March Scripture Writing Plan

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March scripture writing plan to help you return to daily writing, stay rooted in God’s Word, and find renewal during a busy, overwhelming season.

March Scripture Writing Plan

I’ve learned that when life gets full, the first things to go are usually the quiet disciplines.

Scripture writing has been one of those for me.

I started my internship at HHS in the child protection office in mid-January, and the pace has been intense. Between internship hours, school, working in the salon, babysitting my grandsons, and trying to maintain some semblance of order at home, the days move quickly. Add in the emotional weight that comes with child protection work, and by evening I often feel spent.

The work matters. I’m grateful to be learning. But it’s heavy.

In seasons like this, it would make sense to lean more intentionally into the Word. Instead, I’ve found myself defaulting to whatever feels easiest at the end of the day. Not necessarily what’s best, just what requires the least effort.

Scripture writing takes intention. It requires me to slow down, open my Bible, and actually sit still. That can feel like one more task when my list is already long.

But I also know the difference it makes.

When I’m consistently writing out scripture, I feel more grounded. I respond more thoughtfully. I’m less reactive. It doesn’t eliminate stress or remove the realities of this season, but it steadies me in the middle of it.

So for March, I’m starting again.

No complicated study method. No elaborate system. Just one verse a day, written by hand.

I created a simple March scripture plan called Rooted & Renewed. The verses focus on trust, renewal, endurance, and being deeply rooted in faith, themes that feel especially relevant right now. They’re reminders that growth is often quiet, that God’s faithfulness is steady, and that renewal doesn’t always look dramatic.

Sometimes it looks like showing up consistently.

If you’re in a busy or demanding season, I’m not suggesting you overhaul your routine. I’m not even suggesting you do this perfectly. I’m just offering a structure, 31 verses, one per day, to help you return to the Word in a manageable way.

Print it. Keep it in your planner. Tape it inside your Bible. Leave it on your desk.

Five minutes is enough.

This season of my life is stretching me in new ways, academically, professionally, emotionally. I don’t want to move through it disconnected from the One who called me into it.

March feels like a good time to reset.

Find my other scripture writing plans here. Find the notebook I use here.

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