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3.3 Memorizing Bible References
I've been memorizing whole chapters of the Bible, but it's also very helpful
to memorize assorted key verses, such as John 3:16. The sound techniques
will work great for memorizing the words, but not for the reference. More
cryptic numbers!! But if you have read "How to
Improve Your Memory," then you will have learned a great technique
for memorizing numbers. All you need to do,
then, is to expand the system a little bit so you can keep the chapter
number and verse number straight and also memorize the correct book with it.
There are many ways to do this, and people have apparently written books
about it, but I would encourage you to invent a system on your own...
something that works best for you. There is no right or wrong way! Some may
work better than others, though. I'll now describe my own method. Feel free
to use it, adapt it, or whatever. Currently, my method only covers the New
Testament.
The most obvious approach is to come up with a picture for each book of the
New Testament. Then you can link the book picture with a picture for the
chapter and then a picture for the verse. The only disadvantage with this is
that you're re-using pictures over and over again, and soon you might be
saying to yourself, "was that sword-ham-tissue or sword-hen-tire?"
The mnemonic alphabet is nice because you can use different words for the
same number (e.g., rake, rock, Rick, rag, rook for 47). You can deliberately
choose different words to avoid confusion. So my approach attempts to use
this same productivity with the books.
I've assigned a different letter of the alphabet for each book. There are
only 26 letters in the English alphabet and there are 27 books, so it's a
little bit tricky. But I noticed that Philemon, 2 John, 3 John and Jude only
have one chapter each. So I created a new book from each of these in which
each chapter is one book (Chapter 1 is Philemon, Chapter 2 is 2 John, Chapter 3
is 3 John and Chapter 4 is Jude). In the list below this book is marked with
a star (*). I've also included a memory aid for each letter, but you don't
have to use the aid I've provided... you can use the aid that works best for
you, and you can even re-assign the letters if you find something more
comfortable for you.
Letter Book Memory Aid
------ ------- ------------------------------------------------------
A Acts (A)cts
B 2 Thess "Beta" character in German represents "SS"
C Col (C)olossians
D 2 Peter "Deux Peter" (deux is 2 in French)
E Eph (E)phesians
F * The (F)unny Book
G Gal (G)alatians
H Heb (H)ebrews
I Phil Phil(I)ppians
J John (J)ohn
K Mark Mar(K)
L Luke (L)uke
M Matthew (M)atthew
N 2 Tim "Hen Timothy" (hen = N = 2 in mnemonic alphabet)
O --- (not used)
P 1 Peter 1 (P)eter
Q --- (not used)
R Romans (R)omans
S 1 Thes 1 The(S)salonians
T 1 Tim 1 (T)imothy
U Titus Tit(U)s
V Rev Re(V)elation
W 1 John 1 John sounds like "(W)un jon"
X 1 Cor X in Greek is chi (pron. KI), so think "chi-rinthians"
Y 2 Cor Y comes after X
Z James James sounds like "jam(Z)"
With a single letter for each book, you can now write references in a very
compact format. It's not as easy to read, but it's much easier to memorize,
as you'll soon see. Just write the letter for the book, then the chapter,
then the verse, but always use two digits for the verse. If you want an
entire chapter, omit the verse. (So 1-2 digits represents a chapter and 3-4
digits represents a chapter and a verse.) Examples:
Traditional Compact
-------------- -------
John 3:16 J316
1 Cor 10:13 X1013
Mark 2:5 K205
Titus 2:1 U201
2 John 6 F206
Jude 25 F425
Matthew 6:9-13 M609-13
Acts 4 A4
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New! (October 2010) After working on it for four years, the Memory Page Study Bible
is finally ready! Each book of the Bible has a different picture and color, and each
New Testament book uses the single-letter abbreviations shown above, making it easier
and more fun to memorize Bible verses (in the King James version). To make the Bible
even more useful (rather than just an online engine that spits out verses), every
chapter of the Bible has several links to high quality sermons and commentaries on
that chapter. Click on this address to check it out:
http://bible.thememorypage.net/
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To memorize the compact notation, use the same method as for memorizing
numbers except make sure the first letter of the first word you use is the
same as the first letter of the compact notation. In the case of X, you can
find a word that begins with "ox" because the letter O is not used.
Examples:
Reference Memory Pictures
--------- ---------------------------------------------
J316 jam + dish
X1013 oxide + Saddam (Hussein)
K205 Ken + soul
U201 unseat
F206 fan + sash
F425 fur + nail
M609-13 match + speedometer (ignore extra consonants)
A4 air
Now all you have to do is link the pictures with the verse. That's a little
tricky because the verse is by sound and the reference is by picture. But
you can think of some image in your mind to go with the verse. Also, you
ought to decide whether the verse picture should come first and then the
reference pictures or the other way around. For most people, you'd want the
verse picture first because you want to know where to find a verse when it
comes to mind. But if you like to think of the words when you see only the
reference, you may want to memorize the verse pictures first. Of course, you
can always go backwards in your memory when necessary, but it's more
difficult. Anyway, here's some examples:
"For God so loved the world..."
--> Think of God loving the world by taking the earth in his arms and
squeezing it to give it a big hug. Then he takes some red JAM (perhaps
representing Christ's blood?) and rubs it on the top of the earth. Then he
puts the DISH on top of that and it sticks in place as sort of a hat.
Strange way to love the world! But it's only a picture to help you remember
the verse. Later on, you can think of JAM-DISH to come up with J316 which
means John 3:16!
"... but will with the temptation also make a way to escape ..."
--> Think of being alone in a room wherein there is nothing except you, a
table and a huge dessert (the temptation). God opens the room door so you
can escape. You walk out the door, then close it, and you find that it's
rusty so you got some iron OXIDE on your hand. Then you walk forward but
find that SADDAM Hussein is blocking you in the hallway! Perhaps you can
escape by turning around and running down the hallway in the opposite
direction. There's a lot of details! How do you know which ones are the key
words? Well, usually they're the ones that are the most unusual (the table
and hallway are normal, the iron oxide and Saddam Hussein are unusual).
I hope this document has been helpful to you. Happy remembering!
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Document last modified
16 Oct 10. (C) 1998-2001, 2010
Kevin Jay North; see also full
copyright notice & disclaimers..
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