bible Reading Plan – it’s amazing how reading through the Bible regularly familiarizes you with Scripture, which in turns makes it easier to find and memorize verses that are especially meaningful for you

Bible Reading Plan

Motivating Kids to Memorize Scripture:

The Bible commands us to “teach [God’s word] to your children, talking about it when you sit in your house, when you walk in the road, when you lie down, and when we rise up.” (Deuteronomy 11:19). So… what are some practical ways we can help children hide Scripture in their hearts? Try some of the following ideas:

Offer rewards

Even a gold star on a memory chart was enough to motivate me to memorize as a kid. I remember one Vacation Bible School teacher offering us a piece of candy for every verse we memorized one summer, and my friends and I completely cleaned up! The candy we received is long gone, but I can still quote most of the verses I learned.

Sponsor a contest

There’s nothing like a little friendly competition to get kids excited about doing hard things.

Work on it as a family

Review verses at the dinner table or recite together on long car rides.

Model it

Let your children see you prioritizing Scripture memory in your own life.

Play Scripture songs

Regularly play Scripture set to music in the background as your family is doing chores, cleaning house, riding in the car, etc.

Enroll in Awanas

Take advantage of local church programs such as Bible Drill or Awanas that focus on memorizing Scripture.

Play Bible Memory Games

Challenge kids to play games or take quizzes where memorized verses gives them an advantage.

Boy reading Bible

Bible Memory Tips and Tricks

Bible Memory Tips and Tricks

The post Bible Memory Tips & Tricks appeared first on Loving Life at Home.

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Published on February 09, 2023 14:18
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