The Benefit of Saturated Bible Reading

Many people are starting new Bible reading plans as the new year kicks off. Let me suggest a slightly different approach: saturated Bible reading. Instead of reading as much Bible as possible (and possibly retaining very little), focus your efforts on a few chapters of the Bible over many days. Right now, I am reading the first four chapters of Mark's Gospel every day in the month of January. You may think, "Doesn't that get old, reading about the same miracles Jesus performed and interactions Jesus had with people?" Actually, no.

When you focus on the same passage over a several days, God speaks to you in different ways. Each day you have new experiences, and the same story can take on a new application. Also, you become very familiar with the passages. The Holy Spirit enables you to recall verses that encourage, exhort, or even confront you when you need it. If you read the passages from a written Bible (instead of electronically), you remember what part of the page the story is found.

Saturated Bible reading will increase your meditation on the Scriptures, especially if you start to voice it to God as a personalized prayer as you read. Give it a try.

David Rhoades

Dr. David H. Rhoades is a believer in Jesus Christ who is passionate about disciple-making. A gifted author and speaker, he is the Senior Pastor at Broadview Church in Lubbock, Texas. He is producing a growing number of biblically-based resources that can help Christians lead the people in their circles of influence to become fully devoted followers of Christ. David was called to the gospel ministry in 1987, and he has been a pastor since 1995. After finishing his Bachelor of Arts in Biblical Studies at The Criswell College, he earned his Master of Divinity degree at the New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary, where he received the 1995 C.C. Randall Award for Evangelism. In 2005 he graduated from Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary with a Doctor of Ministry degree in Missions and Evangelism, writing a ground-breaking doctoral project designed to help churches engage their multiethnic communities in ministry. Since 1995, he has served as a pastor to churches in Louisiana, Ohio, Oklahoma and Texas. David enjoys cooking, reading books, cheering on the Texas Longhorns, and spending time with his beautiful wife Amy and their kids: Timothy, Jonathan, and Mindi.

https://davidrhoades.org
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