A Deep Reading in LSB & Original Languages

Bible Study לב המקרא · ἡ καρδία τῆς γραφῆς

Verse-by-verse study with the Legacy Standard Bible, the Hebrew (and Aramaic) Old Testament, and the Koine Greek New Testament
1189 of 1189 chapters available (100%) · 66 books complete, 0 in progress

This study reads Scripture in the Legacy Standard Bible (LSB) alongside the original Hebrew, Aramaic, and Greek. The Old Testament is overwhelmingly Hebrew, but a handful of passages are written in Imperial Aramaic, the lingua franca of the Persian empire — Daniel 2:4b–7:28 (roughly half of Daniel), Ezra 4:8–6:18 and 7:12–26 (the Persian-court correspondence), Jeremiah 10:11 (a one-verse polemic against idols), and the two-word place name in Genesis 31:47 (Jegar-sahadutha). Aramaic is also preserved in the New Testament where the Gospel writers retain Jesus’s actual words in transliteration: Abba, Talitha cumi, Eloi Eloi lema sabachthani, Maranatha. The LSB is a literal English translation in the NASB tradition, distinctive especially for restoring the divine name Yahweh where the underlying text reads YHWH, preserving doulos as “slave” rather than softening to “servant,” and rendering disputed phrases (obedience of faith, pistis Christou) with their original ambiguity intact. The study pairs each English passage with the underlying original-language text, word-by-word breakdowns of key terms, grammar and argument notes, OT-NT connections, and the LSB-specific translation choices worth pausing on.

Each chapter is its own page with tabbed sections grouped by the author’s logical units. Gold-underlined words in the text are clickable — they jump to the matching Key Words entry below, which glows briefly so you can find your landing. Select any text to highlight it or add a private note; the floating ✎ button at the lower right opens your notes panel. Highlights and notes are saved in your browser, per chapter.

Authorship attributions follow scholarly convention: traditional where the church has spoken with one voice (Paul, Matthew, Mark, Luke, John); transparent where the matter is disputed (Hebrews is shown as Author Unknown, the Psalms as David and others). The aim is honest scholarship, not pretended certainty.

Where to begin. The 66 books are arranged below in their canonical order, Genesis through Revelation, the same order any printed Bible follows. But the books were written for different readers in different centuries, and they reward different entry points. A few suggestions:

For a first read of the New Testament, begin with Mark (the shortest gospel, urgent and narrative) and then Luke — you will see the same story told twice with different concerns. For doctrinal core, begin with Romans; this study was built around Romans first and the depth there sets the bar for the rest of the project. Galatians is the Reader's Digest of Romans — six tight chapters of the same gospel argument.

For an Old Testament gateway, begin with Genesis 1-12 (creation through Abraham, the seedbed of every later thread), then jump to Psalm 22 and Isaiah 53 — both read like Christian sermons centuries before Christ. For wisdom under suffering, Job and Ecclesiastes. For the prophet Jesus quoted most, Isaiah.

For tracing how the New Testament uses the Old, the bonus Cross References page (linked at the bottom) is a bidirectional index of every OT citation across the entire study — click any verse to jump to either side of the connection.

