Be Prepared for Lent : Reading Plans

What is Lent?

For many people, it is a 40-day period—not including the six Sundays—devoted to reflection, repentance, fasting, and preparation prior to Easter.

How is the date of Lent and Easter decided?

Unlike Christmas, Easter is not a fixed date on the calendar; it is sometimes described as a “moveable feast.” The Western church decided long ago to set Easter as the first Sunday following the first full moon after the vernal equinox (the first day of spring). Since the date of Easter varies widely (from March 22 to April 25), the dates of every other holiday-related to Easter vary as well.

The week before Easter is referred to as Holy Week. It begins on Palm Sunday, which recalls Jesus’ triumphal entry into Jerusalem. Thursday of that week is known in some traditions as Maundy Thursday. It is called that because it memorializes Jesus’ final instructions and last meal with His disciples. The term “Maundy” is related to the Latin word mandatum. It means “commandment”. It is also the first word in the Latin version of John 13:34 that records Jesus’ new commandment to His disciples. Since Jesus washed his disciples’ feet that fateful evening, Christians often do as Jesus did and wash one another’s feet.

Good Friday follows. It is the day that commemorates the crucifixion and burial of Jesus. Calling the day “good” seems ironic since Jesus died such a horrid death that day. However, what Jesus’ death accomplished for the redemption of the world is the greatest good the world has ever seen.

The Sunday following Good Friday ends the season of Lent and is designated Easter. It may be the most celebrated day on the Christian calendar, for it commemorates Jesus’ resurrection from the dead and the beginning of the new Kingdom. – Adapted from The Voice Bible.

Reading Plans for You!

Devotional: Devotion and Honor

Devotion and Honor

You were created for community. When God designed humans, He made us with the intention of placing us within a loving family. Today, we call that family the Church.

God’s original intention was that we would exist within a family of other believers. He didn’t intend for us to exist in isolation or separated from other people. Life was not meant to be lived alone.

Regardless of what your family experience was like, God intended for His family to be loving and caring. And it’s the qualities of God’s family that Paul is writing about in Romans 12.

Paul says to be devoted to one another in love. That means that we are to walk alongside other people through the various seasons of life. We should never abandon people when life gets hard.

Paul also encourages us to honor others. Instead of seeking self-recognition, we should honor and encourage each other. Instead of pursuing what seems best for us, we should seek the good of other people first.

Devotion and honor are just two aspects of loving people well, but Jesus said that the world will recognize us as His disciples by the way that we love. This means that we have to genuinely love others—not just pretend to love them. And the place we need to start showing genuine honor is within our spiritual family. Rather than letting self-promotion divide the family of God, our goal should be to honor those around us.

If we won’t learn how to love people who follow Jesus, then we won’t know how to love people who don’t.

That’s why we should frequently pause and take an assessment on how we are doing at loving others. So take a moment right now to think about the ways in which you loved and honored people this past week. Write down two or three things you can do to continue to show love to those in your life.

Will We Be Ready When Jesus Returns?

I know that I always talk about Jesus returning. I talk about it because it is true. The things that are going on in the world prove it. The Word of God tells us of all of these things that will happen before Jesus returns to earth. The question is this, will we be ready when Jesus returns? Will we be ready to stand before Him in Judgement? If not, we had better get ourselves right before Him before that day comes.

2 Peter 1:19-21-We have also a more sure word of prophecy; whereunto ye do well that ye take heed, as unto a light that shineth in a dark place until the day dawn and the day star arise in your hearts: Knowing this first, that no prophecy of the Scripture is of any private interpretation. For the prophecy came not in old time by the will of man: but holy men of God spake as they were moved by the Holy Ghost. (KJV)

We know that the Word of God is inspired by the Holy Spirit. We know that nothing can be added to it, and nothing can be taken from it. This is why if we want to know about the return of Jesus, we must study the Word of God. All of the answers are in the Word. We do not know when Jesus will return, but He will come like a thief in the night at last trumpet sound. 

Some will be taken up, but there will be those who will be left behind when the rapture happens. This is why it is important to study so we will know what’s going to happen when that day comes. We do not want to be unknowing. We may ask why God preserved these prophecies for us? The Great God is working out a marvelous purpose here below, nationally and individually. We need to study God’s inspired prophecies if we wish to understand His purpose.

Everything God tells us in His Word is true. We need to take heed of what He is telling us. He would never have left this for us if it were not important for us to know. We are important to God. He created us, we are the sheep of His pasture. We are His children. He knows that we all will have questions about the things He has written. He knows that we do not understand everything.

Will we be ready when Jesus returns?

Photo by Prashant Gautam on Pexels.com

Recommendation: NLT Study Bible

The NLT Study Bible is broadly and favorably regarded for its accessible and clear translation. It is based on the New Living Translation, which translates whole thoughts instead of words into conversational English—thus making it as forceful for contemporary readers as it was for the first readers. Yet it includes the scholarship of a cross-denominational gathering of biblical authorities: every note and supplement is designed with you, the reader, in mind—to help you experience God’s message clearly, faithfully, and with transformational power.

While other study Bibles emphasize explaining complex meanings of the text, the NLT Study Biblecomes in clear, lively language that allows you to consider other issues, such as historical/cultural background and theological implications. Culturally murky terms are translated with immediate understanding in mind. All of this adds a compelling layer of knowing to a text that is already completely, powerfully alive.

Primary Features of the NLT Study Bible:

  • Over 25,000 Study Notes — nearly one note for every verse of the Bible.
  • Over 300 Theme Articles — on essential subjects such as Original Sin, The Thousand Year Reign of Christ, and The Sovereignty of God.
  • Over 250 Visual Aids — maps, timelines, charts, illustrations, and diagrams of genealogies and chronologies for visual learners.
  • Over 90 Person Profiles — articles on key Biblical figures.
  • Over 140 Interior Maps — to show what’s going on where.
  • Over 65 Timelines — show how key events connect with overall Biblical and secular history.
  • Chain References — lists one hundred central Hebrew terms in the Old Testament, and one hundred central Greek terms in the New Testament.
  • Other Supplements — overviews, summaries, contextual information, literary outlines, a features guide, a section on how to study the Bible, and compelling quotations from each biblical book.

Get This Study Bible!

NLT Study Bible

Blog at WordPress.com.

Up ↑