Here I offer a set of assumptions and suggestions for reading, understanding, and making creative spiritual use of the Bible.
The Bible is: A collection of writings - myth, narrative, poetry, and letters - from Jewish and early Christian people, describing their journeys to grow closer to God and to each other. It is the treasured source of language, imagery, and stories used creatively by Jews, Christians, and others to describe their own spiritual journeys today.
The Bible is not: A rule-book for how to live today, a book of historical facts, the "last word" about Jewish or Christian beliefs or practices.
1) The Christian Bible includes the Jewish Torah and prophetic and other scriptures, along with a selection of Christian texts, assembled in roughly its present form in the 4th century AD by the emerging Catholic Church as it became the state religion of the Roman empire. It is the work of many human beings over thousands of years, dating back to early Near Eastern civilizations that existed before the Jewish people. It is called "holy" because of the spiritual intentions of the people who composed its books and the devotion of readers. None of its authors had any idea that their works would be part of what we now know as the Bible. There were other texts used in the early Christian church but which later were left out of the “canon”, or official church list of scriptures. An important one is the Gospel of Thomas, a book of quotations attributed to Jesus.
2) The Hebrew scriptures, or the Old Testament, represent a religious tradition that is independent of the later Christian faith. The Hebrew scriptures aren't about Jesus, although the Christian scriptures include many references to the Hebrew scriptures. To honor the fundamental differences between the two sets of scriptures doubles the spiritual significance of the entire Bible.
3) Anything in the Bible that looks miraculous or contrary to the normal functions of the natural world can be understood as mythological. In ancient times, the distinction that now exists between factual and fictional narratives did not exist in the same way as it does now. The Bible does not ask us to "believe" it as if it were a collection of facts or a set of legal prescriptions that necessarily make sense outside their original cultural contexts. Rather, it challenges our spiritual and moral imaginations, inviting us to use it as a rich language for expressing our journeys of faith. Ancient biblical myths can have great power in positively transforming our lives today.
4) Hardly anything in the Christian gospels has a verifiable basis in history corroborated by sources outside the New Testament. The Gospels largely were products of the spiritual imagination of first-century Christians, who creatively transformed their memories and stories of Jesus into compelling mythical narratives. There is no way to separate the Christian scriptures from early Christians, who belonged to diverse communities of beliefs and practices. To understand the figure of Jesus, to make sense of the New Testament and of early Christianity, we must understand the spirituality and the socio-political contexts of people in the first-century Christian church. This requires grounding in non-doctrinal, academic scholarship.
5) There is much to be discovered in the Bible by engaging it with religious traditions outside the Judeo-Christian heritage. Exploring texts in other religions that resonate or differ with passages in the Bible can raise enlightening questions. The Bible can be richly appreciated from the perspective of religious pluralism - the idea that "other religions can be as good for others as mine is for me". In this context, the Bible can be seen as a vital part of the great global conversation throughout history about the relationship of human beings to Ultimate Reality. For example, read the Dhammapada (sayings of the Buddha) and the Sermon on the Mount (in Matthew and Luke) side by side.
6) Rabbi Jesus used the Hebrew scriptures freely and creatively. His “midrashic” method of interpretation, still used by Jewish rabbis, is instructive for Christians in interpreting the New Testament. Following Jesus' understanding of the scriptures of his native tradition, the entire Bible becomes precious raw material, providing us with imagery, aphorisms, pithy parables, poetry, and narratives that we can use to awaken ourselves to higher levels of consciousness and kindness.
7) I recommend the New Revised Standard Version of the Bible. It is the most accurate translation from the most reliable Hebrew and Greek ancient texts. It was assembled by a team of academic Biblical scholars. Many of the Bibles used by evangelicals, such as the Good News, Philips, NIV, NLV, NKJV, etc, insert evangelical theology into the texts. They presume that the whole Bible was always meant to be one book, culminating in an evangelical interpretion of the death and resurrection of Jesus - even though there was no such assumption either implied or explicit in the OT texts. Many evangelical Bibles include comment boxes inserted into the biblical text that supposedly help you understand the passages, but are more like evangelical "sermons". These Bibles should be called interpretations, not translations. The King James Bible is both inaccurate and out of date. It uses antique, hard-to-understand English, and was not translated from the most reliable ancient texts. It heavily depended on the old Latin Vulgate Bible, so some of it is second-hand translation from the biblical languages to Latin and then to English. The KJV is still valuable for the English-speaking world because there are so many enduring references to it in our culture - in art, music, and literature. The best NRSV edition that I've found is the New Oxford Annotated NRSV. It has very useful annotations at the bottoms of the pages. The annotations are scholarly - seldom colored by dogma - and give insight into the historical backgrounds and the textual/translational issues of the passages. It also has scholarly articles that reveal a lot about the history and culture that influenced the composition of the Bible.
