Most Catholics will say they know the Bible matters. Far fewer have a daily habit of reading it. The good news: ten minutes a day, every day, will do more for your faith than any book about the Bible ever could.
Bishop Davies' own homilies are saturated in scripture. The Easter homily 2026 returned again and again to John's account of the women at the tomb. The Advent letter for our 175th anniversary year drew on the prophets and the Catechism. The Chrism Mass homilies are built on John 6, the Bread of Life discourse. There is a reason. The Word of God is the soil out of which Catholic life grows.
Saint Jerome, who translated the Bible into Latin in the fourth century, wrote: Ignorance of scripture is ignorance of Christ. The Catechism agrees: The Church forcefully and specifically exhorts all the Christian faithful to learn the surpassing knowledge of Jesus Christ, by frequent reading of the divine Scriptures (CCC 133).
Frequent. Not occasional. The Bible is not a reference book to consult when curious. It is daily food. Jesus quoted Deuteronomy at the devil: Man shall not live by bread alone, but by every word that proceeds from the mouth of God (Matthew 4:4). If we believe him, our calendars should look like it.
Pick one. Stick with it for thirty days.
Lectio Divina is the prayer the monks of Belmont and the Benedictine sisters at Curzon Park have prayed for centuries. It belongs to you too.
If you want to know how a Catholic reads the Bible, listen to how Bishop Davies returns to John chapter 6.
At the heart of the Catholic Church, Newman found what he called 'a Treasure unutterable', the Mystery of the Eucharist containing the Church's entire spiritual wealth: Christ Himself. This led to an enduring sense of wonder that he had found in the Blessed Sacrament the Real Presence of Christ Himself.
The Catholic reading of John 6 is plain. My flesh is real food, my blood is real drink (John 6:55). The Bible and the Eucharist are the same Word, given to us in two forms. That is why daily reading and Sunday Mass belong together. Pull them apart and you starve.
You do not need to understand everything. You will not, for years. The Catechism says scripture has four senses: literal, allegorical, moral, and anagogical. Most readers spend a lifetime with the literal and the moral and never feel they have run out. Read what you can. Trust the Church to teach you the rest.
Open the Bible. Now, before you close this page.
Ten minutes a day. Thirty days. Begin tonight.