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Bible Challenge #36

Becky Pliego on May 18, 2018

¡Hola, hola!  Welcome to week 37 of our Bible Reading Challenge. As I type this, I cannot thank the Lord enough for the many ways in which it has pleased Him to bless this endeavor. He has been so kind to us in drawing us to Him, and in drawing Himself closer to us. Since the very beginning of the BRC, I have mentioned (especially in the webinars) how God wants to be known, and has made Himself known to us. And now as we come close to the end of this challenge, we can attest that by the help of Holy Spirit and after being intentional and diligent in reading the Word of God, we know Him more than when we started. And this, my friends, is a true gift. From His fullness, we have indeed received grace upon grace.

Summer is right around the corner, and we are ready to jump into our summer habits,  we are eager to wear pretty, warm colors every day and put cheerful flowers on our tables to brighten our homes. And in the same way we must start planning our summer bible reading and praying habits. The Ladies Fellowship of Christ Church has been planning a summer reading plan that we trust will be a huge blessing to you.

The plan for the summer is to read through the New Testament and focus on a few passages for memorization or meditation each week (“M-Days”). The plan begins on June 4th and runs through August 31. There are two options for reading pace – four or six chapters a day. The four chapters a day will take you through the entire NT and the six chapters will mean reading several epistles three times. There is no assigned reading on Saturday (M-day) so that you can have more time to review the verses you worked on through the week. And on Sunday, we don’t assign any readings because we all go to Church to read the Word with the body of Christ and receive it as our own pastors preach from it.

We hope you will join us and will share this with other women you know! Click here to find more information.

This week we will be reading only Psalms, and I think it is very appropriate to finish these last weeks of the BRC this way. Most of these Psalms are not Psalms of lament, but psalms that celebrate the reign of our Lord.  These psalms exalt God’s character and warm our hearts to praise Him fervently. As you read them, find what they teach us about God’s character and see how knowing His character helps us to pray better and worship Him more.

You can choose to divide this week’s readings in three parts, so that you can read two psalms in the morning, two at midday, and two at night. Read them, pray them, sing them. Our God reigns, let us praise His name!

Note about this week’s webinar: Because I am traveling overseas I will record the webinar for week 37 today, Friday May 18, at 8:00AM PST. I know it is too early for many and maybe you will read this email after that hour, but remember that you will be able to find the webinar ready to be watch at your most convenient time on our website. Thank you for your understanding!

May our prayer this week be, “Our Creator, Redeemer, and King, we ask you to give us soft hearts as we read your Word this week, deliver us from reading your Word and hearing your voice and hardening our hearts in response. May we be humble to receive your Words of encouragement and correction. In Jesus name, we pray. Amen” (Psalm 95:7-9)

Under His sun and by His grace,

Becky Pliego and the Ladies Fellowship at Christ Church

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Bible Challenge #35

Becky Pliego on May 14, 2018

¡HOLA, HOLA! Can someone please explain to me how did we get to week 35 in a breeze? YAY! Maybe, after all, this daily wearing of our habit truly became our daily habit. I hope you feel comfortable in it, and I trust that all those around you can see how well it looks on you. We know that habits cannot be hidden for too long, all become visible at one point or another, and so it is the same with the habit of Bible reading and prayer. Be encouraged, Sister. Every time you read your Bible, the Word of God is at work in you!

I want to share with you something that puzzled me this week. I listened to a Podcast in which a renown author was being interviewed on how he read the Bible. To my surprise, he said that he didn’t necessarily have a plan. In fact his approach was that, if he didn’t feel like he was getting much from, let’s say I Kings, he would happily skip to his favorite passages somewhere else. Now, the question we must ask ourselves is this: do we really need to have a plan to read the Bible? (And I know that this question is an odd question to add when we are almost done with our Bible reading plan! But we always need to be thinking about what we are doing and why we are doing it.) Well, no, not necessarily, but if you choose not to have a plan, you must build some sort of structure (a plan? Ha!) so that you will not only read your favorite passages, but read all the Bible. We need all of God’s Word to feed our soul, edify us, and transform us. We need to read all the Word of God to
begin to understand all the Word of God. This leads us to say that yes, having a plan laid out is a wonderful thing to help us get to our destination on time and without missing anything as we go. And we have already seen this, right? We have been encouraging one another to keep walking, to keep turning pages, because we all want to get to our destination, we all want to stand together at the top of the mountain and be amazed at the wonderful view, to see the whole Story of Redemption laid our before us in all its glory!

So, Friends, get ready: our plan will continue! We are already working on the Summer Bible Reading Challenge, the reading plan is done, and now we are working on the graphics and design. And we can’t wait to start a new journey with you!

This week we will finish reading Zechariah, and then we’ll read 1 and 2 Thessalonians, Philemon, and we will start Revelation and 2 Corinthians along with Psalms 81-84 and Proverbs 31. We have a catch-up day on Thursday in which I recommend you read 2 Peter.

Remember what we said in our last webinar: Read as you pray and pray as you read. Don’t skim over the harder passages. And those things you do understand, take heed and apply in your daily life. God will bless your coming to His Word this week too!

