“Ladies Abd Gentlemen, This is a Bible” — Start with the Fundamentals
There’s a famous moment in American football lore that teaches us something about learning anything well — even Scripture.
In the summer of 1961, legendary NFL coach Vince Lombardi walked into Green Bay Packers training camp with a group of professional athletes — men who had played at the highest level, some of whom were just a play away from a championship. Instead of launching immediately into advanced plays, schemes, or conditioning, he did something surprisingly simple. He held up a football and said:
“Gentlemen, this is a football.”
That’s it.
The coach of one of the most successful teams in NFL history started not with strategy or talent, but with fundamentals.
Lombardi wasn’t patronizing his players — he was reminding them that mastery starts with basics. The Packers went on to win five NFL championships under his leadership, including the first two Super Bowls, and he became a symbol of discipline, clarity, and excellence in leadership and learning.
Why Start with the Basics?
Most of us bring assumptions into a Bible class. We’ve heard verses quoted, doctrines summarized, songs that sound familiar. But before diving into layered theology — grace, law, covenant, dispensations — we need to be grounded:
This is a Bible.
This is God’s word.
Before we can rightly divide (as Paul commanded in 2 Timothy 2:15), we need shared vocabulary and shared walls of the building we’re about to enter. And it’s okay to start there — even necessary. Without the basics, everything above them is shaky.
A Simple Starting Framework
If I were to teach a class on Scripture from scratch, here’s how I’d begin:
-
Introduce the Book:
This is the Bible — God’s Word. Different translations, same core message. -
Handle With Care:
2 Timothy 2:15 — teach them what it means to handle the word accurately and carefully. Greek is orthotemeo meansto cut straight or patrician. -
Permission to Explore:
Ephesians 3:1–2 — even Paul acknowledges there is unfolding revelation and stewardship, administartion dispensation if you will of God’s mystery given to Paul. -
Walk Through the Scope:
Turn to Genesis 1 — creation, God speaks.
Then flip to Malachi 4 — the last book of the Old Testament.
Show them how the Bible was collected — not bound by apostles, but recognized over time. -
Explain the Volume, Not the Wow:
It's divided into the Old and New Testament — that’s a later title, not something the writers themselves gave. Knowing that saves a lot of confusion.
Why This Matters
Going into theology before knowing the text is like teaching complex football plays before kids know what a football is. You might get some players moving the right way by accident, but you won’t build a team that understands the game.
What Lombardi did with pro athletes — start with the basics — is something Christian teaching could do more often:
-
Start with Scripture itself.
-
Teach people how to read.
-
Build confidence in the process of discovery.
-
Let the Holy Spirit guide real understanding.
Just like a coach showing a football before showing a playbook, we can show Scripture before we show systems.
And that simple posture — “This is a Bible” — can revolutionize how people think about everything that comes after.
A Few of Lombardi’s Principles That Apply to Bible Study
(Not about winning games — about learning well)
-
“Winning is not a sometime thing — it’s an all the time thing.”
→ Consistent reading matters. -
“Perfection is not attainable, but if we chase perfection we can catch excellence.”
→ We won’t understand everything at once, but faithful effort grows insight. -
“If you aren’t fired up with enthusiasm, you’ll be fired with enthusiasm.”
→ Passion for truth grows motivation to dig deeper.
Closing Thought
Some people look at the Bible and see complexity. Some see tradition. Some see rules.
But what if we all started the way a great coach did —
with the fundamentals, explained plainly, patiently, accurately?
Then maybe Scripture wouldn’t be something to memorize —
it would be something to live.