SOAP Bible Study Method — Free Printable Worksheet (and How to Actually Use It)

⏱ 13 min read

There’s a small movement in Christian devotional circles that says you don’t need a SOAP Bible study worksheet to study the Bible. That a printed template is one more thing standing between you and a direct, unmediated reading. That the woman who reaches for a SOAP printable is hiding behind structure when she could be sitting with the verse on her own terms.

That argument has a point — for the person it describes. Most people are not that person. Most people, when they sit down with an open Bible and no scaffolding, get to the end of the second paragraph having absorbed nothing, close the book, and feel quietly worse about themselves than when they began. A SOAP Bible study worksheet exists for exactly that morning — not as a substitute for meeting God, but as the small printed structure that makes the meeting more likely to happen at all.

A worksheet is not a substitute for meeting God in scripture. It is the chair you sit in to meet Him there. The chair is not the meeting. But on the days you don’t have a chair, you tend not to sit down at all.

This guide gives you a free printable SOAP worksheet — the four boxes pre-printed on a single page, sized to use with any verse you choose — and then walks you through one full example so you can see what each box is actually for. By the end you’ll know what to write in every section, and the worksheet will become invisible by week two.

What the SOAP Bible study worksheet actually is

A single sheet of paper. Four boxes. Each box labeled with one letter of the SOAP framework. That’s the whole thing.

  • S — Scripture. A long ruled box at the top, for writing the verse out by hand.
  • O — Observation. A wide box for what you notice in the verse, before you decide what it means.
  • A — Application. A box for where the verse meets your actual day.
  • P — Prayer. A box at the bottom for turning the verse back into a prayer you can pray today.

That’s the architecture. The reason it works is not that the four letters are magical. It’s that the page has decided, on your behalf, what each section is for. You stop having to choose. The decisions about what kind of writing belongs here are pre-made. The fifteen minutes go to meeting God in the verse instead of designing the page.

Why a SOAP Bible study worksheet works better than a blank notebook for most beginners

In a blank notebook, every morning is a small architecture problem. Do I write the verse at the top, or to the side? Do I leave room for prayer at the end? Do I number my observations? Should I underline anything? These are tiny decisions, and tiny decisions accumulate into the daily friction that ends practices by week three.

A worksheet removes all of them. The boxes are where they go. The labels say what each one is for. The page is sized so that even the day you only have ten minutes, you can fill all four boxes without rushing.

People who use the worksheet for one month and then move into a blank notebook tend to keep going — because by then the format has been internalised. People who start with a blank notebook tend to stop within two weeks. The SOAP Bible study worksheet is training wheels in the best sense. You don’t need them forever. You almost certainly need them now. If the four-letter method itself is still new to you, the full explainer with a different worked example lives at the SOAP Bible study method explained — read that first if the framework needs unpacking before the worksheet will make sense.

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Print one. Have it next to you for the next section. The example will land differently if you can see the four boxes you’re about to fill.

A fully worked example — Psalm 23:1

Here is one SOAP worksheet, filled in the way it might actually look tomorrow morning. We’ve chosen a declarative promise rather than a command this time — a single short verse that everyone has heard, to show how much room one short line actually has when you slow down with it. Read it through. Then, in the section after, you’ll fill in your own.

S — Scripture

“The Lord is my shepherd; I shall not want.” — Psalm 23:1 (KJV)

Eight words. Write them out by hand. Not paraphrased. Not summarised. Word by word — because the hand moving across the page is what slows the eye enough for even a short familiar verse to actually land. Most people have read this verse a hundred times and never copied it once.

