Hopko’s 15th maxim is ‘Read the Scriptures regularly’.
This means letting the Bible become steady nourishment rather than occasional spiritual ‘snacking’. It does not require long, emotionally intense reading sessions or constant ‘insight production’. More important is a simple, repeatable pattern you can actually keep (e.g., one psalm in the morning, the daily epistle or gospel in the evening, or a single chapter read at the same time and place each day. The aim is to receive Scripture as food and fuel for your mind and heart, not as ammunition for arguments or as a way to prove your worth.
Autistic cognition often loves detail, structure, and patterns, which can become a gift in Scripture reading when rightly directed. You might track readings in a small notebook or app; follow the lectionary so your personal reading syncs with the Church; or focus on one book at a time, slowly noticing its repeated words, images, and themes. If you tend to hyperfocus and burn out, it may help to set a hard limit (e.g., 10–15 minutes or a fixed number of verses), then stop, even if you want to keep going; this respects both the maxim and your nervous system. If language processing is difficult when you are overloaded, try listening to an audio Bible, read in a clearer translation alongside a liturgical one, or pair the text with an icon so that your visual strengths help you stay present.
Because many autistic people carry religious trauma, scrupulosity, or fear of ‘doing it wrong’, it is important to remember that Scripture is given as a gracious gift, not as a test you must pass. If certain passages are heavily triggering, you can set them aside temporarily with your priest’s blessing and dwell for a season in the Psalms, the Gospels, or comforting epistles like Philippians or 1 John. Written routines can help some people: ‘After breakfast, I light a candle, make the sign of the Cross, read today’s section, sit in silence for one minute, then close the book’. If your attention wanders, you are not failing; you can gently return with a brief prayer such as, ‘Lord Jesus Christ, speak to me through Your word’. Lived this way, Hopko’s maxim becomes a stable, non-dramatic rhythm where your autistic love of pattern and depth is welcomed, and the Scriptures slowly shape your imagination, your self-understanding, and your hope.
