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The Bible reading plan that changed my spiritual life

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If you’re like most Christians, you’ve probably tried to read through the Bible at some point — and maybe you’ve fallen off track.

Maybe you started strong but got bogged down in Leviticus. Or perhaps you’re in that frustrating cycle where you keep restarting Genesis every few months.

What if I told you I’ve discovered a Bible reading approach that’s not just sustainable, but actually addictive? One that will transform your daily Scripture time from a duty into something you genuinely look forward to?

Why most Bible reading plans fail

A quick search reveals countless different varieties of Bible-in-a-year reading plans. Some offer printable worksheets, others provide audiobook companions, and all promise to guide you through Scripture systematically.

Don’t get me wrong—I’m sure those are all great. Truth be told, ANY Bible reading plan that you make and stick to is a fantastic plan, at least for you.

But there’s a reason so many well-intentioned Bible reading journeys fizzle out by February:

Cold starts are difficult: Diving straight into complex passages like Leviticus or Hebrews first thing in the morning can be jarring.

Linear reading lacks variety: Reading straight through can mean weeks in challenging sections with no relief.

Missing the big picture: Reading isolated sections makes it harder to see connections across Scripture.

Duty without delight: Reading becomes a checkbox rather than a relationship.

Because it’s important, as Protestants, that we truly be Sola Scriptura. And to do that, we can’t be “Some o’ Scriptura” or “None o’ Scriptura.”

If we believe this book truly IS the Word of God, we should be reading it, ALL of it, regularly — including the parts we’re less familiar with.

Enter the 5122 Bible reading plan

I want to share the Scripture reading plan that helped me work through the Bible for the first time as a new believer — a plan that fundamentally changed my relationship with God’s Word.

Warning: This plan is intensive. It involves reading 10 chapters of Scripture PER DAY. Depending on the section you’re in, that can be a lot.

But if you want to engage with the text and drink deeply from it, experiencing Scripture from different angles each day as one comprehensive multi-millennial story, I think you’re going to love it.

Think of it like spiritual leg day. Except every day is leg day.

And the weights you’re lifting are God’s Word.

And God is your trainer.

The 5122 Plan Explained

The plan is called 5122 (five-one-two-two), which helps you remember its structure. Every day you read:

5 Psalms.

1 chapter of Proverbs.

2 chapters of the Old Testament.

2 chapters of the New Testament.

You read straight through each section in linear fashion. When you reach the end of a book (like Psalms), you start over from the beginning.

I didn’t invent this plan. It was taught to me by my friend Garrett, a husband, father, and former Air Force B2 bomber test pilot — one of the handful of men who has blessed me most on my Christian walk.

When we met in mid-2023, he asked if I was reading Scripture daily. When I said no, he explained why that was a problem and taught me this reading plan.

From Tarot Cards to 10 chapters a day

As a relatively new Christian, I initially thought reading ten chapters daily would be overwhelming. So I shelved Garrett’s suggestion.

But a couple months later, I had a convicting realization: I used to spend up to an hour daily on New Age practices like studying tarot cards—something I did religiously for two years.

Why wasn’t I devoting at least that much time to my Christian faith?

Without a good answer, I committed to the 5-1-2-2 plan. And you know what? I loved it. No one was more surprised than me, which is why I’m thrilled to share it with you today.

The daily warm-up: Psalms and Proverbs

Starting with Psalms and Proverbs is like warming up before hitting the heavy weights. Here’s why this sequence is brilliant:

Psalms engage your heart first. The Bible isn’t as immediately readable as a modern novel — that’s not its purpose. Even faithful modern translations reflect thought patterns and language that’s 2,000 years old or more.

Starting in Psalms connects you emotionally before tackling more complex texts. These poetic outpourings of joy, sorrow, triumph, anguish, grief and praise are immediately relatable. Reading five Psalms daily connects you to your own human experience of suffering and longing for God in a visceral way.

Proverbs engages your mind next. Moving into Proverbs shifts from emotion to intellect. Rather than extended theological discourse, Proverbs offers practical wisdom in digestible portions. Most are straightforward, and you’ll likely find at least one daily proverb that relates to something you’re currently facing.

As a man, reading the words of the father-son duo of King David and King Solomon nearly every day became a special treat — learning wisdom from two of history’s greatest leaders.

This Psalms-to-Proverbs progression engages both your emotional and intellectual faculties, preparing you to read the rest of Scripture. My friend Garrett described it as “tilling the soil of our minds and hearts so the Word can be planted in us.”

The main workout: Old and New Testament in parallel

With heart and mind prepared, you’ll find it easier to engage with the language of Scripture in the Old and New Testament readings.

Starting at Genesis 1 and Matthew 1, you read forward linearly through both testaments. This creates a powerful experience as you watch both narratives unfold in parallel.

Day 1, you’ll read about both the creation of the cosmos and the birth of Christ. Creation and redemption side by side! And as I progressed, I discovered other remarkable parallels:

Reading about building the Tabernacle in Leviticus alongside John 3.

Encountering the Messianic prophecy of Isaiah 53, the same day as Hebrews 11 and the “cloud of witnesses.”

