The KJV Audio Bible
I’m recording the King James Version of the Bible, one chapter at a time. The KJV is renowned for its linguistic beauty, and the New Testament of the KJV is based on the Received Text, which I believe is the most trustworthy and original text of the New Testament books. There’s a certain power in reading Bible books as a whole. Bible-in-a-year plans are great, but they have a few pitfalls: (1) They typically chop the Bible up into unnatural parts (readings from several books each day). This makes it harder to understand each book and remember it distinctly. (2) If it’s not January 1, we aren’t likely to start a Bible-in-a-year reading plan. Every day is an excellent day to start reading the Bible. (3) At the end of the year — once we’ve completed reading the whole Bible — we might think we’re “done.” Our goal shouldn’t simply be to read the whole Bible; our goal should be to read the whole Bible and to read the Bible every day of our life. We’re never done.
Episodes

Tuesday Mar 24, 2026
Tuesday Mar 24, 2026
Read Exodus 10.
Exodus 10 continues the account of God's judgment on Egypt through two additional plagues, the eighth and ninth, as Pharaoh persistently refused to release the Israelites from slavery. The LORD told Moses that He had hardened Pharaoh's heart deliberately so that these miraculous signs would be remembered and passed down through generations as testimony to His power.
Moses and Aaron approached Pharaoh and warned him that, if he refused to let the people go, an overwhelming swarm of locusts would descend on the land. The locusts would cover every visible patch of ground and devour whatever crops had survived the previous plague of hail. Pharaoh's own officials pleaded with him to relent, asking how long he would allow this man Moses to bring ruin upon Egypt. Pharaoh briefly seemed willing to negotiate, asking which Israelites specifically needed to go. When Moses replied that all the people (along with their flocks and herds) would need to leave, Pharaoh refused, agreeing to let only the men go. He then ordered Moses and Aaron to leave.
The LORD instructed Moses to stretch out his hand over Egypt, and an east wind blew through the night, bringing with it an enormous swarm of locusts the next morning. The infestation was worse than any Egypt had ever seen, and the locusts consumed every plant and fruit that remained in the land, leaving nothing green anywhere in Egypt. Pharaoh hastily summoned Moses and Aaron, confessing that he had sinned and begging for the plague to be removed. Moses prayed on his behalf, and the LORD sent a powerful west wind that swept every locust into the Red sea. But the LORD hardened Pharaoh's heart again, and Pharaoh refused to let the Israelites go.
The ninth plague then came without warning. The LORD told Moses to stretch his hand toward the sky, and a thick, tangible darkness fell over all of Egypt for three days. The darkness was so dense that people couldn't see one another or go anywhere. But the Israelites had light in their dwellings.
Pharaoh summoned Moses once more and offered a compromise, this time saying all of the Israelites could go — men, women, and children — but they would have to leave their livestock behind. Moses rejected this, insisting that all of their animals must accompany them, since they didn't know yet exactly what offerings the LORD their God would require. Once again the LORD hardened Pharaoh's heart, and Pharaoh refused to let them go. He dismissed Moses and warned him never to appear before him again, threatening death if he did. Moses agreed, telling Pharaoh that he would indeed not see his face again.

Saturday Mar 28, 2026
Saturday Mar 28, 2026
Read Exodus 11.
Exodus 11 records a turning point in the confrontation between the LORD and Pharaoh. The LORD announced to Moses that one final plague would come upon Egypt — a plague so severe that Pharaoh would not merely let the Israelites go but would drive them out entirely. The LORD instructed Moses that, before leaving, the Israelites should ask their Egyptian neighbors for articles of silver and gold. The LORD had caused the Egyptians to look favorably upon the Israelites, and Moses himself was held in high regard throughout Egypt, both by Pharaoh's officials and by the people.
Moses then delivered God's message to Pharaoh, warning him of what was to come. At midnight, God would pass through Egypt, and every firstborn son in the land would die — from the firstborn of Pharaoh himself all the way down to the firstborn of the lowliest slave girl, as well as the firstborn of all the livestock. Moses declared that there would be a great cry of mourning throughout all of Egypt, the likes of which had never been heard before and would never be heard again.
Moses drew a sharp contrast between the fate of the Egyptians and that of the Israelites. Among the Israelites, not even a dog would bark. This distinction, Moses said, would make clear to everyone that God had set Israel apart from Egypt.
Exodus 11 closes by noting that Moses left Pharaoh's presence in great anger and that God had hardened Pharaoh's heart so that he refused to listen, just as God had said would happen.

