What is your daily reading plan? I want to complete the OT AS I have already read the NT through several times. A study bible can be helpful to read through for the notes, Maps, charts, etc.. Not sure if I will use the ESV/NIV AS I MAY switch back and forth given how sometimes the literal rendering can be awkward in contemporary English and why the NIV has the advantage at times. But the ESV is in the same line as the KJV and is probably the most accurate translation in English.
But in all honesty when I meet Amos in heaven what If he asked if I read his book and I said no I read MacArthurs FaithWorks and all of RC SPROUL instead... What an embarrassment!!!!
Reading the Bible next year
Discussion in 'General Baptist Discussions' started by evangelist6589, Dec 29, 2014.
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evangelist6589 Well-Known MemberSite Supporter
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I would highly recommend the chronological Bible reading to read through the Bible. Skip the maps, study notes and stuff and just read the Bible for what it is. Read it straight through and then when you are done with today's reading, if you want to go back to the notes and stuff, that's fine but try to read it as you are reading a letter or a book - just read.
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Scarlett O. ModeratorModerator
Ann beat me to it.
I am reading the Chronological Bible for 2015. -
InTheLight Well-Known MemberSite Supporter
Bought the Chronological Bible for my wife for her birthday. She loves it. Looks very intriguing.
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InTheLight Well-Known MemberSite Supporter
She reads about a half hour every night in bed before turning out the lights. I really want to read it but it might look like I got it for me instead of her birthday present. (Might be true!)
I figure the Chronological Bible will help me put together the history of the Jewish kingdoms in the Old Testament. I don't have much coherent knowledge of that history. -
evangelist6589 Well-Known MemberSite Supporter
Is this a book I need to buy? -
evangelist6589 Well-Known MemberSite Supporter
What translation is this printed in? -
InTheLight Well-Known MemberSite Supporter
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I have a KJV on my shelf here... -
evangelist6589 Well-Known MemberSite Supporter
Is there an ESV? -
http://www.esv.org/assets/pdfs/rp.chronological.pdf -
InTheLight Well-Known MemberSite Supporter
This is the one I got for my wife:
http://www.amazon.com/dp/1401680119/?tag=baptis04-20 -
One of my hopes and prayers is that if I get back to His Word, I'll be better equipped to handle the crud the world throws my way. Did not do a very stellar job of handling life this year. Me in 2014 was like this little guy ----> :tonofbricks:, I got buried under a ton of "bricks." -
I'm trying something new/old this year - the McCheyne Bible reading plan. He was an early 19th century Scottish preacher. With this plan, you read, on average, four chapters a day, occasionally five. You will complete the New Testament twice, the Psalms twice, and the Old Testament once. See the two links - the first is about the plan, and the second is a link to the plan online, using the ESV. If you google the plan, you can also print off pdf's of it.
http://www.edginet.org/mcheyne/info.html
http://www.esvbible.org/devotions/one-year-tract/ -
Jordan Kurecki Well-Known MemberSite Supporter
currently I am working on Song of Solomon trying to commit it to memory. I read chapter 1 5 times a day, twice in the morning and three times at night. then I read a psalm and a proverb, and then read 1 -4 chapters of whatever book I happen to be in as I work through the bible from start to finish.
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Jordan Kurecki Well-Known MemberSite Supporter
my advice is to read for quality and not quantity.
It's better to read 1 verse and to meditate on it (psalm 1:2) than to read a whole bunch to check it off your daily list..
this is why I also recommend trying to memorize whole chapters of scripture, I recommend working through a small book of the bible to start, like James, Philippians, 1 John, Galatians, Ephesians, or some of the Psalms.
work through them chapter by chapter, spend a whole month on each chapter, read it 2 times in the morning, and 3 times at night. this will help you commit to memory, and it's also causes the passage to really get into your heart, it really opens up the scriptures to you.
I also recommend the King James bible for accuracy and because it's beauty and style really work well for memorization. -
Additionally, I will disagree with the accuracy issue - especially with words that have changed meanings and so there is misunderstanding in what is read. -
The ESV is written in such a way that no one has ever spoken that form of Tonto-style English. "Old store, long kept." LOL! -
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