How to use BibleInTongues
The main reading flows on the site and when each page type is useful.
What this guide is for
- It gives you a concrete way to begin reading one part of the Bible without getting lost.
- It narrows too many options into one realistic next step.
- It connects you to published pages that are already useful right now.
How to use this guide well
- Read the whole guide once before opening too many links.
- Choose one next step only: a question page, a plan, or a book overview.
- Then return to the biblical chapter and keep reading in context.
Use chapter pages for primary reading
Chapter pages are the core of the site. They render the full text server-side, include stable verse anchors, and are the best place to read a biblical passage in context.
Use passage pages for sharing
Passage pages are useful when you want a clean link to one verse or a short range. They are intentionally kept outside search indexing so the site does not create endless thin duplicates.
Use topics and plans as guided entry points
Topics help you trace a theme through several books. Reading plans help you keep a short reading rhythm. Neither is a replacement for context; both should lead you back to chapter reading.
Open these chapters next
Use this page as a starting point, then keep reading in the full chapter.
Turn this guide into actual reading
Use these prompts if you want to slow down and turn this page into actual Bible reading.
- 1.After finishing “How to use BibleInTongues”, which single route are you going to follow first?
- 2.Which book, chapter, or related guide should you open today instead of saving the idea for later?
- 3.What part of this guide actually helps you read Scripture better rather than just consume another page?
Use this guide with
These published pages are the best next step if you want to turn this guide into actual reading.
Publisher and policies
See who runs the site, how editorial pages are produced, how translations are handled, and where to send corrections.