This is the time of year when people make resolutions to
read through the Bible in the coming year. If this is your intent, I hope this
post will be of some help to you. Even if this is not your intent, I hope this
post will be of some help to you.
First, there is nothing magical, or even necessarily
particularly sanctifying, about reading the Bible through in a year. If you
recognize from the beginning that the important thing is to read regularly in
the Bible, with prayer and meditation, then reading through it in a year
becomes simply a helpful tool to accomplish that goal. There are any number of “read
through the Bible in a year” programs. Justin Taylor discusses some here: http://thegospelcoalition.org/blogs/justintaylor/2011/12/27/bible-reading-plans-for-2012/.
For those who have had trouble in the past reading through the Bible in a year,
the Plan for Shirkers and Slackers might be the place to begin. If you have a
smart phone, the youversion Bible app has more than 200 different reading plans
available. You can even set it up so that it reminds you each day to do your
reading. There are also a number of reading plans available at the Zondervan
website: http://www.zondervan.com/Cultures/en-US/Product/Bible/Plans.htm?QueryStringSite=Zondervan#In
the Beginning...
If you look at the Zondervan list, you will notice that many
of the plans are not plans that will take you all the way through the Bible in
a year. Rather, they are limited plans that deal with more focused goals. If
you are new to Bible reading, I suggest you might start with one of these plans,
such as the 180-day guided tour. This plan gives you an overview of the Bible
in six months. Or you might want to begin with the two-week guided tour and
then move on to some of the 30-day plans. The main point is to get yourself
into the Word daily in a useful fashion.
Recently, a friend on Facebook was asking about smart phone
Bible reading plans. Another friend cautioned against one of the plans that
takes you straight through from Genesis to Revelation, since you get stuck for
days on end in the Minor Prophets. I understand the point that this person was
trying to make: that finding helpful material for meditation in the Minor
Prophets (or even in the Major Prophets Jeremiah and Ezekiel) can be difficult.
However, I think it reflects some level of ignorance about the Minor Prophets. It
also highlights, however, the fact the many sections of the Bible are difficult
to read and to effectively meditate on, because we are not sufficiently
familiar with what we are reading. Thus, we feel like the Ethiopian eunuch (Acts 8:26 -40 ),
who said, “How can I [understand], unless someone guides me.” There is nothing
wrong with admitting that we don’t understand what we read, and that we need
some help.
So where do we go for help? First, I recommend against study
Bibles. I find that they offer minimal help, usually the least help when you
want it the most. Instead, you should invest in several practical commentaries
that you can read along with your Bible reading. That may slow down your Bible
reading, but that’s all right. The Bible Speaks Today series from IVP has a
number of useful volumes, as does the Welwyn commentary series from Evangelical
Press. These are non-technical commentaries that are designed to help the
reader understand and apply what he reads.
May you have happy Bible reading in 2012.
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