Here’s a confession. I’ve been following Christ for over ten years now, and I’ve never read the entire Bible.
Earlier this year, I started off determined to read the Bible in a year. I had become a fan of the English Standard Version after having done much reading comparing it with other versions. By no means am I declaring absolute loyalty to this specific version, but it is the answer to much prayer concerning worries I had over the NIV.
I had also obtained a copy of the Literary Study Bible, which is also a godsend. I had never been able to really process the Bible in terms of entire books as opposed to individual chapters, or in particular places, individual verses. Most of us have verses that we’ve committed to memory, but how often do we really look at the whole thing? How many of us really figure out the structure of the book of Numbers? I certainly never had.
However, the most important thing that the effort taught me is that it’s bad for me to trust myself with sticking with a daily plan.
Before I elaborate on why, let’s get a certain lame excuse out of the way: “I don’t have time” doesn’t cut it. If God wants you to do it, He will allow you time. There’s twenty-four hours in a day, so figure it out. If you spend an hour a day on the Internet reading things like this article, and you’re not reading the Bible on a regular basis, stop reading this article, turn off your computer, and go pick up your Bible.
With that said, I’m here to offer you a different approach than lists that say “January 1st: read this. January 2nd: read this.” My current effort is going to focus on reading entire books. For one, it better enables the reader to process the entire book rather than series of passages. Secondly, it doesn’t have a time limit. If you take a week off, you can get back where you left off, or if you forget what happened beforehand, go back to the beginning of the book and reread.
This is not to argue that trying to read the Bible in a year isn’t a worthy goal, but for some of us it might actually be lofty. Anything is possible with God on your side, but when you’re someone like me who is constantly going in and out, not to mention waking up at “ungodly” hours for various work-related tasks, you might be better off just checking books off.
Somehow I got through the first five books of the Old Testament without a major hitch. The stumble came when I started reading Joshua, and no, that’s not Joshua’s fault; it’s mine for not relying on God to keep me going, or simply to have him direct me where I ought to be reading.
Accordingly, I’m making the switch over to Matthew, followed by possible alternation between OT and NT books. More importantly, I’ll be reading more Bible and less finance websites. That’s been swamping me over the past three weeks.
ESV Bible Blog | 19-Apr-08 at 1:14 am | Permalink
Read through the Bible a Book at a Time…
The blogger at The Journey of Life writes about how he got his Bible reading back on track, inspired by the Literary Study Bible:
I had also obtained a copy of the Literary Study Bible, which is also a godsend. I had never been able to really process t…
Greg | 20-Apr-08 at 11:23 am | Permalink
I got the Literary Study Bible for my birthday last year and I absolutely love it. For the first time, I’m really going through a structured reading plan (the one in the back of the book) and I’m really enjoying it.
I think that once I make it through this year and the plan, I might give your plan a shot….
(Made it here via the ESV Blog, btw.)