“HOW TO USE YOUR NASB DAILY BIBLE
For each day of the year, there are four portions to read: a portion from the Old Testament, from Psalms, from Proverbs, and from the New Testament. By following the plan, at the end of one year you will have read through the entire Bible in consecutive daily installments.
If you aren’t ready for the entire Bible in a year, an alternative two-year plan would be …
Either way, you will develop a habit of thorough, daily Bible reading that will bless you in life.”
I’m going to follow the plan, with its four portions - similar to the three portion plan
@TrevorHL shared with us in post #12 - because I spent last year reading only the New Testament, twice, and I’m excited to get back to daily reading in the Hebrew Bible - without stepping away from the New Testament.
It takes 30 days to form a habit. I’ve had this habit of daily reading for decades. It will already be comfortable for me. (It would be uncomfortable for me to get out of the habit!) For others it will become a daily habit, if they stick to it.
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This is what the four-portion daily plan I’m following looks like for the first week:
January 1: Genesis 1-2; Psalm 1:1-6; Proverbs 1:1-7; Matthew 1:1-25
January 2: Genesis 3:1-4:26; Psalm 2:1-6; Proverbs 1:8-9; Matthew 2:1-23
January 3: Genesis 5:1-6:22; Psalm 2:7-12; Proverbs 1:10-19; Matthew 3:1-17
January 4: Genesis 7:1-8:22; Psalm 3:1-4; Proverbs 1:20-22; Matthew 4:1-25
January 5: Genesis 9:1-10:32; Psalm 3:5-8; Proverbs 1:23-27; Matthew 5:1-26
January 6: Genesis 11:1-12:20; Psalm 4:1-3; Proverbs 1:28-33; Matthew 5:27-48
January 7: Genesis 13:1-14:24; Psalm 4:4-8; Proverbs 2:1-5; Matthew 6:1-18
I’ve never used a plan that gives such a small daily portion size of reading in Psalms and Proverbs before. I’m already struggling just a little with that. I’ll get used to it - or maybe I won’t. Remember, it’s a plan that I’ll follow for a year and then (probably) use a different plan next year.