← All services

About

How to Use

A basic usage flow centered on Bible reading and Bible notes, with optional tools such as 1260 QT, copywork, and learning features used only when needed.

Basic Flow

Read first, open the resources you need, then continue into your own notes

The usage flow of scripture.how begins with the biblical text rather than complex menu navigation. Open a chapter, read the passage, and then choose original-language data, cross references, commentaries, Bible notes, or comments at the verse where you need them. Optional content such as 1260 QT and copywork can be used only when you want it, without following a fixed order.

01

Start with Bible reading

Open the passage from the top Bible Reading menu or the main button. The default experience is reading, so start with chapter navigation and translation selection.

02

Open resources from each verse

Use the original-language, cross-reference, commentary, and comment buttons beside each verse to view only the resources you need in a popup or supporting panel.

03

Use Bible notes and optional tools selectively

Choose the Bible-note display state to add an interpretation layer over the text, and use optional tools such as 1260 QT and copywork only when you need them.

Step 1

How to open the biblical text

On the Bible Reading screen, choose a translation, Bible book, and chapter to move directly to the passage. You can go to the previous or next chapter, compare multiple translations when needed, or open only selected verses in the multi-Bible popup.

Top Bible Reading menu
Select a book and chapter
Move with previous/next chapter and history

Step 2

How to view original-language data, cross references, commentaries, and comments

Resource buttons appear on the right side of each verse. Original-language data shows aligned tokens and pronunciation, cross references connect related passages, commentaries open historical commentary content in a popup or supporting panel, and comments can grow into a question-and-answer flow for that verse.

Original language: word-level text and pronunciation
Cross references: related passage links
Commentaries/comments: popup or supporting panel

Step 3

Choose how Bible notes are displayed

Bible Notes are an interpretation layer placed over the text. You can write your own notes or study with public notes by approved authors. In the reading screen, choose text+notes, text only, or hide all; you can also expand only verses that have notes. After learning the feature with sample Bible notes, you can select your own notes or approved public notes.

Text+notes / text only / hide all
Expand notes by verse
Choose sample notes and my notes

Options

Use only the additional content you want

Bible reading and Bible notes are the center. Content such as 1260 QT, Bible copywork, Bible typing practice, English Bible study, and Children’s Story Bible does not have to be followed in a fixed order. Use only the feature you need at the moment.

Optional content without a fixed order
QT, copywork, typing, English Bible, and Story Bible
Select only the features you want

Tip

You do not need to turn on every feature at first

If you are using scripture.how for the first time, it is enough to read the Bible text and open only original-language data or commentaries for verses that raise questions. Bible notes, QT, and copywork can be added one by one after your reading habit becomes more stable.