Choosing a Bible
Help picking the right Bible for you — translations, beginners, gifting, and more.
Which Bible should I read?
If you're new, start with the NLT or NIV — both are clear, modern, and easy to follow. If you want word-for-word accuracy, choose the ESV or NRSV. For traditional, beautiful English, the KJV is still hard to beat.
What is the best Bible translation?
There isn't one 'best' — translations sit on a spectrum from word-for-word (ESV, NASB, KJV) to thought-for-thought (NIV, NLT) to paraphrase (The Message). Pick by purpose: study, devotional reading, or gifting.
What's the best Bible for a beginner?
The NLT (New Living Translation) is the easiest modern translation to read cold. The NIV is a close second. Look for an edition with book introductions and a reading plan.
How are Bible translations different?
Translations differ in two ways: how literally they render the original languages, and which manuscripts they translate from. Most modern English Bibles use the same source texts but vary in style.
What's a good Bible to give as a gift?
For most gifting — confirmation, baptism, wedding, milestone birthday — a leather-bound NIV, ESV, or NLT with a presentation page is the safe, lasting choice.
What's the difference between a study Bible and a reader's Bible?
A study Bible has notes, maps and cross-references at the bottom of each page — great for digging in. A reader's Bible strips all of that out for a clean, novel-like reading experience.
What's the difference between bonded leather, genuine leather and goatskin?
Bonded leather is reconstituted scraps — affordable but stiff. Genuine leather is a real leather layer over a backing. Goatskin (and calfskin) is full-grain premium leather that softens and lasts a lifetime.
Which Bible should a Catholic reader choose?
The NRSV Catholic Edition, the Jerusalem Bible, or the Revised New Jerusalem Bible. All include the Deuterocanonical books that Protestant Bibles omit.
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