
God’s splendor
is dramatically
displayed in the
life of Kay Arthur.
Interview by
Laurie Beyer
Beauty radiates from every part
of Kay Arthur’s being. One
would think that life has been
especially good to her. But
out of a life of ashes, God has
brought Kay to understand
what it truly means to reflect her
redemption.
Born in 1933, Kay was brought up in a
home that honored God. Her family moved
frequently, and in each new community
they would look first for a church home
and then find a house to live in. She had a
brother and sister and parents who loved
and respected each other. She believed, “Of
course I’m a Christian. I live in the United
States and I go to church.” She came to
realize later in life that what she knew then
was a religion, not a relationship.
Because Kay admired her parent’s
marriage, she longed for the day she would
marry too. After graduating from nursing
school, Kay married the man she thought
would be the fulfillment of all her dreams.
She was warned that things might not be as
they appeared, but pride became her guide.
Frank Thomas Goetz, Jr. (Tom) was an
outstanding athlete and an engineer. He
gave her a huge diamond ring, and their
engagement announcement on the front
page of the society page gave her instant
status. He most certainly was her Prince
Charming.
Kay and Tom were blessed with two
precious sons, but her marriage was far
from perfect. Battling with depression, he
was unable to find stability in a career. As
much as Tom had going for himself, Kay
could not understand why he struggled. She
wanted to enjoy life, even if it meant doing
so on her own. Taking up modeling, she
remembers, “I had a mink, I had money
and I was miserable.”
Kay admits that she did not love her
husband unconditionally. Neither had she
tried to understand him. She wanted to be
happy. She wanted her needs satisfied.
Only later did Kay really realize that wasn’t
what love was about. Seeking the guidance
of their minister, they were advised to
divorce. Regretfully, Kay recalls that the
Word of God was never even opened in
that counseling session. After just six years,
their marriage came to an end.
She remembers once being warned, “sin
will take you farther than you ever intended
to go, it will cost you more than you ever
expected to pay, and it will keep you longer
than you ever intended to stay.” This
became true of Kay’s life for the next few
years as she began seeking comfort in other
men, at one point having a two-year
relationship with a married man. Going
from one man to the next, she was always
looking for someone, anyone who would
unconditionally love her.
Then, suddenly, one day she became
aware of the emptiness in the life she was
leading. “I realized that someday I would
stand before a holy God and He would say,
‘Depart from Me!’” At first she decided she
would try to be good, but the good she
wanted to do she couldn’t do. “The evil that
I didn’t want to do, I did. I thought, ‘if I
could just erase my past. If I could just
have a new start.’”
At a party one evening in 1963, a friend
said to Kay, “Why don’t you quit telling
God what you want and tell Him that Jesus
Christ is all you need?” The next morning,
Kay stood before God and said, “God, I
don’t care what you do to me. I don’t care
if I never see another man as long as I live.
I don’t care if you paralyze me from the
neck down. I don’t care what you do to my
two boys.” Those were the worst things she
could conceive of having happen to her.
“God, if you’ll just give me peace!” God at
that moment gave Kay Arthur the Prince of
Peace, His Son, Jesus Christ. He called her
“Beloved” when she knew there was
nothing lovely about her. “I went down on
my knees a harlot, and I got up a saint.”
Kay had discovered after their marriage
ended that Tom was manic depressive.
Acknowledging that the counsel they
received to divorce was not biblical, Kay
sensed God leading her to attempt to
restore their marriage. Tragically, though,
at about the same time she realized this,
Tom committed suicide. As she looked
back on the mistakes she had made in their
marriage, Kay understood what it meant to
have a sin bearer. “He paid for all my sins,
past, present and future.” God revealed
Himself in a very real way as her comfort
and guide.
Kay began to read God’s Word with fresh
vision and realized, “I didn’t know this
book was so good!” Experiencing the
goodness of God and His Word is what
brought the dramatic transformation in
Kay’s life. Today, Kay is known as one of
the leading Bible teachers around the
world. She shares her life story because she
truly believes that, “all things work
together for good.” As she has learned to
trust God as her loving, heavenly Father,
Kay has experienced the unconditional
love she always desired. After giving her
life to Christ, Kay went on to study the
Bible at Tennessee Temple where she met
her husband of almost 36 years, Jack
Arthur.

At 68, Kay and Jack have three grown
sons and nine grandchildren. Together they
founded Precept Ministries International in
1970. It is a ministry dedicated to
“teaching people to study God’s Word for
themselves and applying its truths to their
daily lives,” using the inductive study
method. Through her worldwide teaching,
the many resources available through
Precept Ministries, and the more than 100
books and Bible studies she has written,
especially on the subject of embracing
life’s disappointments, Kay has ministered
to the hearts and minds of millions.
