12 Tribes of Israel: Every Biblical List in One Chart
Jacob had twelve sons, yet Bible lists vary from 10-14 tribes. See every lineup in one chart and understand why the tribe names shift across Scripture.
This page lists all 121 resources on the site except Chapter By Chapter, which covers 519 of the 1,189 chapters of the Bible.
Jacob had twelve sons, yet Bible lists vary from 10-14 tribes. See every lineup in one chart and understand why the tribe names shift across Scripture.
Digital Bibles cost less, weigh less, and fit in your pocket. Why you should leave your paper Bible on the shelf and switch to a Bible app.
Why a dead-tree paper Bible is better for reading and studying than the Bible app on your phone.
Hidden glory in “the boring part” of Numbers 33.
Who doesn’t love Hebrew puns foretelling destruction?
Three months? Mary stayed with Elizabeth for a long time! Think with me for a few minutes about that visit.
Prophesied that Jeroboam would become the first king of the northern kingdom of Israel. Also prophesied the death of everyone in Jeroboam’s family.
How do we make sure we encounter God in the Bible, and not just a mirror of ourselves?
God’s sovereignty is infinite, unquestioned, unknowable… but let’s try to make a list anyway.
Counseled King Asa of Judah to enact religious reforms. Asa listens, and then doesn’t listen.
What do Pulp Fiction and J.G. Wentworth have to do with the parable of the sower?
Before you start another Bible reading plan, pause. If reading Scripture keeps turning into guilt and burnout, the problem isn’t you—it’s the method. Here ar...
Matching the cycle of forgiveness with the cycle of sanctification.
Instantly see every Bible book’s chapter count—from Obadiah’s 1 to Psalms’ 150—and grab a free CSV and printable PDF, to plan your reading.
How do prophets know they’re prophets? Do they just go to sleep one night thinking they’re going to be a farmer or a shepherd or a stonemason, and the next d...
Welcome to VerseNotes!
Explore the Apostles’ Creed in reverse, line by line. Download the free worksheet and discover why each phrase matters for your everyday faith.
Mark’s favorite word is “immediately.” What’s everyone else’s?
Amalek somehow joins forces with all of Israel’s enemies but leaves no historical record.
Moses argued with God five times in Exodus 3–4. Here’s what each objection reveals about our fears—and how God answers with presence, power, and grace.
God is always playing the long game. Here’s an example that takes five hundred years to play out.
Israel didn’t just hear stories about giants—they met them on the battlefield. Og with his iron bed, the towering Anakim, and the armored champion of Gath. E...
We think of Jesus’s disciples as fishermen, because many of them were—but not all. Where did all of them come from?
We all know Jesus had twelve disciples. So why does the New Testament give us fourteen names?
The first five books of the New Testament all record Great Commissions, so why do we always focus on Matthew?
Zechariah sings the Benedictus, the second hymn of Christmas. His first words after nine months of silence are, “Blessed be the Lord God of Israel.”
Angels sing the Gloria In Excelsis Deo, the third hymn of Christmas, to shepherds near Bethlehem. A glorious response to the announcement of the birth of the...
Mary sings the Magnificat, the first hymn of Christmas, an amazing display of hope and humility, along with a fair bit of knowledge.
Simeon sings the Nunc Dimittis, the fourth and final song of Advent, a joyous farewell after a lifetime of waiting for the Savior of Israel, Jesus the Christ.
Giants in the Bible aren’t tall tales—they reveal fear, faith, and God’s promises. Discover why their stories still matter for us today.
Challenged King Asa of Judah when Asa sent Temple treasures to Ben-Hadad of Syria for an alliance rather than trusting God as he had in the past.
There are sixty-six books, but only five naming strategies.
Part 3 of how to start reading the Bible. In which we actually start reading the Bible.
How do you stay connected to God through Scripture versus just studying the Bible as a textbook?
Recorded the reigns of Solomon, Rehoboam, and Abijah; possibly Zechariah’s grandfather.
An ancient empire oppressing the Jews, a young virgin, a descendant of Israel’s kings, a murder that didn’t quite take, a permanent yearly celebration of lif...
Why does the author of Chronicles leave out the story of David and Bathsheba? That seems like a major oversight.
When the psalms appear to disagree with Jesus’s lifestyle, we need to take a second look.
Overwhelmed? Walk King Jehoshaphat’s 8-step prayer in 2 Chronicles 20–pause, praise, petition, watch God fight. Includes free study guide & printable flo...
You’re part of the invasion force of Heaven, and every work you do for the Kingdom of God is part of the assured fall of Satan at the word of Jesus.
Prophesies that Jehoshaphat and Ahab will lose in a war against Syria (spoiler: they do). Never has anything good to say about Ahab.
Foreign nations and the Fourth of July.
All the details about graded numerical sequences that didn’t fit in the last post.
The Israelites were famously bad at math, but here’s an instance where they relied on a technique that wouldn’t even be invented for another 3,000 years.
