Tags
Bible, Bible in a year, Christian formation, Christianity, discipline, faith, goals, God, habits, Jesus, One Year Bible

Last week, I shared my thoughts on developing a habit, specifically the habit of daily Bible reading. Knowing how to do it is not hard.
Doing it is the hard part.
In this post, I want to talk about the difference between a habit and a goal.
My daughter received a bike for Christmas last year. And we decided to set a goal to ride our bikes 1,000 miles in 2025.
At the point that we decided to do this, neither of us were really riding bikes much at all. So, for us, this was a pretty bold goal.
I gave serious thought to this particular goal before suggesting it to my daughter. I wanted it to be hard. I wanted it to be something that would require us to put in consistent work and effort over the course of the entire year. I also wanted it to be realistic.
I knew there would be times we would ride more and times when we would ride less (like when it seemed to rain every day for two weeks, or when I was out of town). It wouldn’t be a very satisfying goal to accomplish if we hit the target in mid-March of 2025. And we would almost certainly quit if it required extreme commitment and near perfection every single day for 365 days.
1,000 miles in 365 is about 2.74 miles per day. That means we could do a short ride every day, or longer rides several days a week.
At one level, we have worked to develop a habit of riding bikes together. But it was not exactly a daily bike riding habit. We don’t really care if we ride every day. We care that we accomplish the goal of riding 1,000 miles. We win when we color in the last box on our chart.

With three weeks left in 2025, we have riden 960.73 miles. We are on track and the finish line is coming into view.
When we color in the last box, my daughter will feel a tremendous sense of accomplishment that comes from not only doing something difficult, but doing something difficult that requires consistent effort over a long period of time.
Riding bikes in 2025 with my daughter while preparing for the Year Through the Bible has made me think about the difference between a daily habit and a big picture goal. We are actually after both with our One Year Bibles.
The first priority is developing and strengthening a robust daily Bible reading habit. I wrote about this in depth here.
But a very close secondary priority for everyone who starts with us in January is reading the entire Bible in one year.
By way of reminder, here is a short summary of how to develop a habit of reading the Bible every day:
1. Decide what to eliminate so you have margin to do something new.
2. Decide when you are going to do it.
3. Decide where you are going to do it.
4. Decide where the things you need to do it will be.
5. Do it with other people.
Some quick thoughts on habits vs goals
I think one of the challenges of leading a church through reading the Bible in a year is that you are combining two things.
First, you are using a year as a long ramp to help people really build a habit of daily Bible reading. A habit is something that becomes an action that you do regularly and consistently over a period of time. Developing a habit of daily Bible reading is a top priority for anyone who wants to be a disciple of Jesus Christ. It will literally change your life.
Second, reading through the Bible in a year is not only working towards building a habit, it is a goal. Goals are concrete and measurable. They start and they end. Reading through the Bible in a year, then, is also a goal that is finite and has a completion date.
One of the reasons the daily Bible reading habit is the first priority is because many people will join Asbury mid-year and we will encourage them to begin where we are, which means they will not read the entire Scripture in that calendar year, but they will establish a habit of daily Bible reading. Regardless of when you join in with us, you can work on developing a robust daily Bible reading habit. And that is a foundational habit in the life of everyone who is a disciple of Jesus Christ.
That is the win!
I also get really excited by the idea of thousands of Christians reading the entire Bible cover-to-cover over the course of a year. Maybe it is just because I personally love these kinds of goals.
I want to share a few thoughts about the goal of reading the entire Bible in one year.
This is so obvious, but the first thing is to follow the steps above for building a daily Bible reading habit.
The obvious question, however, if you want to read the entire Bible in one year using the One Year Bible is: What do I do if I miss a day?
If you don’t read the Bible one day and the goal is building a habit, the most important thing is to literally do whatever it takes to read the Bible the next day. (This is why it matters that you pre-decide when and where to do it. If you miss a day, just follow the plan the next day.) The problem with building a habit is not missing one day. The problem is that one day tends to become two days, which tends to become three, and then three weeks.
So, if you are working on building a habit and you miss a day there is only one thing that matters – Do it the next day!
And if you have a goal to read the entire Bible in a year, it turns out that the solution is the exact same if you miss a day: Do it the next day!
But here is one important difference between a goal and a habit:
You cannot make up ground on a habit. You either read the Bible yesterday or you didn’t. And that either helped you have a habit of daily Bible reading or it helped you have a habit of not reading the Bible daily. There is no way to make up for missed days in building a habit.
You can make up ground on some goals. If the goal is to read the entire Bible in one year, I can still do that if I didn’t read the Bible yesterday. But it means I must read more on at least one other day than normal.
Here is another important difference between a habit and a goal:
The idea of a habit is that it does not have an expiration date. Habits are not designed to end. Think about the habit of exercise or of going to bed on time. There are seasons and stages of life and reasons you start new habits. But the idea of a good habit is a thing that you are trying to install in your life that becomes automatic and continual.
Goals do have an end that you are working towards the entire time. I often set a goal to read 100 books in a year. When the calendar turns over to a new year, I have either done it or I haven’t. And there is a sense of accomplishment and completion that comes with accomplishing goals.
I think every disciple of Jesus Christ needs to both develop a habit of reading the Bible daily and they need to read through the entire Bible.
I think habits and goals actually reinforce each other. You are more likely to develop a daily Bible reading habit if you have a goal in mind you are working towards that is specific and measurable. And this is exactly why it is common for churches to lead a congregation wide effort to read through the entire Bible in one year.
Ok, so for both building a habit and pursuing a goal, here is what you should do if you miss a day:
Do it the next day!
Keep going!
That will both help you move forward again on your habit. And it will help you make progress on your goal.
Here is one practical step that applies only to the goal of reading the entire Bible in a year even if you are not perfect in your daily habit:
Add a time block once a week that is for catching up.
This is not the same time as your daily Bible reading habit. It needs to be a different time. To establish the habit of daily Bible reading, you need a plan to do the same thing every day.
I would suggest planning for one-hour. Remember step one for building a habit. This will require eliminating another hour of something else you do.
I would recommend scheduling this one-hour block during a time that usually feels more relaxed in your week so you are more likely to use it when needed.
If you build an additional hour into your week to read the Bible, you will be able to make up significant ground if you fall behind. And if you schedule that into your weekly calendar, you also get a reward for being on pace – a free hour to do whatever you like!
If you follow these steps, I am sure you will both develop a daily habit of reading the Bible. And you will read the entire Bible cover to cover in one year.
This is essential for Christian discipleship. If you don’t yet have a habit of daily Bible reading, you can! Why not start now? You can work through these steps right now.
P.S. I have not been perfect in reading the Bible daily. But I can say it has become a habit in my life. And not once have I regretted spending time reading the Bible. You won’t either.
P.P.S. You should join us in reading through the Bible in 2026. We are reading The One Year Bible (ESV). You can grab a physical copy here. Or, you can read along in YouVersion by downloading the app and searching “The One Year Bible” in plans. (Be sure to include “The” and it will be the first search result. It is the one with a green leaf at the bottom left of the cover.) If you start the YouVersion plan on January 1, you’ll be on pace with us all year.
Kevin M. Watson is a Pastor and the Senior Director of Christian Formation at Asbury Church in Tulsa, OK. He is also on the faculty at Asbury Theological Seminary, anchoring the Seminary’s Tulsa, OK Extension Site. His most recent book, Doctrine, Spirit, and Discipline describes the purpose of the Wesleyan tradition and the struggle to maintain its identity in the United States.Affiliate links, which help support my work, used in this post.

