Most Christians read their Bibles the same way they scroll social media—quickly, superficially, already thinking about the next thing. I've done it myself. Checked off my "read three chapters" goal while my brain was making grocery lists.
Scripture meditation works differently. It's less like scanning a news feed and more like savoring a meal prepared by someone who loves you. You're not racing to finish—you're lingering over each bite, noticing flavors you'd miss if you rushed.
This isn't new. Christians have practiced deep Scripture engagement for two thousand years. But somewhere between Sunday school gold stars for memorization and one-year Bible reading plans, many of us lost the art of actually sitting with God's words until they rearrange our insides.
When Joshua received his marching orders as Moses's successor, God didn't tell him to read the Law. He said to meditate on it "day and night" (Joshua 1:8). The Hebrew word there—hagah—means something like muttering under your breath. Picture someone repeating words so often they become second nature, the way you might rehearse a difficult conversation or replay a song lyric stuck in your head.
That's biblical meditation. You're chewing on a verse, turning it over, letting it soak into how you see the world.
Here's what it's not: sitting cross-legged trying to empty your brain. Eastern meditation traditions aim for that blank-slate mental state. Meditating on the word of God goes t...