I · The Law (Pentateuch)
Genesis
Genesisבְּרֵאשִׁית
Foundations. Creation, fall, flood, and the patriarchs. The seedbed of every typology -- Eden, Noah, Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, Joseph -- where every later thread first goes into the soil.
50 chapters · Complete
Exodus
Exodusשְׁמוֹת
The defining redemption of the OT. Plagues, Passover, the sea, Sinai, the tabernacle. Every NT atonement word leans on Exodus.
40 chapters · Complete
Leviticus
Leviticusוַיִּקְרָא
Holiness, sacrifice, priesthood. The book Hebrews assumes you have read. Atonement, clean and unclean, the Day of Atonement, jubilee.
27 chapters · Complete
Numbers
Numbersבְּמִדְבַּר
Israel in the wilderness. Census, rebellion, the bronze serpent, Balaam, and the wandering generation that did not enter the rest.
36 chapters · Complete
Deuteronomy
Deuteronomyדְּבָרִים
Moses's covenant sermons on the plains of Moab. The Shema, the great commandment, blessings and curses, and the song of Moses.
34 chapters · Complete
II · History
Joshua
Joshuaיְהוֹשֻׁעַ
Crossing the Jordan and the conquest. The fall of Jericho, the sun standing still, and the renewal of covenant at Shechem.
24 chapters · Complete
Judges
Judgesשֹׁפְטִים
The cycle of apostasy and deliverance. Deborah, Gideon, Samson -- and the haunting refrain that everyone did what was right in his own eyes.
21 chapters · Complete
Ruth
Ruthרוּת
Four chapters of grace. A Moabite widow becomes the great-grandmother of David, with the kinsman-redeemer as the OT seed of Christ's redemption.
4 chapters · Complete
1 Samuel
1 Samuelשְׁמוּאֵל א
From Hannah's song to Saul's anointing to David's rise. The transition from judges to kings, with the boy who became Israel's greatest singer.
31 chapters · Complete
2 Samuel
2 Samuelשְׁמוּאֵל ב
David's reign in full -- triumphs, the Bathsheba catastrophe, the Davidic covenant of 2 Samuel 7 that the NT reads as the Christ-promise.
24 chapters · Complete
1 Kings
1 Kingsמְלָכִים א
The split kingdom and the prophets. Solomon's temple and apostasy, the Elijah cycle, and the showdown on Mount Carmel.
22 chapters · Complete
2 Kings
2 Kingsמְלָכִים ב
The decline and exile of both kingdoms. Elisha's miracles, Hezekiah's reforms, and the fall of Jerusalem to Babylon.
25 chapters · Complete
1 Chronicles
1 Chroniclesדִּבְרֵי הַיָּמִים א
Davidic history retold for the post-exilic community. Genealogies that frame the whole biblical story, ending with David's plans for the temple.
29 chapters · Complete
2 Chronicles
2 Chroniclesדִּבְרֵי הַיָּמִים ב
Solomon and the kings of Judah, with the temple as the architectural and theological center. Closes with the decree of Cyrus.
36 chapters · Complete
Ezra
Ezraעֶזְרָא
The first return from exile. Rebuilding the temple, the renewal of worship, and Ezra's reform around the Law. Includes the Aramaic court documents of 4:8-6:18 and 7:12-26.
10 chapters · Complete
Nehemiah
Nehemiahנְחֶמְיָה
Rebuilding the walls of Jerusalem. The wall raised in fifty-two days, the public reading of the Law, and the reforms of a layman who was first a cupbearer.
13 chapters · Complete
Esther
Estherאֶסְתֵּר
Diaspora drama. A Jewish girl becomes queen of Persia, the empire's machinery turns toward genocide, and reversal saves a people. The book that never names God.
10 chapters · Complete
III · Wisdom and Poetry
Job
Jobאִיּוֹב
The most ancient of the wisdom books. Suffering, theodicy, the friends' failed answers, and the voice from the whirlwind.
42 chapters · Complete
Psalms
Psalmsתְּהִלִּים
Israel's prayer book -- the largest concentration of Yahweh in any book of the Bible, and the New Testament's main quotation reservoir.
150 chapters · Complete
Proverbs
Proverbsמִשְׁלֵי
Solomon's wisdom in pithy form. The fear of Yahweh, the woman of valor of chapter 31, and the practical theology of every domain of life.
31 chapters · Complete
Ecclesiastes
Ecclesiastesקֹהֶלֶת
Qoheleth's hard look at life under the sun. Vanity, the limits of wisdom, the gift of work, and the conclusion to fear God and keep his commandments.
12 chapters · Complete
Song of Songs
Song of Songsשִׁיר הַשִּׁירִים
Hebrew love poetry. Read by Jews as Israel's covenant love song, by the church as Christ and his Bride, and by both as a vindication of marital love itself.
8 chapters · Complete
IV · The Major Prophets
Isaiah
Isaiahיְשַׁעְיָהוּ
The most-quoted-by-NT Old Testament book. The Servant Songs, the messianic prophecies, the vision of a new creation that the apostles read as fulfilled in Christ.
66 chapters · Complete
Jeremiah
Jeremiahיִרְמְיָהוּ
The weeping prophet of the fall of Jerusalem. The new covenant of Jeremiah 31:31-34, quoted at length in Hebrews 8. Includes one Aramaic verse, 10:11.
52 chapters · Complete
Lamentations
Lamentationsאֵיכָה
Five poems mourning the destruction of Jerusalem. Acrostic structure, raw grief, and the famous mercy of 3:22-23: his compassions never fail.
5 chapters · Complete
Ezekiel
Ezekielיְחֶזְקֵאל
The priest-prophet in exile. The throne-chariot vision, the dry bones, the new heart, and the temple vision of chapters 40-48.
48 chapters · Complete
Daniel
Danielדָּנִיֵּאל
Wisdom in the imperial court. The fiery furnace, the lions' den, the four kingdoms, the Son of Man of chapter 7. Half the book is in Aramaic (2:4b-7:28).
12 chapters · Complete
V · The Minor Prophets
Hosea
Hoseaהוֹשֵׁעַ
The prophet who married the unfaithful wife. Yahweh's covenant love for an apostate Israel, with the marriage as a living parable.
14 chapters · Complete
Joel
Joelיוֹאֵל
Locust plague as a sign of the day of Yahweh. The pouring out of the Spirit on all flesh, quoted by Peter at Pentecost.
3 chapters · Complete
Amos
Amosעָמוֹס
The shepherd from Tekoa. Justice rolling down like waters, the indictment of the nations, and the rebuilt tent of David quoted in Acts 15.
9 chapters · Complete
Obadiah
Obadiahעֹבַדְיָה
One chapter on the judgment of Edom. The shortest book in the OT, on pride, brotherhood, and reversal.
1 chapters · Complete
Jonah
Jonahיוֹנָה
The reluctant prophet sent to Nineveh. The great fish, the converted city, and Jesus's own sign of Jonah.
4 chapters · Complete
Micah
Micahמִיכָה
