Annual Bible Reading, from Guest Blogger: Junior Duran

I didn’t become a Christian until I was 29. When I was growing up in a charismatic Christian household and I had a question about religious beliefs and practices I was told simply, “You just have to have faith.” That response wasn’t good enough for me before I was a Christian and I wasn’t satisfied with it after I became a Christian.

When I was just a few months into the faith I began working in Christian talk radio. The first lesson I learned from the radio personalities were the three rules of bible interpretation:

  1. Context.
  2. Context.
  3. Context.

What is the immediate context of your passage? What is the context of your passage within that specific book? What is the context of the passage within the whole of scripture?

Graeme Goldsworthy lists some approaches to bible reading programs that are “less than helpful”,

  • Bible-reading programmes consisting of unrelated snippets drawn from all parts of Scripture with no obvious connection other than perhaps some loose thematic relationship.
  • Programmes without any perspective on the “big picture” of the history of redemption (salvation history).
  • Strategies that aim at extracting a devotional thought for the day rather than allowing the text to dictate the outcome.
  • Lack of any real hermeneutical guide for the application of texts, especially Old Testament passages.
  • Asking the wrong questions of the text: usually something like, “What does this teach me about myself?’ before asking, ‘How does this passage testify to Christ?’.

[Goldsworthy, Graeme. Gospel-centered Hermeneutics: Foundations and Principles of Evangelical Biblical Interpretation. Downers Grove, IL: IVP Academic, 2006. Print. page 309]

williamtyndale-600Because of principles like these I eventually started reading the The One Year Chronological Bible by Tyndale. Although this is an NIV bible I was later able to get the electronic version for my Laridian Pocket Bible. This enables me to keep the same reading plan while using my preferred bible translation. I’ve been reading through the bible this way for several years.

I want to differentiate between bible reading and bible studying.

I’m not talking about studying the bible, pulling out and comparing commentaries and/or lexicons, or even reading bible study notes. I’m just talking about reading the text. Getting the text into you. Depending on the passage it will take anywhere from five to twenty minutes to finish a day’s readings.

After about my third year of doing this the bible’s big picture began to come into focus. I believe if a person does this it will greatly aide in their discernment and they’ll be able to notice when theologians and commentaries agree or disagree with scripture. Specifically, when a theologian or commentator might concur with one particular scripture passage while possibly contradicting another passage of scripture. Wheat from Chaff, Heat from Light, discernment is important. You can agree with some of what theologians propose in one area while recognizing their inconsistencies in other areas.

Finally, a word about prayer and bible reading. I use the Lord’s Prayer and Psalm 51 as a framework for prayer. Also, since I don’t have time to pray for everything I would like to at one time, I’ve split them out through the week. Here’s my daily prayer and bible reading outline (you might use a notebook).

  • Prayer: Revelation and Illumination (Always pray for understanding before your read the scriptures)
  • Passage: (the text for the day)
  • Principle: (what were some principles learned from the day’s text)
  • Prayer: Confession
    • Petition
      • Restoration and Renewal
      • Submission, Obedience, and Preservation
      • Provision
      • Intercession
    • Deliverance and Protection
      • Sunday: Local Church
      • Monday: Co-Workers
      • Tuesday: Governments
      • Wednesday: Family
      • Thursday: Persecuted Church
      • Friday: Friends
      • Saturday: Neighborhood
    • Adoration and Worship
  • Practice (look for ways to put what you learned today into practice, James 1:22-26)

[ReBlog] Some Thoughts on Reading the Bible in 2015

From Dr. Benjamin Shaw

52514103746“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.” Read more…

ht: Junior “The Big Dippa” Duran

Thoughts on Biblical Literacy (for you ladies)

Recently, I began a book study with a dear friend of mine from church, and I thought the book that she had in mind was so awesome that it was worth writing about. J The book is entitled Women of the Word: How to Study the Bible with both our Hearts and our Minds, and it is written by Jen Wilkin. Honestly, the book has been amazing so far (we’ve only met up for 3 weeks now), but we have added to the challenge by having a discussion leader each week that poses thoughtful questions for our discussion.

