“And so one of the things that it is doing is it keeps people connected like, ‘Oh, okay, now this makes sense that here you are in the wilderness, and that’s why we’re reading Leviticus, because this is where God needs to give his people the law regarding the tabernacle.’”
The “timeline” approach also means that listeners will not have to wait until very late in the year to hear about Christ.
“If we (read the Bible) straight through like that, we wouldn’t get to the New Testament until I think November,” said Schmitz. “So it was like, ‘that is not good.’ We’ve not spent 10 months not talking about Jesus very clearly.”
To help remedy this, Schmitz said there will be four “messianic checkpoints” that will introduce listeners to Christ. The first of these will occur “right around day 90,” and will consist of the Gospel of John over the course of about a week.
“I’m really excited about that. Just to be able to say, in the midst of this Old Testament story, ‘here is the revelation of Christ,’” said Schmitz.
Catholics in America read the Bible less often than do Protestants. Schmitz believes that this is due in part to how Catholics are accustomed to having Scripture “proclaimed” to them at Mass.
“I mean, the whole reason the New Testament is called the New Testament is because it was read at the celebration of the new covenant, the Eucharist,” he said.
“And so one of the things that we are used to is having the Bible read out loud, we’re used to having the Bible, as I said, proclaimed. And I think maybe because of that, we kind of sit on our laurels a little bit, and don’t necessarily dig in and ask all the questions about, you know, translations, the questions about, contexts and whatnot.”
Despite this, Schmitz thinks that “we still have this hunger to know,” and that many people are discouraged by the “daunting” nature of the Bible. He hopes his podcast, with its unique formatting of salvation history with a timeline, changes this perception.
“So the appeal, I think, of a Bible in a Year podcast is not only, you’re going to be able to go through the entire Bible in one year, but then secondly, is it’s going to be in bite size chunks. And third, you’re going to have some kind of guidance,” he said.
“And I think that that for a lot of people just makes something that might seem inaccessible, accessible.”
The success of the podcast took both Schmitz and Matthew Pinto, CEO of Ascension Press, by surprise. Schmitz said that he has been warned by his friends and family to “not let (the success) go to his head,” something he says never even occurred to him.
“I’m thinking like, ‘well, I’m literally reading the Bible.’ So I don’t know how much that could go to my head,” said Schmitz.
“I think that it’s, it’s very clearly less about me, and the fact that it’s me reading the Bible, and far more about, I think, people’s hunger” for God’s word, said Schmitz.
Pinto was willing to credit Schmitz with at least some of the show’s success.
“We knew it was going to be a great program, but clearly this has struck a nerve beyond, really what we expected,” Pinto told CNA in a phone interview Jan. 7. “Our first thought
was that, for some reason, God has anointed this particular project.”
Pinto credited the “charism of Fr. Mike and the uniqueness of the Bible timeline” as two of the factors behind the success of the show–along with God’s blessing, of course.
The success of the show caught Ascension “flat-footed,” said Pinto, and The Great Adventure Catholic Bible, which the show is centered around, sold out. Pinto told CNA it should be available again to order in the coming months.
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