Scripture Readings - New Testament Readings

New Testament Readings

The books of the Bible which contain the revelation of God since the coming of Christ: the four Gospels, the Acts of the Apostles, the seven General Epistles, the fourteen Epistles of Saint Paul, and the Book of Revelation (Apocalypse).

The center of the New Testament part of the Bible is the four gospels of Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John who are called the four evangelists, which means those who wrote the gospels. Gospel in Greek is ‘evangelion’ which, as we have seen, means the “glad tidings” or the “good news.”
In the New Testament scripture there is also the book of the Acts of the Apostles, written by St. Luke. There are fourteen letters called the epistles (which simply means letters) of the Apostle Paul, though perhaps some, such as the Letter to the Hebrews, were not written directly by him. Three letters are also ascribed to the Apostle John; two to the Apostle Peter; and one each to the Apostles James and Jude. Finally there is the Book of Revelation, also called the Apocalypse, which is ascribed to St. John as well.
For the Orthodox, the Bible is the main written source of divine doctrine since God Himself inspired its writing by His Holy Spirit (see 2 Tim 3:16 and 2 Pet 1:20). This is the doctrine of the inspiration of the Bible, namely that men inspired by God wrote the words which are truly their own human words—all words are human!—but which nevertheless may be called all together the Word of God. Thus, the Bible is the Word of God in written form because it contains not merely the thoughts and experiences of men, but the very self-revelation of God.
The center of the Bible as the written Word of God in human form is the person of the Living Word of God in human form, Jesus Christ. All parts of the Bible are interpreted in the Orthodox Church in the light of Christ since everything in the Bible leads up to Christ and speaks about Him (Lk 24: 44). This fact is symbolized in the Orthodox Church by the fact that only the book of the four gospels is enthroned on the altars of our churches and not the entire Bible. This is so because everything in the Bible is fulfilled in Christ.

Reading Read Time Hit Count
II Corinthians 4:1-6 (11th Thursday after Pentecost) 1 min 4396
I Peter 5:6-14 (Saint Mark) 1 min 4097
James 5:10-16 (For the Sick and In Times of Drought) 1 min 4479
Galatians 3:8-12 (Saturday Before the Nativity) 1 min 5135
Hebrews 4:1-13 (29th Tuesday after Pentecost) 2 mins 4351
I Timothy 5:1-10 (27th Monday after Pentecost) 1 min 4415
I Thessalonians 4:18-5:10 (24th Thursday after Pentecost) 1 min 3507
Philippians 3:1-8 (20th Thursday after Pentecost) 1 min 3972
Romans 4:4-12 (2nd Tuesday after Pentecost) 1 min 4360
Matthew 4:18-23 (2nd Sunday after Pentecost) 1 min 5240
I Corinthians 3:9-17 (9th Sunday after Pentecost) 1 min 5106
Acts 3:19-26 (2nd Monday after Pascha) 1 min 4457
John 3:16-21 (2nd Tuesday after Pascha) 1 min 5069
Colossians 3:4-11 (2 Sundays before the Nativity) 1 min 6100
Luke 2:22-40 (Meeting of Our Lord Jesus Christ) 2 mins 5413
I Thessalonians 5:1-8 (24th Thursday after Pentecost) 1 min 3568
Philippians 3:7-14 (St. Jacob) 1 min 4272
James 5:10-20 (Prophet Elijah) 2 mins 3904
Luke 2:25-32 (Matins – Meeting of our Lord) 1 min 4347
Mark 2:23-3:5 (1st Saturday of Lent) 1 min 5804
I John 4:20-5:21 (Thursday after the Prodigal Son) 3 mins 4730
Galatians 3:13-14 (Great and Holy Saturday) - 4574
I Timothy 5:11-21 (27th Tuesday after Pentecost) 1 min 4214
I Corinthians 3:18-23 (6th Thursday after Pentecost) 1 min 4161