These connections blew my mind. It was like walking through a gallery of the Bible’s great heroes and seeing Christ as their inheritor and fulfillment. All while continuing to sing songs and learn godly wisdom through daily Psalms and Proverbs.

And the best part, these are just the connections that I remember! You’ll undoubtedly find your own.

The practical details

When you reach the end of a book, simply start over. With 150 Psalms at 5 per day, you’ll restart Psalms monthly. Proverbs has 31 chapters, perfect for a chapter a day. (Pro tip: Give Psalm 119 its own day due to length, and both books will align to a 31-day cycle.)

With the New Testament’s 260 chapters and the Old Testament’s 748 chapters (minus Psalms and Proverbs), you’ll complete the New Testament about three times before finishing the Old Testament once.

In just over a year, you’ll have read:

Psalms and Proverbs 12x each.

The New Testament 2x.

The Old Testament 1x.

This creates a richer, more nourishing experience than a straight linear reading.

My personal Bible study setup

A few practical notes that might help you:

Highlighting: I highlight as I read, which helps me find passages later when I return to them.

Flag bookmarks: I use small adhesive flags to mark my place in each section. Each day after reading, I advance the flag two chapters to mark the next day’s stopping point.

Bible translation: My daily reader is the NASB1995, which balances modern language with a formal, biblical feel. Dr. James White suggests the Legacy Standard Bible as the perfected NASB, which might be my next one.

Avoid study Bibles initially: For my first 5122 read-through, I specifically chose a Bible without study notes to focus on God’s Word itself before diving deeper with commentaries.

The challenge: Start your spiritual leg day

So there it is: 5122 in all its glory. Five Psalms, one Proverb, two Old Testament chapters, and two New Testament chapters daily — 10 chapters total.

This isn’t about checking boxes or following rules. It’s about immersing yourself in God’s Word from multiple angles simultaneously, allowing His truth to wash over you day after day.

The best Bible reading plan is the one YOU stick with. Whether that’s 5122 or something else entirely, the important thing is consistency and commitment.

If you’ve struggled to maintain a regular Bible reading habit, I encourage you to try this approach. It transformed my relationship with Scripture, and I believe it could do the same for you.
Sources:Christian Post

http://theendtimeradio.com

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‘God Still Heals’: Mike Signorelli on Fighting the Demonic, Seeing Miracles — and More

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A New York City pastor is on a mission to help people see that “God still heals.”

Mike Signorelli of V1 Church in New York City joined Billy Hallowell to explain how facets of the secular medical community are now “open to the spiritual realm.”

While some doctors and hospitals are looking for help in the wrong places, he said there is an opportunity for Christians to step into the fold and divert attention toward biblical truth.

“What we have to do is believe that God is going to do what only He can do and let me awaken people to the reality that He still heals,” Signorelli said.

In his own ministry, the popular preacher said he has to remind himself to “pray for even incurable things,” as he puts full trust in the Lord. He said he’s seen and experienced incredible miracles as a result of this trust. Signorelli even shared the example of a woman who was healed of Multiple sclerosis (MS).

“I received an email with all of these PDF attachments of a medical diagnosis of MS, and then as I begin to read the documents,” he said, noting he had prayed for the woman. “It was multiple confirmations that all the lesions were gone. It was completely undetectable and they cleared her and even said, ‘You’re done with medication and any medical intervention.’”

Signorelli continued, “And I wept knowing my own unbelief in that moment.”

These are the very issues CBN tackles in our new documentary “Investigating the Supernatural: Miracles,” as we travel the nation diving into claims of miraculous healing.

“Your film is so important,” Signorelli said of the project. “And I hope many people listening watch it right now because it’s like, listen, I don’t want to serve a God that never heals. … But we also don’t want to distract people from the fact that salvation is the greatest healing and we’re all going to die of something. So it’s like living in that both and is healthy doctrine, healthy theology.”

Signorelli is also on a mission to launch a new effort to inspire faith — the Mission 11:59.
Sources:faithwire

http://theendtimeradio.com

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Australian Defence Force releases new Bible edition for soldiers

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The Australian Defence Force (ADF) has released a new edition of the New International Version (NIV) Bible, two decades after the previous edition was released in 2005.

The launch ceremony took place on March 13 at Russell Offices, the ADF’s administrative headquarters in Canberra, according to an ADF press release. Tina King of Bible Society Australia presented the new Bible to Maj. Gen. Sue Graham, who represented the chief of the Defence Force at the event.

“We acknowledge in the Defence Force how we are continually supported by the public, and the sacrifice from Bible Society volunteers brought forward today is another embodiment of that,” Graham said. “It’s particularly important to have a Bible that is available and relevant to all our soldiers, sailors and aviators.”

The new edition includes content tailored specifically to ADF personnel, such as contextually relevant prayers for those serving in the Navy, Army and Air Force.

“This is not a book for a bookshelf, it is a book to be near. We hope it will be dog-eared, underlined, searched and cherished,” said King.

