Walk with Paul.
An open, sourced timeline of Paul of Tarsus — KJV, WEB, NET inline, citations from eleven scholars, zoomable from a lifetime down to a single afternoon in Corinth.
Five minutes, zero documentation
From landing to study in three moves
The timeline is the point. You shouldn't need a tutorial to read it.
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1Land on the timeline
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Paul's life, left to right. Tarsus to Rome. Every event is a clickable pin.
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2Zoom into a city
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Tap a band — Corinth, Ephesus, Antioch — and the view expands to show the texts written there, the people he met, the letters sent.
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3Read with citations
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Every claim has a source. Wright, Dunn, Sanders, Schreiner — toggle them on or off. Translations inline. ESV link-out for those who prefer it.
Sound familiar?
Bible study apps shouldn't make you choose
Devotional apps are shallow
Pretty layout, no sources. A quote and an emoji.
Commentaries are a wall
Eight hundred pages of footnotes, no entry point. Where do you start?
Timelines are static
A PDF poster of dates. You can't click on Athens and read what happened there.
Scholars disagree
Wright versus Sanders versus Dunn on the same event. Most apps pick one. We show all of them.
Honest trade-off
Currently building.
BibleMonkey is open source — MIT-licensed code, CC-BY-SA content, every citation sourced. The domain models behind the timeline are landing now. When they're in, this page becomes the timeline itself.
While you wait
Curious what your spiritual gifts are?
A quick, reflective little quiz — 140 statements, 28 gifts. No account, nothing saved to a server. Just you and a few honest answers.