Quick Answer
For beginners: start with the Gospel of John (the most theologically focused Gospel), then Romans (Paul's clearest systematic theology), then the Psalms (the honest emotional core of Scripture). Read for understanding, not just completion. Ask three questions of every passage: What does it say? What does it mean? What does it mean for me? Consistency matters more than duration — ten minutes daily beats an hour on Sunday.
The Bible is the most translated, most distributed, most read book in human history. It is also, for many Christians, the most intimidating. It is long, spans thousands of years, contains multiple literary genres, and includes passages that are genuinely difficult. What follows is a practical guide to reading it in a way that is both faithful and enriching.
Where to Start
Not at the beginning. Genesis is important, but reading the Bible Genesis-to-Revelation from page one tends to bog down in Leviticus and produce discouragement. Better starting points:
- Gospel of John — the most theologically reflective Gospel, written "so that you may believe" (John 20:31). Gives you Jesus clearly
- Romans — Paul's most systematic treatment of the gospel. Understand Romans and you understand much of the rest of the New Testament
- Psalms — the emotional and devotional heart of Scripture. Covers every human experience. Can be read alongside anything else
- Proverbs — practical wisdom literature, readable in short daily sections
- Genesis + Exodus — the narrative foundation of everything that follows. Essential for understanding the whole Bible
How to Read Well
Three questions to ask of every passage:
- What does it say? — Read it carefully. What actually happens? What is actually said? Don't rush past the words
- What does it mean? — Consider the context. Who wrote it, to whom, in what situation? What did it mean to the original audience?
- What does it mean for me? — How does this passage apply to your life, your situation, your relationship with God?
Context is essential. A verse read in isolation often means something different from the same verse read in its context. "I can do all things through Christ who strengthens me" (Philippians 4:13) is not a general promise of unlimited achievement — it is Paul's statement about contentment in any circumstance, written from prison.
Three Study Methods
Inductive Bible study (observe, interpret, apply) — The most widely used method. First observe the text carefully (what does it say?), then interpret it (what does it mean?), then apply it (what does this mean for me?). Good for going deeper on individual passages or books.
Lectio Divina (sacred reading) — A contemplative method: read a short passage slowly four times. First for understanding, second listening for a word or phrase, third for what God might be saying to you, fourth in silent prayer. Develops attentiveness and receptivity.
Topical study — Choose a topic (forgiveness, fear, money) and find all the passages that address it. Good for understanding what the whole Bible says about something. Risk: proof-texting — reading verses out of context. Use a concordance and read surrounding context.
Reading Plans
- One-year Bible — Read through the entire Bible in a year. Typically 15-20 minutes/day. Gives the whole narrative but can feel rushed
- Book-by-book — Read one book at a time, slowly and repeatedly. Deeper understanding of individual books
- Gospels rotation — Read Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John in rotation. Immerse yourself in Jesus
- Psalms + one other — Read a Psalm each day plus a chapter from the New Testament. Balances devotional and doctrinal
Common Mistakes
- Reading for completion rather than understanding — Finishing the chapter matters less than understanding one verse
- Proof-texting — Using isolated verses to support predetermined conclusions without reading context
- Skipping the hard parts — Genealogies, Leviticus, and Revelation are confusing but not worthless
- Reading alone perpetually — The Bible was written for communities, not isolated individuals. Read with others when possible
- Expecting every session to feel significant — Some days are bread; some are manna you barely notice. Consistency produces growth even when individual sessions feel dry
Frequently Asked Questions
Where should a beginner start in the Bible?
The Gospel of John is the most widely recommended starting point — it introduces Jesus clearly, is theologically rich, and is written with the explicit purpose of producing faith (John 20:31). After John, Romans gives the theological framework of the gospel. The Psalms can be read alongside anything for devotional depth. Starting at Genesis page 1 and reading straight through often results in abandonment at Leviticus.
How long should I read the Bible each day?
Consistency matters more than duration. Ten minutes daily is more valuable than an hour on Sunday. A single chapter read carefully and prayerfully is more valuable than five chapters read for completion. Most Bible reading plans require 15-20 minutes daily to complete in a year. Start with what you can sustain and build from there.