Catholic Readers discussion
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What is your favorite daily reader?
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http://dwightlongenecker.com

2. Meditation for the day from the Magnificent
3. Excerpt from St. Escriva -->The Way, Furrow, The Forge


Although it is not a daily reader, I have been reading Introduction to the Devout Life by Saint Frances de Sales at night before going to bed.

Where do you get this Youversion? I searched for it on the Google Play Store and it was not available.


I don't know how much it's helping to make me "grow in faith." Right now, I can see why people put down their Bibles. Leviticus and Numbers are not the most exciting things in the world.



Hi Emily,
I started a Bible reading program a number of years ago and managed to get through the entire thing. But if I had started with the Old Testament, I am not sure I would have been successful. For Christians, the New Testament is the key to understanding the whole Bible, so it is good to begin there. By reading and studying the New Testament first, your reading of the Old will bear more fruit.
Also, I did not begin with the Gospels because I felt that the stories and parables they contained had become worn out or stale in my mind from overexposure. (Homilies tend to emphasize them and neglect other parts of Scripture.)
I thought that if I started with the Epistles, they would give me fresh eyes with which I could become reintroduced to the Gospels. And I didn't start with St. Paul either—especially not Romans. All too complicated to start out with. Even St. Peter agreed that Paul's letters were complicated!
I think that an excellent starting place for a fruitful Bible study is the Catholic Epistles: the ones by James, Peter, John, and Jude. These are shorter, and they amount to authoritative summaries of the Gospel message—Apostolic book reports on the Gospels, if you will. Sort of a Cliff Notes to the Bible written by the Apostles themselves!
This approach worked for me. The Epistles gave me a fresh perspective on the Gospels and a deeper appreciation of their rich content and wisdom, which forty years of bad homilies almost managed to efface completely.
I am actually starting an online Bible Study group for Advent at my website: http://newwalden.org/2015/12/04/the-r...
Good luck with your Bible study!
John

I do not know if you have access to any bible studies where you are, but Jeff Cavins' Bible Timeline study absolutely opened up the Bible to me. I went online to his website and found one 50 miles from me. (That was the closest at the time.) I was able to travel that distance and completed the study. Since there were no bible studies in my area, and I think it's important to get together with people for discussion, I continued my studies through that church. I'm now getting ready to start a bible study in my own parish using the Jeff Cavins materials. It has been absolutely worth it.


I agree

I agree"
Thanks for sharing, Tina. Do you have a favorite bible passage?

Be angry and do not sin. Mediate within your heart on your bed and be still. Off the sacrifices of rightousness , and put your trust in the Lord.
I keep this by my desk.

Be angry and do not sin. Mediate within your heart on your bed and be still. Off the sacrifices of rightousness , and put your trust in the Lord.
I keep this by my desk."
Thanks for sharing. Psalm 4 is a great one. My favorite is "I am the Vine and you are the branches...apart from me you can do nothing." John 15%


Thanks for sharing, Emily. Some scripture passages can be pretty dry, but we never know when the Spirit will speak to us. I remember waking up at 3 am once and not being able to go back to sleep. I opened my bible to 1st Chronicles "Duties of the temple workers" and I thought, "This is good; it will put me back to sleep." Instead, I was reminded that St. Paul told us we are temples of the Holy Spirit and I started reading the temple workers jobs and seeing how they relate to how we can take care of ourselves in the here and now. I ended up designing a Day of Reflection around it (I am an author/speaker/retreat facilitator)The insights God can give us are amazing. Praise God.










I personally think you have put your finger on the most important thing-the reader we often prefer is the one that most connects us with God.I haven't yet seen "This is the Day"but it sounds as if it gives you a 'balanced spiritual diet!' :)

Books mentioned in this topic
Reading God's Word 2016 (other topics)Introduction to the Devout Life (other topics)
Also: Do any of you use the Bible app from Youversion? Their new version offers sharing verses and discussion with friends and I'd love to have some people to share with me.
Ready, go! :D