What I really like about the book is that it discusses why biblical literacy is important, bad habits we may have that keep us from knowing the Word of God as we ought, and ways we can study more intentionally and effectively. Now, if you’ve been following the posts on CredoCovenant, you could not have missed the last posting of M’Cheyne’s Bible reading plan for the year (but, if you did, you can find it here). I’m not sure how many people are using the plan, or plan on using the plan in 2015, or plan on using a different plan, but I do want to encourage you to make studying the Word of God an intentional endeavor in the new year. Jen Wilkins had this to say from her book:

Biblical literacy is something most of us will never feel comfortable claiming we have achieved during our lifetime…We treasure what we know, but we are troubled by what we do not know. We do our best to cobble together a patchwork knowledge of Scripture, pieced from sermons, studies, and quiet times, but we are often confronted with the gaps and loose seams in the garment of our understanding, particularly when life gets hard…But what can we do to know the Bible better?…

Biblical literacy occurs when a person has access to a Bible in a language she [he] understands and is steadily moving toward knowledge and understanding of the text. If it is true that the character and will of God are proclaimed in Scripture, then any serious attempt to become equipped for the work of discipleship must include a desire to build Biblical literacy. Biblical literacy stitches patchwork knowledge into a seamless garment of understanding…This steady movement does not occur by accident, nor does it always occur intuitively. We may have an earnest desire to build Bible literacy, but left untrained, we may develop habits of engaging the text that at best do nothing to increase literacy and at worst actually work against it. (emphasis mine)

What struck me most in her statement was the fact that Biblical literacy isn’t something you just “happen into”. It’s something that takes work, training, and practice before you become good at it. I mean, it is the way most things work in life. I didn’t start off being a good wife or a good mother, I had to put some work into, get better at it, and I still have a long way to go. What Christian didn’t start off by knowing a few memory verses and some Bible stories about Noah, David and Goliath, and Jonah? So, eventually, we have to grow. We need to mature. We need to move beyond elementary things, and seriously make studying the Word of God a priority in our lives.

Now, this book is aimed at women (excellent holiday gift anyone!?!), but I know any person can benefit from reading the book. However, I know that taking time for Bible study is often difficult with the varying circumstances a lot of women deal with (i.e. husbands, families, children, jobs, hospitality, etc.), but I want to encourage the women out there not to neglect studying your Bibles coming into this new year. In fact, you may want to take advantage of a Bible reading plan to provide you with some guidance and a little motivation to keep on going. But ultimately, I think that the Word of God provides the best motivation. In Titus 2, verses 3-5, women are exhorted here by the Apostle Paul. Right at the end of verse 3, you find the sentence: “They are to teach what is good.” Let’s face it. You can’t teach what you don’t know. That’s a really blunt way of saying it, but it is the truth. You really can’t teach or share with anyone something you do not know. But a more gentle way of saying this can be found in Proverbs 31:26: “She opens her mouth with wisdom, and the teaching of kindness is on her tongue.” In our pursuit to become an excellent lady, honoring God in all that we say or do, let us not neglect studying His Word. So ladies, I pray that these verses provide you with the best motivation to make serious Bible study a part of your life. I also encourage you to check out Jen Wilkin’s book and maybe meet up with a friend or two to talk through it, and her book is a fairly short read for the month of December so that you can start off right in the upcoming year.

Finally, if I can get your mind going already, here are some questions that my friend and I discussed from our first meeting on this all important topic:

  1. When you study the Bible from a man-centered perspective, what aspects of God do we miss seeing? What aspects of ourselves do we miss seeing?
  2. When you study the Bible from a God-centered perspective, what aspects of God do you see more clearly? What aspects of yourself do you see more clearly?
  3. What does it mean to renew our minds?
  4. Is the way that a person becomes more spiritual different in the New Testament than in the Old Testament?
  5. Is the pursuit of doctrinal precision a truly spiritual endeavor? Is it a mark of genuine spirituality? Is it a worthwhile pursuit for the Christian?
  6. Is it sinful for us to study the Word of God however we want to (i.e. interpreting and understanding things how we want or only studying the things we want)?