Wednesday Apr 01, 2026
Wednesday Apr 01, 2026
Read Exodus 12.
Exodus 12 opens with God giving Moses and Aaron detailed instructions for what would become the first passover. God declared that this month would mark the beginning of the Hebrew calendar year. Each household was instructed to select an unblemished male lamb on the tenth day of the month and keep it until the fourteenth day, at which point the entire assembly of Israel was to slaughter their lambs at twilight.
The Israelites were then told to apply the lamb's blood to the doorposts and lintel of their homes. That night, they were to roast the lamb and eat it with unleavened bread and bitter herbs, fully dressed and ready to travel — sandals on their feet, staff in hand — eating in haste. God warned that anything left over by morning was to be burned. This meal was to be eaten with urgency, because the Lord would pass through Egypt that night and strike down every firstborn, both human and animal, executing judgment on all the gods of Egypt. The blood on the doorposts would serve as a sign, and God would "pass over" those houses, sparing them from the plague of death.
God then commanded that this day be commemorated as a lasting ordinance throughout all generations. The feast of unleavened bread was instituted alongside the passover, lasting seven days, during which no leaven was to be found in any Israelite home. The first and seventh days were to be held as sacred assemblies, and all work was to cease on those days. Moses relayed all of these instructions to the elders of Israel, and the people bowed in worship and carried out everything God had commanded.
At midnight, the plague struck Egypt. Every firstborn in the land died — from the firstborn of Pharaoh on his throne to the firstborn of the prisoner in the dungeon, along with all the firstborn of the livestock. A great cry went up throughout Egypt, for there was not a house without someone dead.
Pharaoh summoned Moses and Aaron in the night and urgently commanded them to leave, telling them to take their flocks and herds and go, blessing him as they left. The Egyptians, gripped with fear, urged the Israelites to leave quickly, pressing them to go before any more death came upon them.
The Israelites left in haste, carrying their unleavened dough before it could rise. They also plundered the Egyptians by requesting silver, gold, and clothing, and the Egyptians gave them what they asked for. The Israelites journeyed from Rameses to Succoth — a group numbering about six hundred thousand men on foot, not counting women and children, along with a great mixed multitude and their livestock.
Exodus 12 closes with a reaffirmation of the passover regulations. It was stressed that no foreigner or uncircumcised person was permitted to eat the passover meal. However, any slave who had been circumcised could participate, as could a foreigner who had been circumcised and joined the community. The meal was to be eaten inside the house, and none of the lamb's bones were to be broken. The chapter concludes by noting that, on that very day, God brought the Israelites out of Egypt division by division, fulfilling His promise to His people.

Saturday Apr 04, 2026
Saturday Apr 04, 2026
Read Exodus 13.
Exodus 13 opens with the LORD commanding Moses to consecrate all the firstborn of Israel to Him. Every firstborn male (whether human or animal) was to be set apart as holy to the LORD. This reflected the significance of the final plague in Egypt, during which God had struck down the firstborn of the Egyptians while sparing those of the Israelites.
Moses then addressed the people of Israel, instructing them to commemorate their escape from Egypt. The LORD had delivered them from slavery with a mighty hand. He told them to observe a feast of unleavened bread each year during the month of Abib, the month of their exodus. For seven days they were to eat unleavened bread. On the seventh day, a special feast was to be held in honor of the LORD. Moses emphasized that no leavened bread was to be found among them during this time, and they were to explain to their children that the feast was observed because of what the LORD had done for them when He brought them out of Egypt. The practice was to serve as a sign on their hands and a reminder between their eyes, so that the law of the Lord would always be on their lips.
Moses also gave instructions concerning the consecration of firstborn animals. Every firstborn donkey was to be redeemed with a lamb, or else its neck was to be broken. Every firstborn son was to be redeemed in the same way. Parents were told that, when their children asked about this practice in the future, they should explain that it commemorated the LORD’s powerful act of bringing Israel out of Egypt — and how, when Pharaoh stubbornly refused to let them go, the LORD struck down every firstborn in the land of Egypt. This was the reason every firstborn male, both of man and of animal, was sacrificed or redeemed to the LORD.
Exodus 13 then describes the beginning of Israel’s journey out of Egypt. Rather than leading the people along the shorter coastal road through Philistine territory, God chose a longer route through the wilderness toward the Red sea. He did this deliberately, knowing that, if the people faced war too soon, they might regret leaving Egypt and go back there. The LORD Himself went before them in a pillar of cloud by day to guide their way and a pillar of fire by night to give them light so they could travel at any hour of the day or night. These pillars never left their place in front of the people.
Finally, Moses carried the bones of Joseph with him on the journey, fulfilling the oath that the Israelites had sworn to Joseph long before. Joseph had made them promise that, when God came to their aid, they would bring his bones up with them out of Egypt — a testament to his faith that God would one day lead his people back to the land He had promised them.

