Studying God's Word Week 1

Feb 8, 2026    Tim Asbill Jr

5-Day Bible Reading Plan Based on the Message: Studying God's Living Word


Day 1: The Power of God's Living Word

Reading: Hebrews 4:12-13

Devotional: God's Word is not merely ink on paper—it is alive and active. Like a skilled surgeon's scalpel, Scripture penetrates our deepest thoughts and motivations, revealing what we truly are. This living Word doesn't condemn but transforms, cutting away what hinders our relationship with God. When you open the Bible, you're not just reading ancient texts; you're encountering the living God who speaks directly into your circumstances. The same Word that created the universe can recreate your heart, renew your mind, and redirect your path. Today, approach Scripture expecting God to speak. Ask Him: "What are You saying to me?" Let His Word examine you, guide you, and shape you into Christ's image.

Reflection: What area of your life needs the penetrating truth of God's Word today?


Day 2: From Useless to Useful

Reading: Philemon 1:8-16

Devotional: Onesimus's name meant "useful," yet he lived as "useless"—a runaway slave who had stolen and betrayed trust. But God specializes in transformation. Through Paul's ministry, Onesimus encountered Christ and became truly useful for the first time. Paul's phrase "formerly...but now" captures the essence of every believer's story. What was your "formerly"? Broken, lost, addicted, hopeless, ashamed? God's grace declares "but now"—redeemed, restored, purposeful, loved. Your past doesn't define your future when God writes your story. He takes what seems useless and makes it profitable for His kingdom. The very things you're ashamed of can become testimonies of His transforming power. God wastes nothing in your story.

Reflection: How has God transformed something "useless" in your past into something "useful" for His purposes?


Day 3: Forgiveness That Transforms Relationships

Reading: Philemon 1:17-21

Devotional: Paul's appeal to Philemon reveals the radical nature of Christian forgiveness. He asks a wealthy businessman to forgive his thieving runaway slave and receive him as an equal brother in Christ. This wasn't just forgiveness—it was complete restoration and reconciliation. Paul even offers to pay Onesimus's debt personally. This mirrors what Christ did for us: He paid our debt and reconciled us to the Father. True forgiveness, empowered by God's love, doesn't just pardon; it restores relationship and dignity. Who has wronged you? God calls you to forgive as you've been forgiven—not because they deserve it, but because Christ's love compels you. Forgiveness frees both the offender and the offended, allowing God's transforming work to continue.

Reflection: Is there someone God is calling you to forgive and restore relationship with today?


Day 4: Running the Race with Endurance

Reading: Hebrews 12:1-3

Devotional: The Christian life is a marathon, not a sprint. We're surrounded by witnesses—those who've run faithfully before us—cheering us on. But we cannot run effectively while carrying unnecessary weight. Sin, unforgiveness, worry, worldly pursuits—these slow us down and trip us up. The key to endurance isn't willpower; it's focus. Fix your eyes on Jesus, the author and perfecter of your faith. He began the good work in you and will complete it. When you grow weary, look to Him who endured the cross for the joy set before Him. When obstacles arise, remember He's already overcome. Strip away distractions, throw off entangling sins, and run with determination toward the finish line, knowing Christ runs with you every step.

Reflection: What weights or sins do you need to throw off to run your race more effectively?


Day 5: Consistent Devotion Transforms Lives

Reading: Psalm 119:97-105

Devotional: The psalmist's love for God's Word produced wisdom, understanding, and direction. Notice the consistency: "all day long," "more than my teachers," "sweeter than honey." Transformation doesn't happen through occasional Bible reading but through consistent, devoted study. God's Word is a lamp to your feet—not a floodlight illuminating your entire future, but sufficient light for the next step. Choose a time, place, and plan. Pray for the Holy Spirit to speak. Read slowly, asking "What does this reveal about God?" and "What is God saying to me?" Apply what He shows you. As you consistently feed on Scripture, it renews your mind, guards your heart, builds your faith, and draws you closer to Christ. The Bible isn't just a book to read—it's the Living Word that reads you.

Reflection: What specific time, place, and plan will you commit to for consistent Bible study this week?