O — Observation

Five things I notice, before I decide what any of it means for me:

  1. The verse is built around two claims, not one. The Lord is my shepherd — and thereforeI shall not want. The second claim only stands because the first one is true.
  2. The pronoun is my, not the or our. David is making a personal claim. The relationship is singular and direct.
  3. Shepherd is a working word, not a poetic one. A shepherd in David’s world walked with the flock, slept near the flock, defended the flock, found pasture for the flock. The job was constant attendance.
  4. I shall not want doesn’t mean “I won’t have desires.” It means “I shall not lack what I need.” The English word want carries its older sense — to be in want of, to be without.
  5. The verse is the opening line of the whole Psalm, and the rest of the Psalm is essentially evidence for this one sentence. Green pastures, still waters, restoreth my soul, valley of the shadow of death — each verse that follows is one more proof that the shepherd’s attendance covers every kind of need.

None of this required a commentary. Observation is just slow looking. The worksheet gives you room for five observations on purpose — if you only write two, the page itself is asking for more.

A — Application

What this verse does to today.

I notice that I spent the morning bracing — running a mental inventory of what I might not have enough of by this evening. Energy. Patience. The right words for the meeting. The margin to handle the thing that always comes up at 5pm just as dinner needs starting.

The verse names the inventory and answers it in eight words. The Lord is my shepherd. The shepherd is already with the flock today. He has already seen the field He is walking me into. I shall not want is not a promise that I’ll feel resourceful by 5pm. It is a promise that the shepherd will not let me lack what He has already decided I’ll need to do today’s work.

What the verse asks me to do is specific: stop running the inventory. The inventory presumes I am alone with the field. The verse says I am not alone. Today’s application is to notice each time the inventory restarts and answer it with the eight words rather than letting it spin. The Lord is my shepherd; I shall not want. In the car. At the desk. At 4:55pm.

P — Prayer

Father, You are my shepherd. You see the day I am walking into. You see the place where I have been bracing for lack — bracing for not enough energy, not enough patience, not enough time. I lay the bracing down. I receive that You have already gone ahead of me, that You see the pasture, that You know what I will need by 5pm. Restore my soul. Walk with me through this Wednesday. Let me not run the inventory of lack when You are already the answer to it. Amen.

That is one worksheet. Fifteen minutes. Four boxes filled. The morning is no longer a count of what might run out.

How to fill your own worksheet tomorrow — five steps

Print one copy. Decide the verse the night before. Then in the morning:

1. Write S in full. Word by word. The slow writing is the eye finally catching up with the verse. Don’t paraphrase. Don’t shorthand. The full text is the point.

2. Try for five observations in O. Most beginners write two and move on. The worksheet has room for five. Notice repeated words. Notice what comes just before. Notice who is being addressed. Notice contrasts. The unhurried noticing is where the verse stops being a slogan.

3. Make A specific. Today. By time, by name, by place. Not “be more loving.” Try “at 6pm tonight, when the kids are tired and I’m tired, loving will look like not raising my voice when the third cup of water is requested.” Specificity is what makes the verse meet the day instead of hovering above it.

4. Pray P aloud or whisper it. Speaking the prayer marks the close. Then put the pen down and go.

5. Don’t grade the worksheet. Some days the boxes will fill themselves. Some days each box will be three lines and you’ll wonder if you did it right. Both kinds of days count. The page meets you where you are.

How long the worksheet should take

About fifteen minutes once you’ve done five or six. The first three will take twenty-five. By the time you’ve done two weeks of them, you’ll notice the boxes are filling themselves and the practice is starting to disappear into a daily rhythm.

This is the right direction. The worksheet was never the point — meeting God in the verse was. The worksheet is the scaffold that lets that meeting happen reliably until the scaffold isn’t needed.

A few people do find, around week three, that the printed page feels confining and they want to move into a blank notebook. Do that, if so. The format will travel with you. A few others find, around week three, that what they really want is a journal that holds the four-box structure for them across many months without their needing to print one page at a time. That’s where the bound journal comes in — but only after the practice has begun to take root with the printable.

What to do on the days the worksheet feels flat

Some mornings the worksheet will feel mechanical. The verse won’t open. The observations will be the same three you wrote yesterday. The application will fall back to a general “trust God more.”