Learning about Mosaic law from Fiddler on the Roof.
In which I challenge myself to participate in NaNoWriMo here at VerseNotes by writing every day for the month of November.
Rigorously parsing the account of the flood in Genesis 7 and 8.
Paul reaches back into history and into Scripture to write an old law in a new way for the Corinthians.
Who knew a hat could be so delicious?
Sometimes I forget that God has a name. This psalmist is happy to remind me, over and over again.
The mountaintop is waiting.
Have you ever been reading a book, and suddenly looked up and realized you have no idea what you just read? Here’s what to do about it.
I do my daily devotionals on my phone pretty much all the time. Unfortunately, my phone is pretty dumb. Let’s make it a bit smarter.
The best way to start reading the Bible is probably not what you think it is.
John’s vision of the end of the world involves an awful lot of math. Putting some structure on all those numbers will help you make sense of it all. (Part 1)
John’s vision of the end of the world involves an awful lot of math. Putting some structure on all those numbers will help you make sense of it all. (Part 5)
John’s vision of the end of the world involves an awful lot of math. Putting some structure on all those numbers will help you make sense of it all. (Part 2)
John’s vision of the end of the world involves an awful lot of math. Putting some structure on all those numbers will help you make sense of it all. (Part 4)
John’s vision of the end of the world involves an awful lot of math. Putting some structure on all those numbers will help you make sense of it all. (Part 3)
Exploring the relationship of sin, repentance, and forgiveness with the help of a Pharisee and a prostitute.
A lived example of Jesus’s proclamation about not hiding a lamp—or a woman—under a basket.
Warned Rehoboam not to invade Israel.
The Moabites get all the press, but the Ammonites were there the whole time.
The heart of Psalm 19 contains six poetic statements, each built from three carefully chosen elements: an aspect of God’s Word, a superlative about that aspe...
Close your eyes. Imagine God. What image appears? How does this image of God impact your prayers? your worship? your witness?
This little Hebrew idiom never fails to bring me joy when I encounter it.
The economy of God is not based on fairness, but on gifts and obedience.
Now that resolution fever has settled down, let’s take a hard, serious, Biblical look at New Year’s resolutions.
How did Luke hear the story of Jesus staying behind in the Temple as a little boy?
Bringing the men who guard the gates of the tabernacle into the modern church.
Judah wasn’t the firstborn. He wasn’t the most righteous. He wasn’t even the favored son. And yet, from his line came King David—and Jesus, the Lion of Judah...
The most famous number in the Bible may not be what you think it is.
Jesus tells us how to avoid losing the preparation of Advent and the hope of Christmas in the messiness of January. And February. And March…
A grief poem held together by the Hebrew alphabet… until it’s not.
Looking at familiar Scripture in new ways can help us see what it’s all about. Psalm 136 is famously repetitive, but don’t let “repetitive” become “boring.”
Part 2 of how to start reading the Bible. What is the I.O.U.S. prayer, and why should you pray it before opening your Bible?
If you’ve ever wondered why Revelation has 7 of everything, this article will help. (Warning: there’s a little bit of math.)
Told King Amaziah of Judah not to hire mercenaries from Israel, “for the Lord is not with Israel.”
Told King Amaziah of Judah that worshiping the idols of the defeated Edomites would result in his destruction.
Contemporary of Jeremiah, murdered by the king for prophesying against Jerusalem
Malachi 4:5 seems impossible, or at best a contradiction. What happens when Jesus’s disciples finally get up the courage to ask about it?
Psalm 89’s author, Ethan the Ezrahite, is called wiser than anyone except Solomon. Explore his story, his wisdom, and how his lament shapes our hope.
We’ve spent a lot of time talking about King Jehoshaphat’s Prayer, but we haven’t really asked who he is until now.
The Moabites were descendants of Lot who battled Israel for centuries—yet Ruth the Moabite joined Jesus’s family line. Learn their origins, conflicts, and le...
God’s debt laws in Deuteronomy 15 reveal His wisdom in mercy and sovereignty—how He orders His kingdom with justice, compassion, and renewal.
Why isn’t it “Belteshazzar in the Lions’ Den” and “Hananiah, Mishael, and Azariah in the Fiery Furnace”?
Of all the women in Scripture, only Esther and Ruth get their own books. For Esther, here’s one important reason why—and it has nothing to do with her.
Esther revisits these three titanic themes from the history of Israel all in one book.
Prophet to the young King Joash, who stoned him to death.
False prophet who tells King Ahab to go to war.
The author of Esther embedded significant hidden structure in numbers. I can’t promise there will be no math.
Track today’s liturgical season with a real-time countdown, fullscreen display, and shareable snippets.
Open this page and immediately get a proverb or a Proverbs chapter to read—no planning required.
Match every minute of the day with a curated Scripture verse—shareable, printable, and synced to your local time.
Pick a start date, scope, and length—get a printable plan in seconds.