Reading the whole Bible is daunting - and not just because it is a long book! So here's a selection of passages that give a feel for the whole document, and can whet your appetite for more. It's best to read these passages alongside books that give an historical, spiritual, and textual background. For the Hebrew Scriptures, I recommend The Beginning of Desire by Avivah Zornberg and The History of God by Karen Armstrong. For the New Testament, I recommend The Five Gospels by the Jesus Seminar and The Gnostic Gospels by Elaine Pagels as companion readings. The many books and articles published by the Westar Institute (Jesus Seminar) provide excellent non-doctrinal, academic analyses of the backgrounds of the biblical texts.
I recommend this order of reading the Bible: First, the first letter of John in the Christian New Testament. Then the whole book of Genesis and Exodus through chapter 20 in the Hebrew Scriptures (Old Testament) - the New Testament makes many references to these books. Then read the gospels of Luke and John, the book of Acts, and Paul’s first letter to the Corinthians in the Christian New Testament. Then, continue in the Hebrew Scriptures by reading the book of Ruth, the book of Job, Psalms 8, 23, 46, 92, 95, 100, 118, and 121, Proverbs chapter 8, Ecclesiastes chapter 3, the whole Song of Solomon, and selections from the prophets: Isaiah chapters 2, 11, 40, and 61, Amos chapter 5, and Micah chapter 6. Then in the New Testament read gospels of Matthew and Mark and the letters of Paul to the Romans and the Ephesians, the letter to the Hebrews, and Revelation chapter 22. From these passages, work outwards to finish reading the whole Bible.
Recommended books/passages:
Hebrew Scriptures (Old Testament):
Genesis (whole book - essential to comprehending the whole Bible)
Burning Bush: Exodus chapter 3
Ten Commandments: Exodus 20:1-4,7-8,12-17
The Aaronic Benediction: Numbers 6:24-26
Ruth's Promise: Ruth 1:16-17
Elihu's Speech: Job 37:14-24
Psalms: 8, 23, 46:1-2a, 10, 92:1, 95:1-2, 100, 118:24, 121
Holy Mother Wisdom: Proverbs chapter 8
There Is a Season: Ecclesiastes chapter 3
Celebrating the Sensual: Song of Solomon (Song of Songs) (whole book)
Prophetic Justice: Isaiah 2:2-4, 11:1-3a, 11:6-9, 40:1-11, ch's 27-31, 61:1-2 - Amos 5:21-24 - Micah 6:8
New Testament:
Jesus: Beatitudes: Matthew 5:3-10
Jesus: Light: Matthew 5:16
Jesus: Love Enemies: Matthew 5:43-48
Jesus: Lord's Prayer: Matthew 6:9-13
Jesus: Do Not Be Anxious: Matthew 7:25-34
Jesus: Asking: Matthew 7:7-12
Jesus: With You Always: Matthew 28:20
Jesus: Children: Mark 10:13-16
Jesus: Communion: Mark 14:22-25
Mary: Magnificat: Luke 1:46-55
Simeon's Blessing: Luke 2:29-32
Jesus: Golden Rule: Luke 6:27-31
Jesus: Law of Love: Luke 10:27
Jesus: Parables of Mustard and Leaven: Luke13:18-21
The Word: John 1:1-5
For God So Loved the World: John 3:16
Jesus: Love One Another: John 13:34-35
Jesus: Lay Down His Life: John 15:12-13
Paul: Hope: Romans 8:18-28
Paul: Hold Fast to the Good: Romans 12:9-12
Paul: God of Hope: Romans 15:13
Paul: The Body of Christ: 1 Corinthians 12
Paul: The Love Chapter: 1 Corinthians 13
Paul: Be Kind: Ephesians 4:25-32
Paul: Armor of God: Ephesians 6:10-17
Paul: Put on Compassion: Colossians 3:12-17
James: Doers of the Word: James 1:19-25
John: God Is Love: 1 John 4:7-12
John: He First Loved Us: 1 John 4:19-21
John of Patmos: River of Life: Revelation 22:1-5