M’Cheyne Bible Reading Plan: December

December 1

 

December 2

 

December 3

 

December 4

 

December 5

 

December 6

 

December 7

 

December 8

 

December 9

 

December 10

 

December 11

 

December 12

 

December 13

 

December 14

 

December 15

 

December 16

 

December 17

 

December 18

 

December 19

 

December 20

 

December 21

 

December 22

 

December 23

 

December 24

 

December 25

 

December 26

 

December 27

 

December 28

 

December 29

 

December 30

 

December 31

[Announcement] M’Cheyne Wrap-Up

Digibron1As is the case with much of what I post on this site (The Baptist Confession, The Baptist Catechism, A Catechism for Boys and Girls, etc.), I have undertaken the project of posting Robert Murray M’Cheyne’s Bible Reading Plan primarily for the benefit of my own personal study. However, if the Lord so ordains that it would be a blessing to more than just me, how rewarding that would be. With that in mind, I simply would like to announce that the final post of the M’Cheyne Plan will be published in just a few short days. Be on the look out for it, and let your friends know about it so that they might read along with us in 2015.

M’Cheyne Bible Reading Plan: November

November 1

 

November 2

 

November 3

 

November 4

 

November 5

 

November 6

 

November 7

 

November 8

 

November 9

 

November 10

 

November 11

 

November 12

 

November 13

 

November 14

 

November 15

 

November 16

 

November 17

 

November 18

 

November 19

 

November 20

 

November 21

 

November 22

 

November 23

 

November 24

 

November 25

 

November 26

 

November 27

 

November 28

 

November 29

 

November 30

M’Cheyne Bible Reading Plan: October

October 1

 

October 2

 

October 3

 

 

October 4

 

 

October 5

 

October 6

 

October 7

 

October 8

 

October 9

 

October 10

 

October 11

 

October 12

 

October 13

 

October 14

 

October 15

 

October 16

 

October 17

 

October 18

 

October 19

 

October 20

 

October 21

 

October 22

 

October 23

 

October 24

 

October 25

 

October 26

 

October 27

 

October 28

 

October 29

 

October 30

 

October 31

 

M’Cheyne Bible Reading Plan: September

September 1

 

September 2

 

 

September 3

 

 

September 4

 

 

September 5

 

 

September 6

 

 

September 7

 

 

September 8

 

 

September 9

 

 

September 10

 

 

September 11

 

 

September 12

 

 

September 13

 

 

September 14

 

 

September 15

 

 

September 16

 

 

September 17

 

 

September 18

 

 

September 19

 

 

September 20

 

 

September 21

 

 

September 22

 

 

September 23

 

 

September 24

 

 

September 25

 

 

September 26

 

 

September 27

 

 

September 28

 

 

September 29

 

 

September 30

 

 

M’Cheyne Bible Reading Plan: August

August 1

 

August 2

 

August 3

 

August 4

 

August 5

 

August 6

 

August 7

 

August 8

 

August 9

 

August 10

 

August 11

 

August 12

 

August 13

 

August 14

 

August 15

 

August 16

 

August 17

 

August 18

 

August 19

 

August 20

 

August 21

 

August 22

 

August 23

 

August 24

 

August 25

 

August 26

 

August 27

 

August 28

 

August 29

August 30

 

August 31

M’Cheyne Bible Reading Plan: July

July 1

 

July 2

 

July 3

 

July 4

 

July 5

 

July 6

 

July 7

 

July 8

 

July 9

 

July 10

 

July 11

 

July 12

 

July 13

 

July 14

 

July 15

 

July 16

 

July 17

 

July 18

 

July 19

 

July 20

 

July 21

 

July 22

 

July 23

 

July 24

 

July 25

 

July 26

 

July 27

 

July 28

 

July 29

 

July 30

 

July 31