Contemporary with Isaiah. The little town of Bethlehem (5:2), and what Yahweh requires: do justice, love kindness, walk humbly.
7 chapters · Complete
Nahum
Nahumנַחוּם
Three chapters on Nineveh's fall. A century after Jonah, the city that repented now faces final judgment.
3 chapters · Complete
Habakkuk
Habakkukחֲבַקּוּק
The prophet's dialogue with God: why do the wicked prosper? Includes the verse Paul will set at the heart of Romans -- the just shall live by faith.
3 chapters · Complete
Zephaniah
Zephaniahצְפַנְיָה
The day of Yahweh in the reign of Josiah. Universal judgment, the remnant, and the song of God rejoicing over his people.
3 chapters · Complete
Haggai
Haggaiחַגַּי
Two chapters urging the return-from-exile community to finish rebuilding the temple. The latter glory will exceed the former.
2 chapters · Complete
Zechariah
Zechariahזְכַרְיָה
The most quoted prophet in the Passion narratives. The triumphal entry, the thirty pieces of silver, the pierced one, and the king on a donkey.
14 chapters · Complete
Malachi
Malachiמַלְאָכִי
The last word of the OT. Robbing God of tithes, the messenger of the covenant, and the promise of Elijah before the great day of Yahweh.
4 chapters · Complete
VI · The Gospels and Acts
Matthew
Matthewκατὰ Ματθαῖον
The Gospel that opens the New Testament. Christ as the new Moses, the fulfillment of Israel's story, the Sermon on the Mount, and the Great Commission.
28 chapters · Complete
Mark
Markκατὰ Μᾶρκον
The shortest, most urgent Gospel. Christ as the suffering Servant moving relentlessly toward the cross.
16 chapters · Complete
Luke
Lukeκατὰ Λουκᾶν
The most carefully ordered Gospel. Christ for the outsiders -- Samaritans, women, the poor -- with a long travel narrative to Jerusalem.
24 chapters · Complete · 2 tabs need rebuild
John
Johnκατὰ Ἰωάννην
The fourth gospel: theology of the Logos, the seven 'I am' sayings, and the most sustained meditation on truth, life, and light in the NT.
21 chapters · Complete
Acts
ActsΠράξεις τῶν Ἀποστόλων
Luke's second volume. The Spirit's expansion of the church from Jerusalem to Rome -- Pentecost, Stephen, the conversion of Saul, the Council of Jerusalem, and the missionary journeys.
28 chapters · Complete
VII · The Pauline Letters
Romans
Romansπρὸς Ῥωμαίους
The most influential single document in Christian theology. Sixteen chapters tracing the gospel from the indictment of humanity through justification by faith, life in the Spirit, Israel's place, and the gospel lived out.
16 chapters · Complete
1 Corinthians
1 Corinthiansπρὸς Κορινθίους Α
The most pastorally varied of Paul's letters: divisions, sexual ethics, food sacrificed to idols, the Lord's Supper, spiritual gifts, the love chapter, and the resurrection of the body.
16 chapters · Complete
2 Corinthians
2 Corinthiansπρὸς Κορινθίους Β
Paul defends his apostleship against rivals. The clearest window into his physical sufferings and the theology of strength-in-weakness.
13 chapters · Complete
Galatians
Galatiansπρὸς Γαλάτας
Paul's earliest letter -- justification by faith in white-hot polemical form. Anathema, the Jerusalem confrontation, Abrahamic faith, the Hagar-Sarah allegory, freedom in the Spirit, new creation.
6 chapters · Complete
Ephesians
Ephesiansπρὸς Ἐφεσίους
Paul's cosmic theology: chosen in Christ before the foundation of the world, the body as the new humanity, prayer in the Spirit, the armor of God.
6 chapters · Complete
Philippians
Philippiansπρὸς Φιλιππησίους
Paul's most personal letter, written from prison. Centered on the Christ-hymn of 2:5-11, one of the densest pieces of NT Christology.
4 chapters · Complete
Colossians
Colossiansπρὸς Κολοσσαεῖς
The supremacy and sufficiency of Christ. Cosmic Christ-hymn, freedom from human regulations, the new self, household codes.
4 chapters · Complete
1 Thessalonians
1 ThessaloniansΠρὸς Θεσσαλονικεῖς Α
Paul's earliest letter. The dead in Christ, the coming of the Lord, and the day that comes like a thief.
5 chapters · Complete
2 Thessalonians
2 ThessaloniansΠρὸς Θεσσαλονικεῖς Β
The man of lawlessness, the restrainer, and standing firm under persecution.
3 chapters · Complete
1 Timothy
1 TimothyΠρὸς Τιμόθεον Α
Pastoral instructions to a young leader at Ephesus -- elders, deacons, false teaching, and the pattern of sound words.
6 chapters · Complete
2 Timothy
2 TimothyΠρὸς Τιμόθεον Β
Paul's last letter, written from a Roman prison. The deposit, suffering for the gospel, and 'all Scripture is breathed out by God.'
4 chapters · Complete
Titus
Titusπρὸς Τίτον
Order in the Cretan churches, qualifications for elders, and the grace of God appearing for salvation to all.
3 chapters · Complete
Philemon
Philemonπρὸς Φιλήμονα
One chapter, 25 verses. A runaway slave, a transformed relationship, and the gospel applied to the dinner table.
1 chapters · Complete
VIII · The General Epistles
Hebrews
Hebrewsπρὸς Ἑβραίους
The NT book that breathes the Septuagint. Levitical fulfillment, priestly Christology, and the elegant Greek argument for Christ as the better and final High Priest.
13 chapters · Complete
James
JamesἸακώβου
Faith and works, the tongue, wisdom from above. The Lord's brother writes with the force of OT wisdom literature.
5 chapters · Complete
1 Peter
1 PeterΠέτρου Α
Living hope, royal priesthood, suffering for righteousness. Exodus typology saturates every chapter.
5 chapters · Complete
2 Peter
2 PeterΠέτρου Β
Partakers of divine nature, false teachers, and the promise of new heavens and a new earth.
3 chapters · Complete
1 John
1 JohnἸωάννου Α
Love, light, truth, abiding, life. Greek-elegant and theologically compact.
5 chapters · Complete
2 John
2 JohnἸωάννου Β
A short letter on truth and love -- the elder warns against deceivers.
1 chapters · Complete
3 John
3 JohnἸωάννου Γ
A short letter to Gaius about hospitality, Diotrephes, and Demetrius.
1 chapters · Complete
Jude
JudeἸούδα
Contend for the faith. OT judgment examples, fallen angels, and a quotation from 1 Enoch.
1 chapters · Complete
IX · The Apocalypse
Revelation
RevelationἈποκάλυψις Ἰωάννου
John's vision from Patmos. The seven churches, the throne room, the seals, trumpets, and bowls, the dragon, the Lamb, and the new heavens and new earth.
22 chapters · Complete
Bonus · Echoes Through the Story

