M
midori
Guest
Remember that the Bible isn’t one big novel; it’s lots of different books that have been assembled together between one set of covers. And just like you don’t read law in the same way you read correspondence, and you don’t read poetry in the same way you read prophecy, and you don’t read allegory in the same way that you read history, you need to read each part according to the reason why it was composed in the first place.
At the same time, however, you read some bits… and you get excited, because you realize that foreshadowing is happening, in anticipation of 500, 1000 pages in the future.
So having a good idea as to what’s going on overall is also important, to help you appreciate what’s happening at a given moment.
When we were small, we read it two chapters per night. I think it takes about three years to finish it at that pace. Then later on, in college, I took Survey of the OT, and then Survey of the NT. Each of those classes would assign a book at a time, and we’d discuss. It’s easier to read, say, Tobit or Esther in one big go, versus, say, Psalms or Numbers.
But there’s plenty of Bible-reading programs/schedules out there. Find one that works for you, and see if the extra guidance can help you appreciate what you’re reading, instead of getting bogged down by wordswordswordswordswords.
Also, you might try putting your hands on the Knox Bible. Not only is the translation very elegant— sort of what you might have gotten if the KJV was written in the mid-20th-century— but the type layout is deliberately in paragraph form, vs the usual two-or-three-column layout you get with other Bibles. So that really helps with the narrative flow, if you like your Bible-reading to be more like a novel than a reference book.
At the same time, however, you read some bits… and you get excited, because you realize that foreshadowing is happening, in anticipation of 500, 1000 pages in the future.
When we were small, we read it two chapters per night. I think it takes about three years to finish it at that pace. Then later on, in college, I took Survey of the OT, and then Survey of the NT. Each of those classes would assign a book at a time, and we’d discuss. It’s easier to read, say, Tobit or Esther in one big go, versus, say, Psalms or Numbers.
But there’s plenty of Bible-reading programs/schedules out there. Find one that works for you, and see if the extra guidance can help you appreciate what you’re reading, instead of getting bogged down by wordswordswordswordswords.
Also, you might try putting your hands on the Knox Bible. Not only is the translation very elegant— sort of what you might have gotten if the KJV was written in the mid-20th-century— but the type layout is deliberately in paragraph form, vs the usual two-or-three-column layout you get with other Bibles. So that really helps with the narrative flow, if you like your Bible-reading to be more like a novel than a reference book.