Study Deeply

February 16, 2026

There is a kind of work in ministry that no one applauds and very few see. It is slow. It is quiet. It is mentally exhausting. And it is absolutely essential.

If you are called to preach, teach, or lead with the Word of God, you must carve out time every week to study deeply. Not casually. Not hurriedly. But deeply.

Paul told Titus to “teach what accords with sound doctrine” (Titus 2:1). That assumes something. It assumes you know what sound doctrine is. It assumes you have labored in the text long enough to understand it before you attempt to explain it. Paul also told Timothy to present himself as a workman who does not need to be ashamed, rightly handling the word of truth (2 Timothy 2:15). That word workman is not accidental. It implies effort. Diligence. Focus.

You do not accidentally handle Scripture well.

In ministry, availability matters. Being present with people matters. Shepherding conversations matter. But if you have a preaching or teaching role, depth in the Word is not optional. It is foundational. And depth does not happen in leftover moments between meetings.

It requires carving out protected time.

That means turning off notifications. Closing the office door. Blocking the calendar. Sitting with a text longer than feels efficient. Reading it again. Asking better questions. Wrestling with context. Comparing passages. Letting the Word confront you before you attempt to use it.

This work is hard work. It demands attention in a world designed to fracture attention. It often feels unproductive because no one sees it happening. But it is the quiet work that gives weight to everything else you do.

When study is neglected, two things happen. First, your teaching grows thin. You may still communicate clearly. You may still hold attention. But depth will be missing. Second, people begin to feel like interruptions. When preparation is unfinished, meetings and ministry conversations can feel like obstacles standing between you and your outline. That is a dangerous place for a shepherd to live.

Deep study, done early in the week, frees you later in the week. When you have wrestled with the text and prepared diligently, you are able to meet with people without resentment. You are not scrambling. You are not guarded. You are not protecting your time as fiercely because the most important work has already been done.

Study deeply so you can minister freely.

Carving out that focused time is not selfish. It is stewardship. It protects the integrity of your teaching. It protects your joy in ministry. And it serves the people who will sit under your care.

The slow, quiet, hard work of study may not be visible, but it shapes everything visible. If you want to teach what accords with sound doctrine, and if you want to handle the Word faithfully, you must give it your best attention.

Depth in the text produces freedom in the ministry.


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Travis Agnew

Travis Agnew serves as the Lead Pastor of Rocky Creek Church in Greenville, SC.