The Bible isn’t a set of moral examples or religious insights. It’s the record of God’s saving work, fulfilled in Christ, delivered now through words spoken and heard.
Every hearing of the Word in the liturgy is doing (at minimum) three things at once:
it places God’s voice at the center,
reveals Christ as the heart of Scripture,
and creates faith where none could be manufactured.
This isn’t information transfer.
It isn’t religious instruction.
It isn’t spiritual commentary.
The Word is what happens when God speaks, and his people are addressed rather than consulted.
The Word begins where Scripture itself begins. Not with human searching, but with divine speech. “Let there be light,” God says, and light comes into being (Gen. 1:3). At Sinai, Israel doesn’t gather to discuss God. The Lord speaks, and a people are formed (Exodus 20). Through the prophets, God doesn’t offer insights for reflection, but sends a Word that accomplishes what he declares (Isa. 55:10–11).
The pattern is always the same: God speaks first and life follows.
The early Church recognized this immediately. Writing in the second century, St. Justin Martyr describes Christians gathering on the Lord’s Day while the memoirs of the apostles and the writings of the prophets are read. He doesn’t explain why this matters. He simply reports what happens. God speaks and the Church listens.
This is why Scripture is read aloud in the Divine Service. Not summarized. Not paraphrased. Not silently absorbed. It’s spoken publicly, because it’s public speech. God addresses his gathered people now, with the same authority by which he has always spoken.
The pattern is older than the New Testament. Moses commanded Israel to read the law aloud when the people assembled, so that faith would be carried by hearing rather than memory alone (Deut. 31:11). Ezra opens the Book, the people stand, the Word is read, and hearts are cut open and healed (Nehemiah 8). St. Paul instructs Timothy not to neglect the public reading of Scripture, because the Church lives by what she hears, not by what she assumes (1 Tim. 4:13).
Faith, Paul insists, comes by hearing — not by effort, sincerity, or analysis — but by hearing the Word of Christ (Rom. 10:17).
A monk in Northumbria once observed that Scripture read aloud forms the heart before it informs the mind. St. Bede the Venerable believed that the repetition of the readings trained the Church to dwell inside God’s story rather than skim across it. The Word, he taught, does its work by return and rhythm.
This is why the Word isn’t optional. It isn’t decoration between prayers. It isn’t background for reflection. It’s the living voice of God, active and working, exposing and healing at the same time (Heb. 4:12).
And the Word that is read isn’t scattered or random. It’s ordered.
The Church receives the Scriptures in sequence because God has chosen to reveal himself through a story. St. Augustine warned his hearers against treating Scripture as a collection of useful sayings. The Scriptures, he taught, have a center. And that center is Christ. To read them rightly is to be led, again and again, to him.
The Bible isn’t a set of moral examples or religious insights. It’s the record of God’s saving work, fulfilled in Christ, delivered now through words spoken and heard.
Jesus himself teaches the Church how to hear Scripture. On the road to Emmaus, he opens the Scriptures and shows how Moses and the Prophets were always speaking about him (Luke 24:27). The Bible isn’t a set of moral examples or religious insights. It’s the record of God’s saving work, fulfilled in Christ, delivered now through words spoken and heard.
This is why the Psalms hold such a central place. The Church doesn’t only listen to Scripture; she sings it back to God. St. Athanasius once wrote that the Psalms gather the whole range of human speech — fear, joy, sorrow, hope — and place it before God. In the Psalms, Christ gives his own prayer to his people, and teaches them how to speak to the Father.
Then comes the sermon.
The sermon doesn’t stand above the readings, nor does it compete with them. It exists for one reason: to place Christ where he has already promised to be. The sermon doesn’t add authority to Scripture. It serves it.
St. John Chrysostom warned preachers that when Christ isn’t given, the sermon becomes noise, however polished it may be. The task of preaching, he said, is to open the treasure and distribute what’s inside.
The Wittenberg Reformers took this with utmost seriousness. Martin Luther insisted that preaching belongs inside the liturgy because the Word must be delivered, not discussed. The sermon doesn’t explain Scripture away from the people. It presses Scripture into their ears with a promise attached — for you.
This is why the Word comes before the Church’s confession and prayer. God always speaks first. The Church, then, responds to this address rather than out of uncertainty. She doesn’t confess faith she has generated, but faith that has been given. She doesn’t pray to awaken God, but because God has already awakened her.
The Word does all this quietly, persistently, and without spectacle.
It doesn’t require the hearer to feel its power. It works whether the heart thrills or resists. St. Gregory the Great once said that Scripture grows with the reader; not because its meaning changes, but because the Word continues to address new depths of need.
This is why the Word endures at the center of the Divine Service. It doesn’t flatter the listener. It doesn’t entertain the restless. It doesn’t bend to the age. It does what God has always promised it would do.
It speaks.
It creates.
It gives Christ.
And having been spoken and heard, it leaves the Church changed; not because she has mastered it, but because it has done its work on her.
The Word doesn’t wait for readiness.
It makes it.
And where the Word of Christ is heard,
faith is born.