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Wednesday, February 25, 2026

CrossTalk: Read the Bible as your Lenten Challenge

 


For the second year in a row, our congregation is working on a challenge to read the Bible from cover to cover during one calendar year. That comes out to 82 verses, or three and a quarter chapters per day.

It’s quite doable and it has many benefits. I encourage you to join us in this challenge.

The first benefit is that it will dispel the myth that the Bible is just too big and too complicated for the average person to tackle. Anyone—and I mean anyone—who starts reading the Bible at page one soon learns that it is very straightforward.

Most of the Bible simply describes events that happened during the history of the world. It is not written in cryptic code but in historical narrative.

The Bible is only confusing when false teachers cherry-pick a passage from here and a passage from there and artificially connect them together into something that the Bible never says.

When you read the Bible cover to cover, don’t try to read between the lines. Just see for yourself how its stories connect naturally. Adam’s story flows into Abraham’s story. And Abraham’s flows into Moses’ story and Moses’ story flows into Jesus’ story.

Read it on its own terms and you will soon become familiar with the story of the human family, created and sustained by God. As you are reading these historical events, you will see how God is deeply involved in very ordinary lives.

Sometimes His involvement is a miraculous deliverance from an impossible situation. Sometimes it is a frightening judgment on those who thumb their noses at Him.

The blessings—like bumper crops, victory in battle, and restoration of broken relationships—may seem like pure luck in the non-biblical world. But the Bible makes clear that all of them are God’s direct fulfillment of His promises.

Likewise, judgments—like famine, military disaster, and the fall of entire nations—are not random, but are directly connected to the people’s sins and rebellion.

Taken together, both sorts of stories are written so that you would take God ever more seriously. “Now these things happened to them as an example, but they were written down for our instruction” (1 Corinthians 10:11).

When you read of God’s terrible punishments, you are stirred to repent. And when you read of God’s miraculous deliverances, you are emboldened to trust His promises without fearing that He will let you down.

That’s the second main benefit of Bible reading. If you approach it like an empty fairy tale, you will be bored. But when you remember that these things really happened, you will be moved to repentance and faith.

Repentance is when you take your sins seriously and are no longer content to cave in to every temptation that you feel. Faith is when you are no longer afraid of what others can do to you but you trust that God’s promises to care and provide for you are true.

And that brings us to Lent.

Lent is a time of renewal because Lent is a season that invites us to take God more seriously today than we did yesterday. Lent is not about giving up chocolate or some such thing. Lent is really about a renewal of life that is born of repentance.

Fasting can be helpful. But if you really want renewal, go to God’s Word. It will do more for you than anything that you can do for yourself.

Reading the Bible for yourself will reduce your intimidation over Bible reading and fortify you against some of the false teaching that Satan will throw your way. Reading the Bible will give you reasons to fear, love and trust in God more than anything. Also, reading the Bible will teach you to gather with fellow believers in weekly worship.

When you take God’s involvement in your life seriously, the blessing you find by gathering with other believers will crown your Lenten repentance with renewal and Easter joy. God promises it.


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