Wednesday Apr 08, 2026
Wednesday Apr 08, 2026
Read Exodus 14.
The LORD instructed Moses to lead the Israelites to camp near the Red sea, between Migdol and the sea, opposite Baal-zephon. This was part of a divine plan to harden Pharaoh's heart and draw the Egyptian army into pursuit, so that God could demonstrate His glory and power over Egypt, causing them to know that He was the LORD.
When Pharaoh was told that the Israelites had fled, he and his officials wondered why they had let their labor force go free. Pharaoh assembled a massive military force — six hundred of the best chariots along with all the other chariots of Egypt — and set out in pursuit of the Israelites, catching up with them as they camped by the sea.
As the Egyptian army approached, the Israelites became terrified and cried out to the LORD. They turned on Moses in anger, accusing him of bringing them into the wilderness to die, saying it would have been better to remain as slaves in Egypt than to perish in the desert. Moses responded by urging the people to stand firm and not be afraid, assuring them that God Himself would fight for them and that they need only to be still and watch the salvation that the LORD would bring that day.
Then the LORD told Moses to lift his staff and stretch out his hand over the sea to divide the waters, so that the Israelites could walk through on dry ground. The angel of God and the pillar of cloud that had been traveling ahead of the Israelite camp moved to the rear, positioning itself between the Egyptians and the Israelites. The cloud brought darkness to one side and light to the other, preventing the two camps from coming together throughout the night.
Moses stretched out his hand over the sea, and the LORD drove the sea back with a strong east wind throughout the night, turning the seabed into dry land. The waters divided, and the Israelites walked through the sea on dry ground, with walls of water standing on either side of them. The Egyptians pursued them, with all of Pharaoh's horses, chariots, and horsemen following them into the middle of the sea.
During the night watch, the LORD looked down on the Egyptian army from the pillar of fire and cloud and threw them into confusion. He caused the wheels of their chariots to come off so it was difficult for them to drive. The Egyptians began to cry out that the LORD was fighting against them and urged each other to escape.
The LORD then told Moses to stretch his hand back over the sea so that the waters would return upon the Egyptians. Moses obeyed, and, at daybreak the sea returned to its full depth. The Egyptians tried to flee, but the waters swept over them — the chariots, the horsemen, and the entire army of Pharaoh. Not one of them survived.
The Israelites, however, had crossed on dry ground with the water forming a wall on either side of them. When the people saw the great power that God had displayed against the Egyptians, and when they saw the bodies of the Egyptians washed up on the shore, they stood in awe of the LORD. The people feared the LORD and put their trust in Him and in his servant Moses.

