Understanding the Holy Bible which is a very large volume containing 66 books within two major parts--the Old and the New Testament can be difficult. At first, the Bible could seem a little hard to navigate, but with some basic knowledge on how it is organized and practice, you will be able to quickly find any scripture to check for accuracy of what people say or that you need for any other reason.

Steps

  1. 1
    Learn how the bible is organized. It is divided into Book Chapter:Verse. For example, if you wanted to look up John 3:16, first you would turn to the book of John. You would then turn to the 3rd chapter (the number before the colon is the chapter.). You would then find the 16th verse.
    • Verses are usually arranged with small numbers within the text. Some Bibles are formed into paragraphs and only have the number of the verse that begins each paragraph.
    • The first part of the Bible is called the Old Testament (Tanakh -- Jewish) Bible of the "books of Moses" and other ancient prophets' writings and second the New Testament of Christian books starting with the four Gospels of Christ written by Christian Jews -- and as many as fourteen (or as few as seven, some say) books all ascribed to one Greek Jew, the Apostle [Saint] Paul (born Saul of Tarsus), more on his contributions to the Bible Christianity in the "Tips" section.[1]
  2. 2
    Look in the back of your Bible; it may have a Bible concordance (index) which will direct you to a few verses that contain each word that you find in the concordance.
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  3. 3
    Study with a much larger, separate concordance including a dictionary of Bible and Holy Land atlas of maps, all in one volume, spanning various times in the history of the eastern Mediterranean Sea region, Middle East -- or find a set of Bible commentary books -- all available at bookstores (especially Christian, Jewish and Western-commercial booksellers).
  4. 4
    See whether or not there is a cross reference in your Bible--which is usually setup in two text columns, and then the cross reference may be found in the middle of the page in a very narrow column. It serves as a kind of footnote section to list other places you find the same, a similar/related topic in the Bible.
  5. 5
    Inspect the bottoms of most pages or above the beginning of each chapter, or in subtopic headings between groups of verses to see if your Bible has selected comments about the subject, meaning and/or history of the material in that chapter.
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Method 1
Method 1 of 1:

Bible Research on the Internet

  1. 1
    Search for a Bible subject/verses on the Internet that refer to your topic. Bible subject:marriage or try Bible verses:marriage for example to find several websites that may contain your reference. Some will be sermons, others commentary and some will be arguing or discussion pages.
  2. 2
    Find a Bible quotation on the Internet like Bible quote:for God so loved the world. If you have several of the words from a verse but want its chapter and verse location in the Bible, this is used like a concordance.
  3. 3
    Find many language translations of the entire Bible with various, different versions (older or more modern language usage, etc.) on the Internet.
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Community Q&A

  • Question
    Where do I find the scripture that begins "When two or more gather together..."?
    SmartAZ
    SmartAZ
    Community Answer
    Matthew 18:20 "For where two or three are gathered together in my name, there am I in the midst of them."
  • Question
    How do I connect with my angels?
    Community Answer
    Community Answer
    God knows you like you know yourself. All you have to do is talk to God. You can talk formally, informally, whatever you like. God likes to hear from you, and talking to him to connect to your angels will help you find inner peace. Secondly, do some research on the angels' names in specific that you'd like to connect with. God can sometimes be "an operator" while we are "on hold" for "the phone call" with our guardian angels.
  • Question
    How do I understand the Bible better?
    Community Answer
    Community Answer
    Get a historical background so that you can better understand the context. Much of the Bible is allegorical rather than literal, and it helps to understand the times in which it was written.
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Warnings

  • Be careful of some books having names that are very similar. For example, there are four books with the name John. They are the larger [Gospel of (Saint)] John, and his three smaller books: 1st John, 2nd John and 3rd John.
    ⧼thumbs_response⧽
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Things You'll Need

  • The Holy Bible (contains both the Old and New Testament)
  • The Tanakh (Jewish Bible/old testament)
  • The New Testament (contains only the Christian books)

About This Article

wikiHow is a “wiki,” similar to Wikipedia, which means that many of our articles are co-written by multiple authors. To create this article, 10 people, some anonymous, worked to edit and improve it over time. This article has been viewed 69,064 times.
71 votes - 68%
Co-authors: 10
Updated: August 28, 2022
Views: 69,064
Categories: Bibles
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