It took me longer than I expected to realize this simple truth: understanding Scripture isn’t something that happens in a moment of revelation. It’s not a destination you reach after reading cover to cover. It’s a gradual, sometimes frustrating, often beautiful process of growing into the text over years. I learned this the hard way.
The Seasons
For the first few years of reading the Bible seriously, I approached it like a textbook. I had a plan. I was disciplined. I was going to understand it. Then life happened.
There were seasons where I was consistent — months where I opened Scripture every morning, notebook in hand, ready to extract meaning. And then there were seasons where I wasn’t. Times when I’d open it daily, and times when it sat untouched for months because work was overwhelming, or I was discouraged, or honestly, I just forgot.
I felt like a failure. Everyone else seemed to “get it.” Why couldn’t I stick with it?
But over time — through repetition, discipline, and honestly just not quitting even when I wanted to — something started to change. It wasn’t dramatic. There was no lightning bolt moment. But gradually, almost imperceptibly, the words stopped feeling like ancient instructions and started feeling like a conversation.
What felt distant started to feel personal. What seemed like separate books began to sound like one voice.
Why the Bible Feels Hard
The Bible isn’t hard because it’s meant to keep you out. It’s deep because it’s meant to be lived in — not studied like a textbook, but inhabited like a home you return to.
When you live in a home, you don’t learn everything about it in a week. You discover it slowly. You find the creaky floorboard in the hallway. You learn which windows let in the morning light. You figure out which cabinet has the good cups. Over months and years, the space becomes familiar. It becomes yours.
The Bible works the same way.
The Psalms meant something different to me at twenty than they do at thirty. The parable of the prodigal son made me cry at one stage of my life, and challenged me in a completely different way at another. Passages I skipped over as “boring genealogy” suddenly became profound when I understood the context of redemption running through generations.
The Part People Don’t Like to Hear
You can read the Bible every day and still not hear it clearly.
I used to think that meant I was doing something wrong — that I needed a better translation, a better study guide, a better commentary. But then I realized something humbling:
I’d read a passage about pride while my chest was tight with it. Read about forgiveness while actively rehearsing a grudge. Read about greed while scrolling through things I didn’t need. Read about patience while irritated at being interrupted.
The words were there. They were clear. I just wasn’t listening — because I didn’t want to change.
This is the barrier most people don’t talk about. It’s not intellectual. It’s simple resistance. When a passage confronts something you’re not ready to let go of, you develop incredible skill at not hearing it. You rationalize. You contextualize. You convince yourself it doesn’t apply. You read right past it.
“Do not merely listen to the word, and so deceive yourselves. Do what it says.”
James 1:22
What Actually Changes
If you stay with it — really stay with it, through the dry seasons and the confusing passages and the moments when nothing seems to be happening — something shifts. Not overnight. Rarely with fanfare.
But gradually, then suddenly, you’ll notice you’re responding differently to things that used to control you.
You begin to recognize the voice behind the words — not as doctrine or instruction, but as presence.
How to Actually Start (and Stick With It)
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Start small.
Not because you lack ambition, but because consistency beats heroic effort. Three verses a day is infinitely better than planning to read five chapters and then reading nothing for two weeks out of guilt.
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Pick a translation that connects with you.
If you’re reading something you find difficult or archaic, you’ll quit. The ESV, NIV, NLT, and The Message all have different feels. Read a passage in a few versions and pick the one that feels most alive to you.
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Use a simple plan.
You don’t need the fanciest app. A printed reading plan, YouVersion, or even just opening to a random book works. The goal is to remove the friction of deciding what to read.
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Read with a pen.
Circle words that stand out. Write questions in the margin. Jot down what you notice. Engagement changes everything — you’ll remember more, and you’ll be more likely to actually hear what’s being said.
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Don’t aim for perfection.
You will miss days. You will read something and understand nothing. The question isn’t “Did I miss a day?” It’s “Am I staying in it overall?”
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Find someone to talk about it with.
A friend, a small group, a pastor, even an online community. Articulating what you’re learning helps you understand it more deeply. And knowing someone else is on the journey makes it feel less lonely.
The Real Starting Point
Not discipline. Not spiritual correctness. But desire — the hunger for something more than you currently are. Even if it’s just three verses. Open it today. Come back tomorrow. The rest will grow in you, gradually, then suddenly.
What’s been your experience with Scripture? Have you had seasons of consistency and seasons of struggle? Share your story in the comments — you might be the encouragement someone else needs.