Dec 29, 2024
How can you get more out of your Bible reading this year? My top advice is to SLOW DOWN! The readings in this plan take around 20 minutes if read aloud. If you read silently, you might finish in only 10 minutes. But if you skim through like that, you won’t retain very much! I suggest these two ways to slow down:
1. Read out loud to yourself. Read expressively. When you find that your first attempt didn’t quite have the right intonation, go back and read the sentence again. Take time to think about— and pray about, what you have just read.
2. Read along while listening to the Daily Bible Reading Podcast. This will definitely slow you down.
One advantage of listening to the podcasts is that each one ends with a short prayer that is aimed at helping you apply what you have just read. By the way, I normally don’t say an Amen at the end of the prayers. This is because I hope you keep on praying after the episode ends.
GENESIS 5-6:
In chapter 3 of Genesis, the Lord gave his judgment against the
serpent. God talked about the woman’s offspring (which is a
collective singular noun) when speaking to the serpent, and
said,
“her offspring and yours will always be enemies. Her offspring will crush your head, and you will bite her offspring's heel.”
This is the very first prophecy looking forward to a Messiah and Redeemer who will crush Satan’s head. Just before that, there is another picture worth noting: God provided clothes for the man and woman made from animal skins. This is the first hint of the sacrificial system that prefigures Christ.
JOB 3:
Today we read Job’s first speech. In the Bible— and especially in
Job and the Psalms, we find out that God thoroughly understands and
takes into account the fact that humans suffer. This is shown in
the fact that such deep expressions of suffering are found in God’s
Word— right from the earliest writings.
MARK 2:
Yesterday in the second half of Mark 1, we read of Jesus
miraculously healing people in Capernaum, and his refusing to stay
only there. He preached and cast out demons all over the region of
Galilee. The healing of the man with leprosy is notable because of
the exchange between Jesus and that man, and also the results of
the man’s not following Jesus’ instructions.
———————
NLT Translation notes:
Mrk. 2:5 Seeing their faith, Jesus said to the paralyzed man, “My child, [PET: I have forgiven your sins.//your sins are forgiven.]”
[I will occasionally quote from the PET, which is the Plain English Translation. That is the English translation that matches our Plain Indonesian Translation (TSI). The PET was first created as part of the checking process for the TSI, and some parts have been published because so many Indonesians desire to learn English.]
9 [PET: Certainly you will have difficulty accepting that I said to this paralyzed man, ‘I have forgiven your sins.’ Will it be easier for you to accept it if I say to him, ‘Get up, pick up your mattress and go home’?//Is it easier to say to the paralyzed man ‘Your sins are forgiven,’ or ‘Stand up, pick up your mat, and walk’? ]
10 So I will prove to you that [I, the Son of Man
have//the Son of Man has] the authority on earth to
forgive sins.” Then Jesus turned to the paralyzed man and said,
18 Once when John’s disciples were fasting and the
Pharisees were [also] fasting, some people came to
Jesus and asked, “Why don’t your disciples fast like John’s
disciples
and the Pharisees do?”
[The translation should not give the impression that the two
groups were joining together to fast.]
28 So [I,] the Son of Man [am/is]
Lord, even over the Sabbath!”
Unless otherwise indicated, all Scripture quotations are taken from the Holy Bible, New Living Translation, copyright © 1996, 2004, 2015 by Tyndale House Foundation. Used by permission of Tyndale House Publishers, Carol Stream, Illinois 60188. All rights reserved.