My church is using this guide to read the entire Bible in one year. I love the thought of this, of doing it together as a congregation, but in practice I haven't kept with it. I know I could jump back in, so I've left this book on my Currently Reading shelf, but I don't think it is going to happen right now, and I've finally told myself that this is ok. This doesn't mean that I've given up on reading the Bible! It just means that I'm not actively working to read the entire book (books, really) by the end of the year.
As I said below, I don't feel that I can rate the Bible. (October 17, 2013)
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For the Year of the Bible reading program at our church, I decided to switch to this translation from my NRSV because I find this to be a bit more readable. Here's a flow chart of my interpretation of translations and readability from what I find to be harder to read older English to modern colloquial English.
OLDER: King James - NRSV - TNIV - The Message: COLLOQUIAL
The Bible is the one book that I've read that I will not rate. I feel like giving it 5 stars seems like I'm missing the many complexities within it that need to be wrestled with, whereas any lower rating seems almost sacrilege. I know some people rate the Bible based on their preference in translation, but for me that depends on my mood and why I'm reading (study, prayer, etc.). (June 20, 2013)
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I set out to read this cover-to-cover in one year, but gave up. So, though I've read much of this translation, I didn't read the whole thing. I am now starting to do a Year of the Bible curriculum with my church using the NRSV Bible. (2012)