This is not another post on Bible reading plans. There are
about a thousand different reading plans out there, and I have no intention of
adding to the list. What I will say first is that if you really want to read
through the Bible in 2015, use a plan that takes you straight through from the
beginning to the end. The Bible is one great big fantastic story, and if you’re
reading a little here and a little there every day, you lose the plot.
Second, get yourself a Bible for reading. What I mean is
that most Bible publishers do everything they can to make it hard to read the
Bible. They print it in two columns. They put cross references in there. They
put notes at the bottom of the page. They print in different colors, and add
pictures and drawings. All of this can be helpful if you’re studying the Bible.
But if you’re reading the Bible, it all distracts. When was the last time you
picked up a novel that was printed in double columns, or had footnotes, or was
printed in different colors, or had cross references? Of course you wouldn't
expect cross references or footnotes in a novel. But the point is that those
things distract from the task of reading. The ESV and the NIV are both now
available in what is called a reader’s edition. While I don’t much care for the
NIV as a translation, if you do, look into it. What both of these editions do
is eliminate the verse numbers, the cross references, and the footnotes. And
they put the chapter numbers in a place where they don’t intrude on the
reading. If you don’t want to buy one of
those, at least get a plain text Bible (no cross references or footnotes). You’ll
be surprised how much easier it is to simply read when you don’t have all those
distractions on the page.
Third, read the whole thing. By that, I mean don’t skip over
the annoying parts, such as the rules for sacrifices in Leviticus, or the
censuses in Numbers, of the long lists of names in 1 Chronicles. Don’t puzzle
over them trying to find some secret meaning in them, but don’t ignore them
either. However obscure they may be, they are part of the story. Having those
things in the Bible is a little like having accounts of dish-washing and
vacuuming in someone’s biography. Maybe they don’t seem important, but they
constitute a regular part of daily life. So these seemingly unimportant things
in the Bible have a place.
Fourth, if you miss a day or two, or even a week or two, don’t beat yourself up.
Just pick up where you left off. If you don’t quite finish in a year, that’s
okay.
Here’s to getting the big picture, reading the whole story
in 2015.
2 comments:
Excellent points. And I highly concur on the ESV Reader's bible. It's just amazing what a difference this makes in the whole experience.
I just found your blog so this is a little late. I like all your suggestions, but had never thought about getting a readers edition of the Bible to reduce distractions. Seems like it's worth trying out.
Post a Comment