We at Just Between Us were richly
blessed recently to have Kay share with us
from her heart. We’re grateful to be able to
share that conversation with you.
JBU: You have what many people consider
to be a unique love for God’s Word. How did
this love evolve?
Kay: Before I was a believer, I would read
the Bible and found it boring. When I
became a child of God at the age of 29, I
opened the Bible and it became a brand new
book. I have been in the Word ever since. In
those early days I also began reading
biographies of great Christian men and
women. One of the things that I observed
was the primacy of God’s Word in their lives.
They would meet with God daily and search
His Word for what He had to say to them.
When my husband and I were on the
mission field we had the privilege of leading
many teenagers to the Lord. As I searched
for Bible study materials to use in teaching
them, I only found the fill-in-the-blank
variety. That format bored me to death!
Someone encouraged me to just take a book
of the Bible and start teaching it. With the
help of a wonderful old book, Independent
Bible Study by Irving Jensen, I did just that
and learned through the inductive-study
method about the treasures found in God’s
Word.
JBU: How did your passion for knowing
God’s Word grow into such a burden for
teaching others?
Kay: I knew that what was filling me was
exactly what others were looking for as well.
What brings us fullness of joy shouldn’t be
hidden! You see, what happens when we
begin to really desire to know God is that a
veil comes off of the Word, because the
Spirit of God, who gives the mind and heart
of God is inside us. He creates the hunger
and thirst for righteousness and takes the
things of God and reveals them to us. We
become like sponges.
It didn’t take long in my Christian walk for
me to realize that a knowledge of God is
absolutely fundamental to the Christian life.
His Word is the bread by which we live and
the foundation on which we build. And now,
of course, my passion and burden is to help
other people to get into the Word of God in
the most effective way possible.
JBU: Why do you believe the inductive
Bible study method works so well?
Kay: Because it brings you directly to the
Word of God, apart from the interpretation of
the text by someone else. Everything we do
in our ministry is geared toward one thing:
Not to have you think like we think, or to
believe what we believe, but to show you
how you can know truth for yourself.
In our culture, we can get our theology
from a variety of sources: from preachers to
novels. Certainly God has ordained preachers
and commentaries, as well as many teachers
on television and radio. But how will I know
if their theology is right? I will only know if I
learn to observe God’s Word and discern
truth for myself.
Once I know what God’s Word says and
what it means, I can put its truths into
practice, being equipped for every
circumstance of life. The ultimate goal of
personal Bible study should always be a
transformed life and a deep and abiding
relationship with Jesus Christ.
JBU: Many people assume your ministry is
primarily to women, although, in fact, you
have been working with teens since the
beginning. What makes your ministry so
universal?
Kay: Ironically, outside of the U.S. most
people see our ministry focus as being to
men, so I guess that covers everyone! The
reason, I believe, is that the message is
universal and it’s one that is universally
desired by those who hunger for the truth.
Why else would I have 900 women in the
Atlanta Bible study I led committed to a 32-
week study of Romans and willing to do
hours of homework each week? And what
about the teens at our boot camp programs,
who after five to six hours of daily Bible
teaching, hang around after class just
wanting more?
My burden is for every person to be able
to stand on his or her own two feet
spiritually. They can’t do that without
knowing the Word of God. Everything that
our ministry does is focused on that goal.
Our motto is to reach everybody,
everywhere, any time, any place, any
language, any age, with one message, the
Bible, and one method, inductive. So
everything we do is to accomplish the goal
of establishing people in God’s Word.
When we see people who are exemplary
followers of Jesus Christ, studying the
Bible inductively, viewing the world
biblically, and serving the church faithfully
in the power of the Holy Spirit, that’s the
wonderful finished product!
JBU: Speaking of your message being
universal, can you share a story about the
overseas work of Precept Ministries?
Kay: We have excellent staff serving
around the world, and I love being a part of
their work. Recently, I was in Germany
teaching and learning with people from 21
different countries. We spent six hours each
day studying the subject of covenant
throughout the Bible. There they were,
bishops of churches and men and women in
church leadership, people from a variety of
denominations and church experiences.
Outside of this setting they might not even
associate with each other, but here they
were all sitting together, discovering
together the truths in God’s Word. We are
so non-denominational in America, and for
the most part willing to accept differences,
but in many other parts of the world it takes
something like studying the Word of God
to bring these people together!
JBU: What do you believe is the general
attitude toward God in America right now?
Kay: I believe that the American culture is
in a state of moral anarchy because the
church ignores the Word of God. At one
time we accepted God’s Word as absolute
truth, but now we live as if we doubt it. We
are not proclaiming it in it’s power. Now
we have a nation of hurting people and
psychology has come to the fore as the
answer, when the Word of God is really the
answer. It has to be! Otherwise, what did
all of those past millennium do without
psychology?
