I woud offer these 3 suggestions:
1. Ask the Holy Spirit to show you how the text you're studying applies to your life. Apart from such guidance, Bible study can sow doubts in your heart and create a sense of irrelevance due the great cultural between Bible times and our modern era. After you ready, say, a chapter, enter a holy silence for a minute and see whether God imparts unexpected wisdom from your reading.
l The modern Bible scholarly consensus is that Mark is the source for both Matthew and Luke, but not for John. But don't just accept that at face value; instead buy a Gospel Parallels book such as that edited by Burton Throckmorton, which lines up Matthew, Mark, and Luke in parallel columns. That way, you can see for yourself how obvious it is that Matthew and Luke modify Mark when they used it and, more importantly, how these changes affect our understanding of the Gospels. I once used this Gospel Parallels book for a Bible study and all but 1 member found this method of study so enlightening that they all got an MDiv or a Masters of Theology degree. Don't study the first 3 Gospels without a Gospel Parallels book.
3. Study for yourself the reasons why modern scholars are so opposed the KJV, which so often presents a corrupt text of God's Word. The texts use by other modern translation (NIV, NRSV, etc, are fine, but study for yourself why this issue is so important.