Many Christians feel they should have a daily devotional life but aren’t quite sure what that looks like in practice. Maybe you’ve tried before and it fizzled out within a week. Maybe you feel like your devotions need to be longer, more theological, or more structured to “count.” Maybe you simply don’t know where to start.
This guide is for you. Learning how to start daily devotions as a beginner doesn’t require a seminary degree, an hour of free time, or a specific personality type. It requires showing up – consistently, simply, and honestly – and letting God meet you there.
What Are Daily Devotions?
Daily devotions – also called quiet time, morning devotions, or personal Bible study – simply means setting aside intentional time each day to connect with God through Scripture, prayer, and reflection. There is no single correct format. The goal is not spiritual performance but relationship.
How to Start Daily Devotions as a Beginner
Step 1: Choose a Consistent Time and Place
Consistency of timing and location matters more than duration. Morning is the most common choice – before the day’s demands crowd in – but evening, lunchtime, or any quiet window works. What matters is that you protect the same slot each day until it becomes habitual.
Your place should be comfortable and minimally distracting. A chair by a window, a corner of your bedroom, or a kitchen table after the household has settled – any space where you can sit quietly for 10 to 15 minutes without interruption.
Step 2: Start With Just 10 Minutes
One of the most common mistakes beginners make is starting with an ambitious 45-minute devotional plan they can’t sustain. Start with 10 minutes. Ten genuine, undistracted minutes is infinitely more valuable than a longer session you’ll abandon after three days. You can always extend it – but build the habit first.
Step 3: Use a Simple Structure
A basic devotional structure for beginners might look like this:
- Open with prayer (1-2 minutes) – Simply ask God to speak to you and quiet your mind
- Read a short passage (3-5 minutes) – Start with a Gospel (Mark or Luke are accessible) or a Psalm
- Reflect (2-3 minutes) – What does this passage say about God? What does it say about you? Is there anything to respond to?
- Close with prayer (2-3 minutes) – Talk to God naturally about what you read and what’s on your heart
That’s it. This structure works for a beginner and for a seasoned believer. The depth grows as you grow – the structure remains simple.
Step 4: Choose Where to Read in the Bible
The question “where do I start in the Bible?” stops many beginners. A few practical starting points:
- The Gospel of Mark – The shortest Gospel, fast-paced, focused on Jesus’s actions. Read one chapter per day.
- The Psalms – Rich in emotion, honest about pain and doubt, and deeply devotional. Psalm 1, 23, 34, and 46 are excellent starting points.
- Proverbs – 31 chapters, one for each day of the month. Practical wisdom for daily life.
- A devotional book – Resources like “My Utmost for His Highest” by Oswald Chambers or “Jesus Calling” by Sarah Young provide daily readings with Scripture references for those who prefer guided structure.
If you’re struggling with anxiety or fear, weaving in some of the short Bible verses for anxiety and worry covered in our companion article is a powerful way to make your devotional time immediately practical.
Step 5: Keep a Simple Journal
You don’t need a specialized devotional journal. Any notebook works. Write the date, the passage you read, one thing that stood out to you, and one thing you prayed about. Three to four sentences is enough. Over months, this record becomes a visible account of God’s faithfulness and your own spiritual growth.
Step 6: Don’t Quit After a Missed Day
You will miss days. Life will interrupt. You’ll fall asleep in the chair, get pulled into work, or simply forget. The response to a missed day is not guilt – it’s returning the next day without drama. Consistency over months matters far more than an unbroken streak. Devotional life, like any relationship, is built in the showing up again after you’ve been away.
Frequently Asked Questions
How long should daily devotions be for a beginner?
Start with 10 to 15 minutes and let it grow naturally. Many mature believers find 20 to 30 minutes becomes their rhythm over time. Duration is far less important than regularity. God is not more impressed by longer devotions – he values a humble, attentive heart at any duration.
What if I don’t feel anything during my devotions?
Feeling is not the measure of effectiveness. Many of the most spiritually mature believers have long seasons where devotions feel dry and routine. Showing up faithfully during the dry seasons is often where the deepest character is formed. Feelings follow eventually – usually when you stop requiring them as proof.
Final Thoughts
Starting daily devotions as a beginner is simpler than most people expect and more transformative than most people anticipate. Ten minutes, a Bible passage, honest prayer, and a journal. Do that consistently for 30 days and you’ll understand why generations of believers have called their quiet time with God the most important part of their day.
Don’t wait for the perfect time or the perfect method. Open your Bible today. Talk to God. Start there.