Bible Society Australia also hosted a historical display at the event, showcasing military Bibles dating back to the Boer War. Among them was a Bible that saved the life of LCpl. Phillip Davies during World War I. Davies was digging for telephone cables at Messines Ridge, near Ypres in Belgium, when two bomb shells exploded nearby. Shrapnel struck his arms and legs, killing one colleague and injuring two others.

The location is known to have seen fierce fighting between British and German soldiers vying to control the ridge, considered important at the time for military advancement as it allowed a strategic viewpoint over the Ypres Salient.

The next morning, Davies discovered a piece of shrapnel stuck in the back cover of his Soldier’s Bible, which he had kept in his breast pocket. The shrapnel had been stopped just inches from his heart. The Bible was one of a million donated at the time by Bible Society Australia.

Director General Chaplaincy—Army, Principal Chaplain Kerry Larwill, spoke at the ceremony, noting the continued relevance of spiritual resources in military life.

“About 44 percent of Australians identified as Christian, and more are interested in spirituality of different varieties,” Larwill said. “For people who serve in Defence, which we know has demands on individuals and their families, it’s a source of light and hope to those who derive their meaning from a Christian perspective or value its wisdom.”

Representatives from the Military Christian Fellowship of Australia (MCF-A) and other chaplaincy networks, such as the Forum of Christian Military Ministries, also attended the launch. The new Bible includes a foreword written by former MCF-A patron and former Gov.-Gen. of Australia, General (retired) David Hurley.
Sources:Christianpost

http://theendtimeradio.com

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Labour council withdraws injunction seeking to ban Christian street preachers

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A Labour-run council in the United Kingdom has withdrawn its attempt to impose an injunction banning Christian street preachers in two Hampshire towns. Rushmoor Borough Council reversed its legal action after sustained opposition from local faith leaders and Conservative councilors.

The council had sought a court order in March that would have prohibited street preachers from praying, singing, handing out Bibles or leaflets, or initiating religious conversations in the town centers of Farnborough and Aldershot, according to the U.K.-based group Christian Concern.

The proposed injunction included restrictions that would have made it a criminal offense to pray for someone without prior permission, offer Christian literature by hand, or engage in discussions deemed “hostile” based on protected characteristics under the Equality Act.

“The Gospel has never been silenced by opposition — in fact, challenges like these have historically refined, not weakened, the Church’s resolve,” said Andrea Williams, chief executive of the Christian Legal Centre, in a statement provided to The Christian Post on Saturday.

“Thanks to the swift action of Christian Concern, the local preachers, councilors and supporters — and the public attention generated — the Council now recognizes the serious error of judgment it made. A meeting is now scheduled between the Council and the preachers to explore constructive and lasting solutions.

The council’s application, filed under provisions of the Anti-social Behaviour, Crime and Policing Act 2014 and the Local Government Act 1972, cited the need to prevent “alarm and distress” among the public. The draft injunction warned that breaching its terms could result in prosecution and up to two years in prison.

Preachers and local churches said they were not consulted and described the proposed restrictions as disproportionate and unprecedented.

Lawyers from the Christian Legal Centre, which supported the preachers, said the injunction risked criminalizing ordinary expressions of faith, including carol singing.

Street preacher Sally McGuinness, who has worked in the area for over 15 years, was quoted as saying that she made several attempts to contact the council after learning of the proposed injunction but received no response.

She told council officials at a meeting on April 23 that the threat of criminalization had weighed heavily on her and accused the council of failing to acknowledge the good done by local Christian outreach.

Several faith leaders, including ministers from Evangelical churches, an Army chaplain and a local vicar, also attended the meeting to raise their objections. During the session, council officers were told that the proposed measures would not only restrict constitutionally protected religious expression but would set a precedent for banning similar public acts of faith.

Preacher Jamie Broadey, supported by the Christian Legal Centre, an arm of Christian Concern, said he had been shocked to read that the draft injunction forbade activities like praying or singing unless the public first gave permission.

He called the restrictions incompatible with centuries of Christian tradition in Britain.

Following the meeting, the council announced it would withdraw the application and consider a voluntary code of conduct for street preaching.

Council leader Gareth Williams was quoted as saying that discussions with the local Christian community helped reach a solution that balanced freedom of worship with the interests of all town center users.

Councilor Gareth Lyon, the local Conservative group leader who had taken up the preachers’ case, welcomed the decision, saying it was the right outcome for both free speech and religious liberty.

Rushmoor’s draft injunction on prohibitions included a ban on placing a hand on someone while praying — even if they consented — as well as any sermon that could be perceived as hostile toward individuals based on characteristics such as sex, gender identity or religion.

The council defended its position by citing complaints from members of the public who claimed the preachers created a “non-inclusive” environment. In one instance, a person said their trans-identified child felt unsafe encountering street preaching. Other complaints referred to the use of a portable PA system, preaching that was deemed judgmental and daytime evangelism that disrupted residents’ sleep.

A meeting between council officials and faith leaders is expected to discuss alternatives to legal enforcement. The preachers are still seeking an apology and assurances that such measures will not be pursued again.
Sources:Christianpost

http://theendtimeradio.com

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