May our prayer this week be, “Lord, direct our way to you and make us increase and abound in love for one another, so that our hearts may be established blameless in holiness before you, our God and Father.” (I Thess. 3:11-12)

Under His sun and by His grace,

Becky Pliego and the Team of Christ Church Ladies Fellowship

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Bible Challenge #34

Becky Pliego on April 27, 2018

¡Hola, hola!  Can you believe this? We are on week 34 already! God has clearly prospered our plans and has been incredibly kind to us these past months. We have been learning to wear this new habit daily and it feels comfortable and natural to wear it now.

Today I want us to consider for a moment how the world we live in is one in which, more than ever, the written word abounds. No matter where we turn we find words to read. But the problem that many of us are facing is that we are no longer reading, but skimming through the words in front of us. We have been training our minds for the last several years to read superficially, to read headers and bold print, and words that are always accompanied with images. Words, not ideas. We no longer wrestle with the texts we have in front of us, we no longer want to wrestle with words. But if we are Women of the Word – and if we are Christians, which we are indeed – we must resist this temptation and learn (re-learn?) to read and read well. To read thoroughly and not skim the text, especially when we find ourselves in front of God’s Word open before us. We have mentioned many times that we should not despair if we don’t “get it all” the first (or second, or third) time we read a passage, and that is true. But we shouldn’t be lazy either and deliberately skim through the hard passages or difficult texts we encounter. Friends, God has given us a wonderful mind and has given us His Word and His Spirit so that we may know Him and His will for us. He is a God that wants to be known, and this means that He wants us to understand the Scriptures.

When we come to the harder passages or books of the Scripture, we must come knowing that God has given us extraordinary minds, yes, but also limited. We will never fully understand all the mysteries in the Word of God, but by His Grace, God will increase our understanding as we pray and faithfully open the Scriptures and wrestle with the passages in front of us. As we read and read again and resist the temptation to skim through it, God, in His kindness, will remember our frame and help us understand so that we may know Him more, love Him more, praise Him more, and obey Him more.

George Whitfield once said, “My mind being now more open and enlarged, I began to read the Holy Scriptures upon my knees, laying aside all other books and praying over, if possible, every line and Word. This proved food indeed and drink indeed to my soul. I daily received fresh life, light and power from above. I got more true knowledge from reading the Book of God in one month–than I could ever have acquired from all the writings of men!”[1]

Let’s ask God this week to teach us to read, to help us pray as we read His Word, and to trust that His Word will never return void.

This week we will read the book of Daniel and start Zechariah. We will also read (and pray) Psalms 74-80, and Jude. We have a catch-up day on Thursday in which I recommend you read 1 and 2 Thessalonians (only 8 chapters all together). Read attentively, read prayerfully, read and do not skim the texts this week.

May our prayer this week be, “help us, O Lord, to build ourselves in our faith and persevere in prayer in the Holy Spirit, keeping ourselves, at all times in your love, and waiting for the mercy of our Lord Jesus Christ.” (Jude 20-21)

Under His sun and by His grace,

Becky Pliego and the Ladies Fellowship Team of Christ Church

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Bible Challenge #33

Becky Pliego on April 17, 2018

¡Hola, hola! Dear Friends, thank you one more time for opening this weekly email to read it. I pray you will find it encouraging.

This week I have been talking to different women who have been sharing with me how being consistently in the Word these past months has been a huge blessing to them, and that is no surprise, of course. But you know what has been a huge blessing to hear? That none of these women has testified that the more they are in the Word, the less problems and trials they have. No, not at all. All of these women- including me!- have not been spared from troubles or travails. But in the midst of them all we have found that the Word of God is indeed an anchor to our soul in the darkest storms, a lamp to our feet when we can’t see the way clearly; it is indeed our bread and wine, and water, our sustenance. It is what keeps us going with much hope and joy. Without the Word of God in our hearts and minds we would be in despair.

So, Friend, I want to encourage you today, if you are not reading along anymore, today you can take the Book of God and read it. Today, when you don’t feel like opening it because you have not read it in a long time, take the Book and God and read it. Come to the Word! Remember as we turn the pages of God’s Book we are preparing our hearts and minds for the next turn of the page in our own life. We take the Book of God and open it in faith, and from His fullness He gives us grace upon grace. Our coming to Him, our drawing to Him in faith is never in vain. Come to Christ! Open the Word and read it!

This week we will start reading Ezekiel (1-30) and will also read Proverbs 27 and 30 and Psalms 60-62 and 30.

Ezekiel is a powerful book, with many images that will demand you use your imagination. Read and imagine, “see” what the author has written. Be captivated by all the imagery, you might lose your breath looking at God’s greatness. As you read think how the spiritual world is real and how God is bigger and more awesome than anything we would ever dare to imagine.  Some have said that Ezekiel is the Revelation of the Old Testament, so be ready to swim in deep waters with the help of the Holy Spirit.

 

In Psalm 60 we will read a psalm that David wrote when the events of 2 Samuel 8 happened. We will read how God treads down over His people’s foes and because He is our Victor we shall do valiantly. Our hope – which was strengthened last week as we read Psalms 55 and 56 – is not built on good intentions, but on the victory that Christ, our Victor has secured for His people.

