Briefly, which I know is a strange word for me, I'd like to touch on reading for the previous year and make some recommendations for the coming year. Yes, I also know it's too late for you to start a daily reader tomorrow if you do not already own it. Unless, of course, you've got a Kindle or Nook and make the digital order.
First, this year I've read these three as daily devotional and growth reads:
Jesus Every Day by Mary DeMuth. This was an easy read, moving through the Bible in a year, and guiding me with some prayer suggestions. I liked it as the introductory moment for my daily devotional time, it helped me tune my brain in the right direction. I won't immediately read it again, but it goes on the list for another year later on.
My Utmost for His Highest by Oswald Chambers. A classic in the devotional field, I read again my copy that I've had since 1996. This was my second year reading through it daily, so it will get set aside for this coming year as I usually do this in two-year bursts. For example, I read it daily in 2020 and 2021, then again 2023 and 2024. Written by Gertrude Hobbs Chambers from Oswald Chamber's sermons and spiritual talks that she had taken down in shorthand, this is a good, challenging read. It's available in both "Classic" and "Modern" language editions, I've got the "Modern" and recommend it, but the "Classic" is not that hard.
The Daily Dad by Ryan Holiday. At this point, we diverge from Christian teaching and read some philosophical mediations. Some of Holiday's thoughts are drawn from Scripture, most are centered on very practical thoughts and illustrated from history. Holiday's personal beliefs run more toward a modernized version of Stoicism (the real philosophy, not the "don't have emotions" nonsense), so at times he is just a bit not-right from a Biblical perspective. Still, there is enough value here to make it worth reading. I've given this as a gift to new parents.
Other books that I've wrapped up this year will be addressed at other times--these were the page a day.
Now, starting this year:
Every Day for Everyone: 365 Devotions from Genesis to Revelation by N.T. Wright and John Goldingay. As you can guess by now, I'm a fan of things that work through the whole Bible in a year. Next year, I will probably redo a read through the whole Bible plan, but for this year, I'm doing more time on less text. So this one will start off my days. Wright and Golindgay are both from a different Christian tradition than I am, but that will keep me challenged.
The Daily Pressfield by....Steven Pressfield. This one is more motivational than spiritual, but I'm looking forward to it. Pressfield is one of my favorite authors, despite wishing some of his vocabulary choices were different. I've got it on Kindle, so that will be digital reading.
In the "not a book" category, I get Seth Godin's daily email which I think is worth your time. It's not something I read in my daily devotional time, because I try to do the devotional work before I fire up the digital world. It's early in the workday, though.
Beyond that, we'll look at some of the various books for spiritual and personal growth as I read them!
Have a great new year celebration.
Oh, and this year will be the next Pearls Before Swine page-a-day calendar because we all need to laugh.