Before a new medicine is shared with the world, it is first tested on a small group. Only after its benefits are seen does it become available for everyone. In much the same way, “Come, Let Us Praise the Lord” has been a kind of experiment. For the past five years, we’ve been trying out a new way of reading the Bible together. What started with just 35 people has now grown into a community of 350, drawn from many different churches and traditions.
We began with a simple longing: to rediscover the Bible in a fresh way. Too often, we have treated it as something to be read only in ceremonies, or we have used it to defend the doctrines we inherited. Every denomination has its own lens, its own favorite verses, its own claim to being “right.” Somewhere along the way, the Bible became less of a living Word and more of a weapon in debates.
But the Bible was never meant for that. It is a gift—a great heritage passed down to us, filled with stories, songs, wisdom, and faith that shaped countless generations before us. When we set aside our prejudices and read it simply to hear its voice, something beautiful happens. We begin to see its power, its unity, and its life-giving depth.
That is what we do in “Come, Let Us Praise the Lord.” Together, we open the Scriptures with just two simple questions: What does it say? and What was the world in which it was first spoken? We deliberately set aside our assumptions and doctrinal divides, not because they don’t matter, but because we want the Bible itself to speak.
And the result? People who once might have argued endlessly now sit side by side, reading, listening, and learning together. We’ve seen friendships grow, hearts change, and communities come closer to God. This simple way of reading has made our faith feel more honest, more united, more relevant, and so much richer.
Now we feel ready to share this experience more widely. What worked in a small circle can work in bigger ones too. The church today doesn’t need more arguments or more walls—it needs more humility. It needs to gather, open the Bible together, and listen again with fresh ears and open hearts
If 350 ordinary people from different traditions can do this week after week in “Come, Let Us Praise the Lord,” just imagine what could happen if churches everywhere did the same. We would discover again who we truly are—not defenders of denominations, but seekers of truth. Not divided by traditions, but united by the living Word of God.
This is our hope and our invitation: that we may all become what we were meant to be—children of the same heritage, people of the Book, people of the Word.