Today, April 7, 2026, the Sunday after D-Day, I am going honor all the Americans who secured religious liberty for me and my fellow Americans by reading at least one Bible chapter per day and also reading 35 chapters of the Bible per week.
The Bible is the best-selling book in human history, with over 5 billion copies sold . It has shaped laws, literature, and lives for millennia. But here's the question that actually matters: Does reading it change you?
The Power of 4: The Threshold Effect
The Center for Bible Engagement (CBE) studied over 100,000 Christians and discovered something astonishing:
- 0–1 days/week of reading Scripture → no meaningful change in their life
- 2–3 days/week of reading Scripture → small, inconsistent change in their life
- 4+ days/week → dramatic, nonlinear transformation change in their life
This is the famous Power of 4.
(See: Understanding the Bible Engagement Challenge: Scientific Evidence for the Power of 4, Arnold Cole, Ed.D. & Pamela Caudill Ovwigho, Ph.D. December 2009, PDF and Center for Bible Engagement. (2024, May 31). Bible Engagement and "The Power of 4": A Key to Spiritual Growth and Center for Bible Engagement. (2012). Bible Engagement as the Key to Spiritual Growth: A Research Synthesis. CBE White Paper and Center for Bible Engagement. (2024). Bible Engagement Research Overview and Scripture better self-care than exercise, friend-time by Diana Chandler, Baptist Press, July 11, 2025 and State of the Bible: Scripture reading spurs generosity, brotherly love, Baptist Press, November 6, 2025 and 4 Great Reasons to Read Your Bible in 2024 (Australian Christians)
It is not a “read more” effect. It is a threshold effect — a sudden jump in transformation once Scripture becomes a consistent part of life.
What changes at 4+ days/week?
Behavioral outcomes (20–62% reductions):
- overeating
- overspending
- pornography
- extramarital sex
- drinking to excess
- gambling
- gossiping
- lying
- lashing out in anger
- neglecting family
Emotional outcomes (14–60% reductions):
- fear/anxiety
- discouragement
- loneliness
- bitterness
- difficulty forgiving
- feeling spiritually stagnant
- feeling like you can’t please God
- feeling like you must hide
- destructive thoughts
Proactive faith outcomes (218–416% increases):
- sharing faith
- discipling others
- memorizing Scripture
- charitable giving
These are not small effects. These are not “g = 0.30” improvements. These are identity‑level transformations.
Why Scripture produces identity change
Scripture is not merely information. It is:
- revelation
- correction
- renewal
- confrontation
- comfort
- formation
- the voice of God
This is why CBE defines Bible engagement as:
Receiving, reflecting on, and responding to God’s Word.
Not reading. Engaging.
This is the engine of Christian transformation.
The Mind of Christ:
Scripture teaches that Christian transformation includes receiving “the mind of Christ” (1 Cor 2:16)—not omniscience, but a Spirit‑given way of seeing, discerning, valuing, and interpreting reality. Paul describes this renewed mindset as humility and self‑giving love (Phil 2:5), the re-patterning of desires and judgments (Rom 12:2), the setting of the mind on the things above (Col 3:1–3), and the Spirit’s ongoing renewal of the inner world (Eph 4:23). This is not metaphorical language; it is the New Testament’s description of a new mental operating system. The mind of Christ is formed as believers engage Scripture, softened through prayer, shaped in worship, and ignited by the Spirit. In other words, the Four Rivers of Bible reading, prayer, worship, and the renewal of the Spirit do not merely improve behavior—they reconfigure the interpretive framework of the self. They give the believer Christ’s way of seeing, which is the foundation of identity transformation.
Please see: The Four Streams of Christian Transformation: Scripture, Prayer, Worship, and the Renewal of the Spirit

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