Since December 25th of 2019 I have been disciplining myself to do systematic reading of the Bible. I started with one schedule doing portions of Psalms, Proverbs and a New Testament book. That got to be too tedious. So I began reading all of the book of Psalms (or Palms, as Joe Biden has said). Then I began reading Genesis up through Job which I finished yesterday. It looks like this will be a three year plan. I intend to finish Malachi by the end of October 2021. All of my plans of course should be conditioned with Lord willing.
I will start Matthew by November 2021 and conclude the book of Revelation by December 25, 2022. I wanted to slow the pace of reading and meditating when going through the New Testament.
Aside from Bible reading I usually have several books that I pour through. I haven't learned the art of finishing one and going to the next. I own just two Dale Ralph Davis commentaries. My pastor lets me borrow other Davis commentaries. Davis is an excellent communicator of biblical truths. But I am a bit behind in reading his commentaries. I have yet to read his work on 1 Kings. He didn't issue any commentaries on 1 and 2 Chronicles. I do own T.V. Moore's books on three Old Testament prophets which I never got to. And I am enjoying Michael P.V. Barrett's book : "The Next To Last Word : Service, Hope, And Revival In The Postexilic Prophets." I just got that last month. I have two other books by him. I listen to him on Sermonaudio.com. And I had the pleasure of hearing him speak personally when he lived, taught and co-pastored in South Carolina. I used to own a book by James Boice on the Minor Prophets, which I read with great satisfaction but somewhere along the way it got misplaced (I can't bring myself to say it got lost.)
I have loads of Bible study helps for the New Testament. And I pull out the NIV Compact Dictionary Of The Bible constantly. To save my eyes I prefer to read old-fashioned books rather than electronic forms.
Other believers I have spoken with suggest that I should memorize one verse per chapter which I have yet to do. When I conclude a chapter or two it doesn't mean I can tick that off as complete. A sermon I heard a long time ago was entitled "When Is The Message Really Over?" When we hear a sermon and it ends at 12:15, is it really over? Of course not. It should continue to be with us as we meditate on it --give it a good chew.
It's amazing to me that some are able to read the Bible in one year. That requires speed reading. When it comes to the Word of God I have to go slower. But each to their own method. I think that a five year plan is the most ideal to really get the most out of Scripture.
In the future which is not guaranteed to me --I would like to go through the Scriptures with a chronological Bible. That would set things in better perspective for me.
So do y-o-u (plural as Hendrickson would do) folks think? How are you going about your Bible reading? Do you have the desire to read the entire canon regularly? Please give me your thoughts.
I will start Matthew by November 2021 and conclude the book of Revelation by December 25, 2022. I wanted to slow the pace of reading and meditating when going through the New Testament.
Aside from Bible reading I usually have several books that I pour through. I haven't learned the art of finishing one and going to the next. I own just two Dale Ralph Davis commentaries. My pastor lets me borrow other Davis commentaries. Davis is an excellent communicator of biblical truths. But I am a bit behind in reading his commentaries. I have yet to read his work on 1 Kings. He didn't issue any commentaries on 1 and 2 Chronicles. I do own T.V. Moore's books on three Old Testament prophets which I never got to. And I am enjoying Michael P.V. Barrett's book : "The Next To Last Word : Service, Hope, And Revival In The Postexilic Prophets." I just got that last month. I have two other books by him. I listen to him on Sermonaudio.com. And I had the pleasure of hearing him speak personally when he lived, taught and co-pastored in South Carolina. I used to own a book by James Boice on the Minor Prophets, which I read with great satisfaction but somewhere along the way it got misplaced (I can't bring myself to say it got lost.)
I have loads of Bible study helps for the New Testament. And I pull out the NIV Compact Dictionary Of The Bible constantly. To save my eyes I prefer to read old-fashioned books rather than electronic forms.
Other believers I have spoken with suggest that I should memorize one verse per chapter which I have yet to do. When I conclude a chapter or two it doesn't mean I can tick that off as complete. A sermon I heard a long time ago was entitled "When Is The Message Really Over?" When we hear a sermon and it ends at 12:15, is it really over? Of course not. It should continue to be with us as we meditate on it --give it a good chew.
It's amazing to me that some are able to read the Bible in one year. That requires speed reading. When it comes to the Word of God I have to go slower. But each to their own method. I think that a five year plan is the most ideal to really get the most out of Scripture.
In the future which is not guaranteed to me --I would like to go through the Scriptures with a chronological Bible. That would set things in better perspective for me.
So do y-o-u (plural as Hendrickson would do) folks think? How are you going about your Bible reading? Do you have the desire to read the entire canon regularly? Please give me your thoughts.