In Psalm 61, we will hear the cry of one who knows that we cannot go to the Rock on our own, we need the Holy Spirit to lead us, to bring us to Him.

 

We come to Psalm 62 where we find the Psalm we pray when the Lord brings us different seasons of waiting.

And Psalm 30 reminds us that God will also bring seasons of joy, of healing, of restoration, and in those seasons we will have songs to sing and we will not be quiet.

As you read Proverbs 27 and 30 remember that we read Proverbs to find principles that we can apply with all wisdom to our lives and the situations in which God has placed us. You will for sure find great treasures in those verses.

Friends, next week we will not have a Webinar on Monday, April 16. We will resume our Live Webinars on April 23, when we will be talking mainly about Ezekiel and Malachi. Thank you for your understanding!

May our prayer this week be, “For God alone my soul waits in silence… I will not put my trust in man or circumstances, but in God alone who is the Rock of Ages, my God and my refuge.” Amen. (Psalm 62)

Under His sun and by His grace,

Becky Pliego and the Team of Christ Church Ladies Fellowship

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Bible Challenge #32

Becky Pliego on April 6, 2018

¡Hola, hola! Welcome to week 31 of our Bible Reading Challenge, Friends! Thank you for following along and for all the encouraging comments we keep receiving from you. It is a wonderful thing to hear week after week how the Lord continues to bless His Word in our lives. Soli Deo Gloria!

Some of you have asked if we are planning to continue doing the challenge after this round, and the answer is a resounding “Yes!” You will be happy to hear that we are currently working on the summer reading plan and we know that you will be thrilled when we release it.

We have been reading several Proverbs and will continue to do so next week. So I want to take a minute to share with you some hints on how to read Proverbs. First keep in mind that in the introduction of the book we read that these are “riddles.” Proverbs is filled with principles, which are not promises. We know that not everything in life happens according to Proverbs (we have read enough stories in our Bibles, and lived enough in this world to know this to be true), but we want to read them in order to become wiser, to train ourselves to discern and to judge situations better. We have proverbs, for example, that tell us to give answers and others that tell us not to give answers at all. And the wise woman, the one who fears the Lord and is in the Word, will learn -through practice- to discern the different seasons and apply these two different proverbs in different situations wisely. So as I said, life doesn’t always happen according to the principles in Proverbs, but we must strive to live according to these principles ourselves.

We must also keep in mind that the only way to truly live wisely in this fallen world is fearing the Lord and depending on the Holy Spirit to make us wise. The Lord Jesus is the wisdom of God, and we know that the Holy Spirit will teach us all things (Jn 14:26). Wisdom cannot be obtained apart from God’s mercy. He is the only One who can make us wise -and that should be enough to keep us humble.

So as we open our Bibles, let’s ask God to make us wise, and as we face our daily routine, let’s be ready to apply the principles we learn in Proverbs by faith. God will have mercy on us and will indeed give us wisdom when we ask for it.

Reading Jeremiah has been great, right? It amazes me how in the middle of the book we find the hinge on which our Christian life revolves: forgiveness of sins. That is the heart of the New Covenant, and of the Gospel. If God doesn’t have mercy on us and lead us, in Hs kindness, to repentance and forgiveness, we are doomed to eternal damnation. But God’s steadfast love is higher than the heavens and His mercies endure forever, so He is always willing and ready to forgive us when we come to Him and repent of our sins. No sin can keep us away from His love but the one that we don’t confess and don’t repent of.

So the heart of the Gospel is that in Christ there is forgiveness of sins, right? Now what about forgiving each other as God in Christ forgave us? Can we forgive those who say they don’t know what they were thinking when they offended us? Can we forgive and never use the sin we forgave against that person? Do we forgive and seek restoration? Remember, the heart of the gospel is forgiveness of sins all the way through.

Sometimes we are like the false prophets in the book of Jeremiah: we proclaim to ourselves, “Peace!” when there is no peace. We try to cover our sins and excuse them when the Hoy Spirit is bringing conviction to our hearts. We despise the Word of the Lord and choose to trust in the externals -in vain. Friends, let’s trust that the Lord will bless our coming to His Word this week and that He will help us see the sins in our lives that we need to repent of. Let the Word of God pierce your heart and soul, let His Word tear down the high places in your life so that He can start rebuilding and restoring you. He is our righteousness!

Friday we have a catch-up day and my suggestion is that you read Colossians and 1 John, since both letters emphasize forgiveness of sins.
On Saturday we will read Lamentations, a collection of five poems by Jeremiah. In this book we can learn how God is holy and righteous and how He always remains true to His character.  It is our aim to see Jesus on the pages of the book as we remember what Isaiah told us in chapter 53: Our Lord Jesus is the Man of sorrows.

The Psalms we will be reading are so incredibly comforting. Read them and pray them, and mediate on them. Let them become yours and give you hope.

May our prayer this week be, “Help me remember your Word, your deeds, your mercy, Oh Lord, and bring them to mind so that I may have hope.” (Lam.3:21)

Under His sun and by His grace,

Becky Pliego and the team of Christ Church Ladies Fellowship

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