Friday Apr 10, 2026
Friday Apr 10, 2026
Read Exodus 15.
Exodus 15 opens with a, a triumphant hymn of praise sung by Moses and the Israelites to the LORD following their miraculous deliverance from Egypt. The song celebrated the LORD's overwhelming victory over Pharaoh and his army, who had been swallowed up by the sea. The Israelites exalted the LORD as their strength and salvation, declaring Him a warrior whose name was to be glorified above all.
The song vividly recounted how God had hurled the enemy's chariots and soldiers into the water, where they sank like stones. The Israelites praised the incomparable majesty and power of the LORD, acknowledging that His right hand had shattered the enemy and that His wrath had consumed them like stubble in a fire. The waters piled up with a blast of the LORD's breath, allowing the Israelites to pass through, while the same waters then crashed down and covered the Egyptians.
The song then turned toward the future, describing how the surrounding nations — the inhabitants of Canaan, the Philistines, the Edomites, and the Moabites — would hear of this great act and tremble in fear. The Israelites affirmed their confidence that the LORD would guide them to His holy mountain and plant them there, and He would reign forever and ever.
Following Moses' song, his sister Miriam led the women of Israel in praise, taking up a tambourine and dancing as she sang a refrain echoing the opening of the great hymn — praising the LORD for his glorious triumph over the horse and rider thrown into the sea.
The chapter then shifts from praise to struggle, as Moses led the people away from the sea and into the wilderness of Shur. After three days without finding water, they arrived at a place called Marah, only to discover that the water there was bitter and undrinkable. The people complained about Moses, asking what they were to supposed to drink.
Moses cried out to the LORD, who showed him a tree. When Moses threw it into the water, the water became sweet and drinkable. It was there that the LORD gave the people a statute and a rule, testing them and calling them to listen carefully to the LORD's voice and do what was right in His eyes, promising that, if they obeyed, He wouldn't bring upon them the diseases He had brought on Egypt, for He was the LORD who healed them.
The end of the chapter records the journey of the Israelites to Elim, where they found twelve wells of water and seventy palm trees, and they camped there beside the water.

Tuesday Apr 14, 2026
Tuesday Apr 14, 2026
Read Exodus 16.
After leaving Elim, the entire Israelite community set out into the wilderness of Sin, which lay between Elim and Sinai. This occurred on the fifteenth day of the second month after their departure from Egypt. There, in the wilderness, the whole community began to grumble against Moses and Aaron, complaining that it would have been better to have died in Egypt, where they at least had food to eat. They accused their leaders of bringing them into the desert only to starve the entire assembly to death.
The LORD heard their complaints and spoke to Moses, promising to rain down bread from heaven for the people. Each day the people were to go out and gather only enough for that day, as this would serve as a test of whether they would follow the LORD's instructions. On the sixth day, however, they were to gather twice the normal amount. Moses and Aaron then relayed the LORD's message to the people, reminding them that it was not against Moses and Aaron that they were grumbling, but against the LORD Himself. As Aaron spoke to the whole community, they looked toward the wilderness and saw the glory of the LORD appearing in a cloud.
That evening, quail came and covered the camp, providing the people with meat. In the morning, a layer of dew surrounded the camp. When it evaporated, thin flakes appeared, like frost on the ground. The people didn't know what it was and asked one another, "What is it?" — which in Hebrew is mān, the origin of the name "manna." Moses told them it was the bread the LORD had given them to eat. They were instructed to gather an omer per person. When they measured what they had collected, those who gathered much did not have too much, and those who gathered little did not have too little — each had exactly what they needed.
Moses warned the people not to keep any of it until morning, but some disobeyed and kept part of it overnight. By morning it was full of maggots and began to stink, and Moses was angry with them. Each morning the people gathered what they needed, and, as the sun grew hot, the manna melted away. On the sixth day they gathered twice as much — two omers per person — and the leaders of the community came to report this to Moses. Moses explained that the next day was a holy Sabbath rest unto the LORD, and that they should bake or boil whatever they wished that day, saving the rest for the Sabbath. When they set it aside until morning, it did not spoil or stink, as had happened on the other days. Moses told them to eat it that day because it was the Sabbath and none would be found on the ground.
Nevertheless, some of the people went out on the Sabbath to gather manna and found nothing. The LORD expressed his displeasure to Moses, asking how long the people would refuse to keep his commands and instructions. He reminded them that the Sabbath was given to them as a day of rest, and that on the sixth day they would always receive a double portion. So the people rested on the seventh day.
The Israelites called the bread "manna." It was white like coriander seed and tasted like wafers made with honey. Moses, following the LORD's instructions, directed Aaron to take an omer of manna and place it before the LORD as something to be kept for future generations so that they would be able to see the bread the LORD had provided in the wilderness. Aaron placed it before the Testimony, where it was preserved as God had commanded Moses. The Israelites ate manna for forty years, continuing to do so until they reached the border of Canaan.

