Luke Resources

The Gospel of Luke was written by a physician who travelled with Paul in the early church and set out to write an orderly account of the life of Jesus. It is the longest, most detailed, personal and heartfelt of the four Gospels.


BridgePointe teachings from Luke

BridgePointe is teaching through the Gospel of Luke in 2025 & 2026. We’re starting it off with the teaching series, Simply Jesus.

Simply Jesus
Luke Ch. 1 - 6


Book Recomendations


Reading Scripture

Each time BridgePointe revisits The Gospel of Luke is a chance to read through the book again. The book is 28 chapters long. We’ve outlined a plan to read through five chapters a week and complete the book in six weeks. But you can use other Acts reading plans, like the She Reads Truth Acts Plan, the He Reads Truth Acts Plan, or even read a chapter a day and be done in four weeks.

If Scripture reading isn’t a regular rhythm we encourage you to reorder your daily routine to make it a priority. We encourage you to use a notebook or journal and use the SOAP method for Bible Study detailed down at the end of this page.

Overview & Context

The Bible Project is a free online resource for studying the Scripture, with media and tools to help you get a fuller picture of the Bible.

Check out their guide on the book of Luke.


30 Day Luke Reading Plan

Use SOAP: Read the Scripture. Write down your Observations and Application to your life. Pray in response to what you’ve read.


BridgePointe’s Approach to Scripture Reading

S.O.A.P. is an acronym for Scripture, observation, application and prayer. It’s a powerful tool that moves you from the text into the reality of your life. Using this method consistently will make it a habit and something you are familiar with. Use a journal or notebook and apply this method to work through any passage of Scripture.

Scripture

Write the Scripture reference and read through the passage slowly.

Observation

Write down what you notice from the reading. For example...

• What’s the main point the author is trying to get across?
• What’s something challenging or new?
• Is there anything in the passage you want to study more?

Application

Write down how this applies to your life today.

• How does this challenge you to live as a disciple?
• How does it intersect with your current life circumstances?
• Is God speaking a word of encouragement or challenge to you directly?

Prayer

Write your prayer to God in response to what you’ve read.