How It Works
A few minutes a day. The whole Bible, together.
Open today's passage
Each day your group reads the same Scripture — no hunting for a passage, no deciding where to start. Your leader has already set the reading for the day, so you open the app and the Word is waiting for you. Cover to cover. Every page. Every person.
We are more than halfway through the book of Proverbs — a collection of wisdom literature written largely by Solomon, shaped for a people learning to live faithfully in everyday life. Today's passage sits at the heart of that project. It is not simply practical advice. It is a posture — a way of orienting the whole self toward God before making any move at all.
"Trust in the Lord with all your heart, and do not lean on your own understanding. In all your ways acknowledge him, and he will make straight your paths."Proverbs 3:5–6
Notice the weight of "all your heart" — not most of it, not the parts where you feel uncertain. The invitation is total. And the contrast is sharp: trust in the Lord stands directly against leaning on your own understanding. The Hebrew word for "lean" (sha'an) means to prop yourself up, to use something as a support. Solomon is asking: what are you using to hold yourself up?
Engage with the prompt
Reading alone isn't enough — Group Tuesday asks you to interact with the text. A short fill-in-the-blank prompt draws your attention to the heart of the passage. There are no trick questions and no grades. It just gives your mind something to hold onto.
According to this verse, what are we told not to lean on?
Once you've responded, tap Show Answer to see how your leader unpacked the passage — not to score you, but to give you something to compare your own thinking against.
Write your reflections
Scripture has a way of surfacing things at unexpected moments. Group Tuesday lets you add notes throughout the day — not just once when you finish the reading. A thought at lunch, a prayer that came to mind during your commute, a connection you noticed later: add it whenever it arrives.
Everything you write is private by default. You choose — individually, per reflection — who can see it. Share with your small group, your group leader, your session leader, or your church leaders. Or keep it entirely between you and God. You will always confirm before anything leaves your hands.
See what your group is thinking
When members of your group choose to share a reflection, it shows up here — not as a feed to scroll past, but as a window into how the same passage is landing differently for different people. Same Word. Different angles. One body.
Only reflections that were explicitly shared with the group are visible. Nothing appears here by accident.
"In all your ways acknowledge him" — I've always read this as a religious instruction. But this morning it hit me differently. Every decision. Every plan. Not just the spiritual ones. He's asking for the whole map, not just the church-shaped pieces of it.
I kept sitting with the word "lean." Like leaning on a wall that looks solid but isn't load-bearing. My own understanding has let me down enough times that I should know better — but I keep going back to it first. This verse is a daily reorientation, not a one-time decision.
Life happens — catch up when you can
Missed a day? It happens. Group Tuesday doesn't penalize you for being human. Open the calendar, tap the day you missed, and complete it when you have time. Your consistency record stays honest — catch-up days are tracked to the date they were originally due, so the story of your journey stays intact.
Tap Wednesday to complete that day's reading.
On weekends, a Weekly Summary view collects the week's key prompts into a single session — a 15-minute catch-up that keeps you in the story even when the week got away from you.
Build the habit. Grace covers the rest.
Consistency matters — but grace is never something you earn. It is always given. Group Tuesday celebrates the days you show up and extends grace for the days you don't. Missing a day is not failure. It is an invitation to return.
The Hebrew word Torah is often translated "law," but its root — yarah — means something closer to throwing a stone at a target, or drawing a bow and releasing toward a mark. Torah is instruction that aims you. It is God pointing you toward what is true and good, saying: throw here.
And the Hebrew word for sin — chata — means simply to miss the mark. Not to be wicked. To aim and fall short. We all do. The Torah does not condemn you for missing; it keeps showing you where to aim. And grace is what catches you every time the throw goes wide.
Streaks celebrate the days you threw well. They are not a measure of your standing before God — only markers of the habit you are building, one day at a time.
"Let the word of Christ dwell in you richly, teaching and admonishing one another in all wisdom."
Group Tuesday launches August 2026. Get on the list and be first through the door.
Join the waitlist