Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For years I've had a mission of reading the full Bible. I've been on the minor prophets in the Old Testament for quite a while. And normally I'll start reading some but get bored, flip a few pages and turn to a favorite Psalm of mine or say a Chapter in Romans, Ephesians, Galatians, or the like. There are a lot of chapters and verses that are very inspiring and help me get through a lot of the stresses of my life and I have been wondering now why I have this mission to complete the Bible, other than being able to say I did it.
So how important is it to read the full Bible and should I feel bad that I keep wanting to go back to my favorites?
Are you willing to consider combining biblical reading with outside reading about the Bible, Christianity, history, etc.
On a personal level, I've find biblical reading more fulfilling in a greater context. If i were to sit and read the bible in the way i read anything else i'd get bored quickly, which seems like what you're going through.
Anonymous wrote:For years I've had a mission of reading the full Bible. I've been on the minor prophets in the Old Testament for quite a while. And normally I'll start reading some but get bored, flip a few pages and turn to a favorite Psalm of mine or say a Chapter in Romans, Ephesians, Galatians, or the like. There are a lot of chapters and verses that are very inspiring and help me get through a lot of the stresses of my life and I have been wondering now why I have this mission to complete the Bible, other than being able to say I did it.
So how important is it to read the full Bible and should I feel bad that I keep wanting to go back to my favorites?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm glad I read the entire Bible. Thank you, Bible in a Year, which is 20-25 minutes daily podcast, so it wasn't a particularly heavy lift for me. While there will be parts I will probably never return to, the journey helped put some of the NT in context.
So I guess my advice would be, it's not urgent, but it's a nice and helpful thing to do. If you need to wait until your kids are in college or until you retire, that's fine. In fact it's probably more than fine because, if you wait, you'll have more time to think about what you're reading.
Honestly, what I normally do is listen or read on my phone while I'm running on the treadmill in the mornings before the kids wake up. But some books like the stuff after Proverbs to Matthew is difficult to make it through. I read SoS, and had to take a break, then went back and did Isaiah and took a break, Jeremiah then break, Lamentations and Ezekiel then break. Daniel and then a break. Its so much going on in these books. I think I have just Hosea, Joel, Amos, Obadiah, Jonah, Micah, Nahum and Habakkuk left.
Maybe this is just the Devil trying to get me to quit when I'm so close to finishing. I'm really finding that I can read many of these remaining books in about 30 minutes each before I start my day. So honestly I could be done by the end of Feb. But then what? I'm not going to go bragging around my church saying "look what I've done". I'm probably just going to go back and read Ephesians 6, Philippians 4, Romans 8, Hebrews 11, etc. But its like I'm running a "marathon" in my back yard. There's no reward for finishing this. I don't even know that I'm getting the understanding that I should be getting. Its one thing to know things that happened and some of the things that are not talked about in church, but I'm not getting the training of a pastor or theology person. I'm just a layperson who's trying to guide his conscience right.
Anonymous wrote:Spent a year reading the entire Bible. It was worth it to find less well known passages that became important to me. Every day, I read various parts for inspiration. Whatever works best for you!
Anonymous wrote:You might find it helpful to read an annotated copy? When I start getting lost in the text, I sometimes find the footnotes helpful as a way to help me understand the text in a new way and keep me engaged. Try The Hebrew Bible: A Translation with Commentary by Robert Alter. I like his style of translation and his footnotes often delve into historical context that can be helpful when trying to understand some of what's going on in the text.
Anonymous wrote:I'm glad I read the entire Bible. Thank you, Bible in a Year, which is 20-25 minutes daily podcast, so it wasn't a particularly heavy lift for me. While there will be parts I will probably never return to, the journey helped put some of the NT in context.
So I guess my advice would be, it's not urgent, but it's a nice and helpful thing to do. If you need to wait until your kids are in college or until you retire, that's fine. In fact it's probably more than fine because, if you wait, you'll have more time to think about what you're reading.