We also don’t believe that our youth want to
be serious about God. When I minister to youth
I wouldn’t dare say, “Let’s have a cheer for
Jesus!” Our tendency is to believe they only
want to be entertained. People don’t realize
how hungry kids are and that you’ve got to
give them meat. We have so missed the
holiness of God, and we’ve lost the fear of
God. And, we don’t know the Word of God,
and that’s why we’re in the mess that we are in!
JBU: You referred to people who are hurting.
Why do so many Christians struggle with
experiencing joy in their relationship with
God?
Kay: I believe that one reason is because they
don’t understand the purpose of trials in their
lives. They are unable to embrace trials. We
are so egocentric in our Christianity and want
everything in our lives to be perfect as we
perceive perfect. The Bible says, “Consider it
pure joy, my brothers, whenever you face
trials of many kinds.” In everything we are to
give thanks.
God is sovereign! And knowing His Word,
tasting of what it means to discover truth for
yourself, transforms your life. You can go
through all sorts of trials and tests, and pass.
When we know our God, we are able to
stand firm and be strong. I love the verse
from Job 6:10 which reads, “Then I would
still have this consolation, my joy in
unrelenting pain, that I had not denied the
words of the Holy One.”
The other reason we don’t often
experience His joy is because we don’t live
in His presence. When we are living in His
presence, abiding in Him, we gain
perspective on life, His!
JBU: What would you say to someone who
is having trouble connecting with God’s
Word?
Kay: First of all I would ask why? Are you
willing to put forth the effort required? Are
you willing to discipline yourself for the sake
of godliness? A common problem today is
that we have so entangled ourselves with the
affairs of this life that we’ve forgotten how to
please Him. My biggest battle is being busy.
I believe that an essential key to connecting
with God’s Word is spending leisure time in
the Word. It can’t be rushed into, “here’s my
10 minutes with You, God.” When I spend
leisure time in the Word, reading and
absorbing its truths, I realize that nothing
really matters except my relationship with
God. As Hebrews 5:14 says, we will grow
into mature believers through the “constant
use” of His Word.
JBU: How would you encourage people that
it’s worth it?
Kay: Ultimately it doesn’t matter whether I
speak here or there, or accomplish this or
that. What matters is if everything’s all right
between me and God. Am I becoming a holy
woman? Am I reflecting Him? Am I pleasing
Him? Am I following Him? I love doing
other things, but if I’m not in the Word, then
those things can capture my attention. When
you develop an intimacy with God that
comes through knowing His Word, then you
are able to approach Him with clean hands
and a pure heart, having dealt with the areas
of sin in your life that God has revealed to
you. Only then can you truly experience the
sweetness of His presence and His joy.
There’s nothing greater!
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Kay Arthur and her husband, Jack, founded Precept Ministries International in 1970. What
began as a fledgling ministry to teens has now grown into a worldwide ministry with the “sole
purpose of teaching people to study God’s Word for themselves and apply its truths to their daily
lives.” The method used is inductive study, a process involving three steps: observation,
interpretation and application. This method of learning takes you directly to the Word of God to
determine not only what God says and what it means, but also directs you in putting God’s truths
into practice.
Precept Ministries is headquartered in Chattanooga, Tennessee. The campus is home to
television and recording studios as well as classrooms and dormitories for a variety of residential
study programs. The Precept Upon Precept Bible studies are published by Precept Ministries
International. Precept Ministries Bible classes are held in each of the 50 states as well as in 117
other countries. In addition to being the primary Bible teacher at Precept Ministries in
Chattanooga, Tennessee, Kay Arthur has a national and international ministry, speaking frequently
at conferences and stadium events. She has authored more than 100 books and Bible studies,
and hosts daily radio programs and weekly television programs that are broadcast around the
world. The “Precepts For Life” television program recently began airing in the Middle East.
To find out more about Precepts Ministries International and their resources available for
inductive study contact: Precept Ministries International, P.O. Box 182218, Chattanooga, TN
37422. Call: 1-800-763-8280. Also on the web at www.precept.org.
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To read more about Kay Arthur’s life
story or to be encouraged in your times of
struggle we recommend Kay’s book,
As Silver Refined, available through
Precept Ministries International.
Laurie Beyer is a writer for JBU, and a
former women’s ministry coordinator at
Elmbrook Church in Brookfield, Wis.
Laurie and her husband, George, have
been married 21 years, and have four
children. They reside in Elm Grove, Wis.
Also read:
Battling Bitterness
Grounded!
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