I wanted to share something from my heart.
This year, I’ve been intentionally reading through the Bible using a Bible-in-a-year study from The Daily Grace Co. I’ve mentioned it here before, but this experience has been eye-opening. It’s the first time I’ve approached reading the Bible with this much intention. I also made a decision that has changed everything for me: instead of reading silently, I’ve started reading the Bible out loud.
As an ADHD reader, I tend to skim without realizing it. Sometimes I gloss over details, miss important information, or create confusion simply because my eyes move faster than my brain processes the words. Reading Genesis out loud slowed me down. It forced me to pay attention. And while there wasn’t a lot of brand-new information in the book itself, hearing the words spoken brought Scripture to life in a way I hadn’t experienced before.
Along the way, I discovered a few things.
Now, some of you may read this and think, “Sheesh, for someone who’s been a Christian for over 30 years, this is Christianity 101.” And honestly? That’s fair.
But I’ve always believed there’s value in going back to the simple things. Sometimes we need to return to the beginning so we can see something we’ve missed before.
I’ve done this my whole life. Whenever I finish a TV series or a movie franchise, I immediately want to start over and watch it again. Once I know the ending, I notice connections, details, and foreshadowing I completely missed the first time around. I do the same thing with books.
The Bible is no different.
I know how the story ends. I know Jesus wins. I know we win.
Yet I love going back to where it all started—or more accurately, where God chose for us to begin learning about Him. God has always existed, so there is no beginning to go back to. (My finite brain still struggles to comprehend that.)
So that’s what I’m doing in this season.
Relearning.
Rediscovering.
Getting to know my Heavenly Father on a deeper level than ever before.
Here are a few things that stood out to me as I read through Genesis.
1. God is the ultimate Creator.
I look at the trees and think, “God made that.”
I look at the grass beneath my feet and remember that God put it there.
The sky bursts with brilliant yellows, reds, and oranges in the morning, shines blue throughout the day, and fades into violet at night because He said it should. The moon follows its appointed course because God commanded it. Every star sits exactly where He placed it.
And He did it all simply by speaking.
That amazes me.
2. God showed us how powerful words are.
See point number one.
Words have power.
God spoke creation into existence. He could have chosen any method He wanted, but He chose words.
I believe that’s one reason He gave us His Word. When we speak God’s Word, we’re not repeating empty phrases. We’re speaking truth, life, and power.
3. God keeps His promises.
One thing I loved about Genesis was the repetition.
God gave promises to Abraham.
Then He reminded Abraham of those promises.
Then He repeated them to Isaac.
Then He repeated them again to Jacob.
Over and over, I saw God reaffirm what He had already said.
Not because He forgot, but because He wanted them to remember.
From the very beginning, God demonstrated that He keeps every promise He makes.
4. God’s promises are still alive today.
When God promised Abraham blessing, increase, and descendants, He established a covenant that extended beyond Abraham himself.
That’s us.
That’s you and me.
Even if we aren’t part of Abraham’s physical family line, we’ve been grafted into God’s family through Jesus. Those promises still matter. They still carry weight. They still work because God hasn’t changed.
5. God turns what was meant for harm into good.
I’ve read Joseph’s story countless times, but this time something hit differently.
His brothers wanted to destroy him.
Instead, God used every betrayal, every setback, every unfair circumstance, and every delay to position Joseph exactly where he needed to be.
What others intended for evil, God used to save an entire nation from starvation.
And it didn’t happen overnight.
Joseph’s story unfolded over years.
He started as a cocky teenager with big dreams and eventually became second only to Pharaoh himself.
God was working the entire time, even when Joseph couldn’t see it.
6. God uses imperfect people.
This one encouraged me more than I can explain.
Abraham came from a family that worshiped idols.
Isaac repeated some of his father’s mistakes and lied about his wife.
Jacob built a reputation on deception.
Joseph struggled with pride.
None of them were perfect.
Yet none of their flaws stopped God from calling them, blessing them, protecting them, providing for them, or fulfilling His promises through them.
Genesis reminds me that God doesn’t wait for perfect people.
If He did, none of us would qualify.
As I finished Genesis, I realized I learned far more than facts about creation, covenants, and patriarchs. I learned something about the heart of God.
I saw His faithfulness.
I saw His patience.
I saw His mercy.
I saw His desire to keep pursuing people even when they stumble, fail, doubt, and make a mess of things.
Most of all, I saw a God who keeps His word.
And honestly, that makes me excited.
I’m excited for this season of learning, growing, and rediscovering Scripture with fresh eyes. I’m excited to slow down and really listen. And I’m excited to see what God reveals as I continue this journey.
Next up is Exodus.
If you’ve made it this far, thank you for letting me share what’s on my heart. I think I may turn this into a series and pop on here each time I finish a book of the Bible to talk about what I’ve learned, what challenged me, and how God used it to grow my faith.
So here’s to Genesis—the first book of the Bible and the first post in what may become a very meaningful series.