Threads

Typology threads tying Old Testament seeds to their flowering in Christ — from the serpent-crusher of Genesis 3:15 to the tabernacle that became flesh in John 1:14. Each thread is shown in four stages: OT seed, the linguistic thread (Hebrew root, LXX vocabulary), NT fulfillment, and why it matters. The LSB’s literal rendering of Yahweh and other Hebrew-OT vocabulary makes the linguistic seams visible across both testaments.

Open Threads →
Bonus · The Old in the New

Cross References

A bidirectional index of every Old Testament reference cited across the entire study — organized by OT book and chapter, with links forward to where the reference is discussed and back to the original passage. Use it to trace a single Hebrew verse through every place it surfaces in apostolic teaching, or to see at a glance which OT books shape any given New Testament chapter.

Open Cross References →

How to Use This Study

  1. Open a book by clicking its card. The book index lists its chapters in the order of the author’s argument.
  2. Within a chapter, navigation is by tabs grouped by logical unit, not always one verse per tab. Click the tab title to switch sections.
  3. Every tab gives you the LSB English text, the Greek (or Hebrew) text with transliteration, word-by-word breakdowns of key terms, grammar and argument notes, OT-NT connections, and a focused “LSB Choices Worth Noting” section.
  4. Click any gold-underlined word in the text to jump to its Key Words entry — the target glows briefly to mark where you landed.
  5. Select any text in a chapter and a small toolbar appears: Highlight the passage or Add a Note. The floating ✎ button at the lower right opens your notes panel. Notes are saved in your browser per chapter.
  6. The Threads page collects typology threads — OT seeds and NT fulfillments — and is cross-linked from chapters where the threads come home (e.g., Romans 16:20 links to the serpent-crusher thread).