- May 16, 2021
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The title get your attention
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Do you have a bible reading plan ?
"People don't plan to fail but the do fail to plan ."
www.christianpost.com
Clip from article .
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 (pun intended).
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.
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:
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.

Do you have a bible reading plan ?
"People don't plan to fail but the do fail to plan ."

The Bible reading plan that changed my spiritual life
If you ve struggled to maintain a regular Bible reading habit, I encourage you to try this approach

Clip from article .
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 (pun intended).
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.
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.
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.