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READING PLANS

Bible reading plans
a place you want to return to.

Hand-curated reading and teaching plans, plus a Bible in a Year. Each plan ships with photographic cover art, a daily passage, a written reflection, and Scripture-anchored study tools when a passage asks for it. Promise. Psalms. Christ. Wisdom. Prophecy.

Reading plans

  • The Scarlet Thread — 10 days of redemption from Genesis to Revelation
  • The Promises of God — 10 days standing on God’s unshakeable promises
  • Psalms of Comfort — 7 days of peace through hard seasons
  • The Life of Christ — 12 days from manger to empty tomb
  • Romans Road, Beatitudes, Fruit of the Spirit, Love in Motion, Growing in Christ, Messianic Prophecy
  • Bible in a Year — every chapter, structured daily

Teaching plans

  • How to Pray — 7 days, foundational
  • How to Study the Bible — 7 days, faithful method
  • Core Doctrines — 10 days, what Christians believe and why
  • Sharing Your Faith — 7 days, gentle and ready
  • Spiritual Disciplines — 8 days, the rhythms of grace

Trinity Plus — 7 Core Deep Study plans

Plus opens 7 multi-week Deep Study plans for serious students — Who Is Jesus, Theological Deep Dive, Wisdom for Living, Marriage & Family, Woman of Faith, Prophecy & Fulfillment, and one more added each season. Each is theologically rich, with original-language work and 146 curated study prayers across the set.

How Trinity's reading plans work

A plan in Trinity is a sequence of days, and each day is built around the same quiet shape. You open to a passage — sometimes a single psalm, sometimes a longer span when the story needs room to breathe. You read it in whichever mode suits the morning: verse-by-verse for slow attention, full chapter for context, or continuous reading when you simply want to be in the text. Underneath the passage sits a short written reflection that points back into the verses rather than away from them, and the ordinary study tools — bookmarking, highlighting, a note of your own — are right there if a line asks you to stop and stay.

Progress is kept gently. Trinity remembers the last day you reached and brings you back to it, so a plan is something you resume rather than something you have to remember. The day count is a frame, not a deadline. You can read ahead when a passage will not let you put it down, fall behind without losing your place, pause for a season, or restart from the beginning — the plan waits for you. There is no streak penalty buried inside a plan and no notification badge that turns Scripture into a chore. The design goal is steadiness, not pressure.

When a passage opens onto deeper ground, the study surface is one tap away on the same screen: a chapter summary to set the scene, the Hebrew or Greek behind a key word, cross-references that show where else the theme is carried, and Ask for a question you cannot quite let go of. These tools live alongside every plan so that study never means leaving the passage. The Bible stays in front of you; the engine works in the margins.

Reading vs deep-study plans — what's free

The line is simple, and it is drawn in your favour. Every curated reading plan and every teaching plan is free for everyone — browsing them, starting them, and finishing them, with no chapter locked and no day held back. The Scarlet Thread, The Promises of God, Psalms of Comfort, The Life of Christ, the shorter focused plans, the How to Pray and How to Study the Bible teaching tracks, and the complete Bible in a Year all belong to the free tier. The whole Bible, read on a plan, costs nothing.

Where reading plans lead

Reading and teaching plans carry you through Scripture on a clear path — a theme, a story, a discipline — with a passage and a reflection each day. They are made to be returned to and completed, and they ask nothing of your wallet. This is the place to start, whether you are reading the Bible end to end for the first time or coming back to a familiar gospel with fresh attention.

Where Deep Study plans lead

The 7 Core Deep Study plans are the one plan type reserved for Trinity Plus. They run for multiple weeks, lean on original-language work and richer study notes, and carry 146 curated study prayers across the set — built for the reader who wants to sit with a doctrine or a book for a long while. Plus also opens the wider study tools that any reader can reach inside a plan: chapter summaries, Hebrew and Greek on a verse, cross-reference navigation that lets you jump to a reference, the Ask feature, and watermark-free sharing. Plus carries a seven-day trial, and when the trial ends those deep-study surfaces close while every free reading plan stays exactly where it was — open. Nothing you have already read is taken away.

Building a daily Bible reading habit

A reading habit is rarely built on willpower. It is built on a small, repeatable shape that is easy to keep and hard to dread. The most durable advice is also the oldest: choose a fixed time and a fixed place, and let the two become a single cue. Many readers find the morning holds before the day fills it; others read at night, after the noise has settled. Either works. What matters is that the moment arrives the same way each day, so that opening the passage feels less like a decision and more like a return.

Begin smaller than feels impressive. A single psalm, a paragraph of a gospel, one day of a short plan — a few faithful minutes outlast an ambitious hour you cannot sustain. A plan helps here precisely because it removes the daily question of where to start; the next passage is already chosen, and your only task is to show up to it. When you miss a day, and you will, the practice is simply to open the next one. Trinity keeps your place and brings you back to it, so a missed morning never becomes a lost plan.

Let the reading leave a mark. Highlight the line that stopped you, write a sentence of your own beneath it, return to a passage you do not yet understand instead of rushing past it. A reading life is measured less by chapters covered than by attention given, and the slow plans — Psalms of Comfort over a hard week, The Life of Christ across a season, Bible in a Year held loosely — are built for that kind of attention. The aim is not to finish the Bible. The aim is to keep returning to it.

Questions, answered plainly

Are reading plans free?

Yes. The reading and teaching plans plus Bible in a Year are free for everyone. The Core Deep Study plans are part of Trinity Plus.

Can I read at my own pace?

Yes. Plans are structured by day, but you can read ahead, fall behind, pause, or restart. Trinity tracks your progress and lets you resume where you stopped.

Are the daily reflections AI-written?

No. Plan reflections and devotional content are written and edited by our team. Trinity uses AI for tap-to-explain, summaries, and original-language work — never for plan content.

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