This isn’t a sign the method has stopped working. It’s the day-eleven dip every practice goes through.

The fix is small: change one variable, not all of them.

  • Change the translation, not the verse. Read the same verse in a different translation and run the worksheet again. Often it cracks open.
  • Change the time of day, not the structure. If you’ve been doing it at 6am for two weeks and it’s gone flat, try 8pm for three days. Different time, same page.
  • Change the location, not the worksheet. Move from the kitchen to the porch, from the desk to the armchair. New environment, same four boxes.

The method is robust. What goes flat is usually one of the surrounding variables. Adjust one. Keep going.

Scripture is the spine of the practice

The SOAP worksheet is built around one verse. That verse does the work. The boxes are the place the verse gets to land — not a substitute for the verse, just the structure that catches what the verse offers.

Thomas à Kempis, writing six hundred years ago about how to actually read the scriptures, named the disposition the worksheet quietly trains:

That is the whole posture of the O box, the A box, and the slow writing-out of the verse in S. Not eloquence — humility, simplicity, faith. The four boxes are not designed to make you sound smart on the page. They are designed to give the verse a slow room to land in.

The shepherd-king David, writing the very verse we used as the worked example, said in eight words what the worksheet quietly trains the heart to receive across many months:

Each filled worksheet is one small daily reception of that promise. The shepherd is already in the field. The lack we keep bracing for has already been met. The four boxes are simply the place where we set the bracing down for fifteen minutes and let the verse begin to do its quiet work in the background of the day.

A journal that holds the worksheet structure for 140 days

The free worksheet is the right starting place. Print one. Try it for a week. Try it for a month.

When the practice has taken root and the daily printing becomes the friction you want to remove, the next step is a bound journal that holds the same four-box structure across 140 days — with the scripture for each day pre-printed and the older devotional language gently glossed so the verse actually lands.

That’s the Everspring Bible Study Workbook for Women. Same SOAP structure as the worksheet, in a book that sits on your bedside table and doesn’t need to be re-printed every Sunday evening.

Bible Study Workbook for Women

Frequently asked questions

Can I use the SOAP Bible study worksheet with my kids, my husband or my small group?
Yes — though the worksheet shown here is sized for adult use. Kids do better with a larger, simpler version that uses fewer words in the labels and gives more drawing room (there’s a kid-specific version of SOAP in our companion piece, the SOAP method for kids, with the boxes resized and the language softened). Husbands and small groups can use the same worksheet as you — the four boxes don’t change with the reader. Small groups in particular do well with everyone bringing a filled worksheet on the same verse and comparing what each person observed. Five people will see five different things in O, and the conversation that follows is richer than any unstructured Bible study would have been. For groups that want to go deeper on a single verse on a different day, verse mapping for beginners pairs naturally with a weekly SOAP rhythm.

Do I have to use SOAP every day, or can I use it weekly?
Either. Daily SOAP gives the practice a quick, light rhythm — fifteen minutes, four boxes, every morning. Weekly SOAP is for the verse you want to sit with longer; one filled worksheet on a Sunday afternoon, for the verse from the sermon that morning, can be its own slow meditation across the week. Most people who use both end up doing a light daily worksheet plus one deeper Sunday worksheet, and the two reinforce each other.

What if I print the worksheet and it sits on my desk untouched for two weeks?
That’s the most common failure mode and it isn’t a failure of will. It’s a failure of placement. The worksheet should not be on your desk. It should be in the spot where you are most likely to sit with a pen in the morning — on the kitchen table, next to the coffee maker, beside the chair where you read. Move it physically into the daily path of the person you already are. Then move the pen there too. Habits attach to context. The worksheet you’ll fill is the one you walk past on the way to the kettle.


The Everspring Bible Study Workbook for Women holds the same four-box SOAP structure as the free worksheet, across 140 days, with the scripture for each day pre-printed. Built for the woman who has used the worksheet for a month and wants the practice held in something that lives on her bedside table instead of in the printer tray.

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