Friday Apr 17, 2026
Friday Apr 17, 2026
Read Exodus 17.
The Israelites continued their journey through the wilderness, traveling according to the LORD's command and camping at Rephidim. However, there was no water for the people to drink, and they quickly grew frustrated and began quarreling with Moses, demanding that he provide them with water. Moses, troubled by their complaints, asked them why they were quarreling with him and why they were testing the LORD.
The people's frustration escalated into open grumbling against Moses, and they questioned why he had brought them out of Egypt only to let them, their children, and their livestock die of thirst in the desert. Moses cried out to the LORD, expressing his distress and fear that the people were on the verge of stoning him.
God responded by instructing Moses to walk ahead of the people, taking along some of the elders of Israel and the staff with which he had struck the Nile River. The LORD told him to strike the rock at Horeb, promising that water would flow from it for the people to drink. Moses did exactly as the LORD commanded, in the sight of the elders of Israel. Moses named the place Massah and Meribah, meaning "testing" and "quarreling," because the Israelites had quarreled and tested the LORD, asking whether He was truly among them.
Exodus 17 then shifts to a military encounter. The Amalekites came and attacked the Israelites at Rephidim. Moses instructed Joshua to choose men and go out to fight against the Amalekites, while Moses himself would stand on top of a nearby hill with the staff of God in his hand. Joshua did as Moses commanded and engaged the Amalekites in battle. As the fighting unfolded, a remarkable pattern emerged: Whenever Moses held up his hand with the staff, Israel prevailed in the battle, but whenever he lowered his hand, the Amalekites prevailed.
As the battle wore on, Moses grew weary and his hands became heavy. Aaron and Hur, who were with him on the hill, responded by having Moses sit on a stone while they stood on either side of him and held up his hands — one on each side — keeping them steady until the sun went down. Through this sustained effort, Joshua was able to defeat the Amalekites.
Afterward, the LORD instructed Moses to write down an account of the victory as a memorial and to recite it to Joshua, declaring that He would completely blot out the memory of the Amalekites from under heaven. Moses then built an altar and called it Jehovah–nissi, which means "The Lord is my Banner," proclaiming that the LORD would be at war with the Amalekites from generation to generation.

Monday Apr 20, 2026
Monday Apr 20, 2026
Read Exodus 18.
Jethro, the priest of Midian and father-in-law of Moses, heard about everything God had done for Moses and the Israelites in delivering them from Egypt. He came to meet Moses in the wilderness, bringing with him Moses' wife Zipporah and their two sons, Gershom and Eliezer, whom Moses had previously sent away.
When Jethro arrived at the camp near the mountain of God, Moses went out to greet him with great respect, bowing down and kissing him. The two men exchanged greetings and went into Moses' tent, where Moses recounted all that the LORD had done to Pharaoh and Egypt on behalf of Israel, including the hardships they had faced along the way and how the LORD had delivered them. Jethro rejoiced and praised God, declaring, "Now I know that the LORD is greater than all gods: for in the thing wherein they dealt proudly he was above them." Jethro then offered burnt offerings and sacrifices to God, and Aaron came along with all the elders of Israel to share a meal with him in the presence of God.
The next day, Moses took his seat to serve as judge for the people, who stood around him from morning until evening bringing their disputes and questions about God's decrees and laws. When Jethro saw this, he expressed concern, telling Moses that the approach wasn't good — that both Moses and the people would wear themselves out, since the burden was too heavy for one man to bear alone.
Jethro then offered Moses wise counsel. He advised Moses to continue representing the people before God and teaching them the statutes and laws but to delegate the work of judging by selecting capable, God-fearing, men of truth who hated covetousness. These men were to be appointed as officials over thousands, hundreds, fifties, and tens. They would handle the ordinary cases themselves, bringing only the most difficult matters to Moses. Jethro assured Moses that, if he followed this plan — and if God so directed — he would be able to endure, and the people would be served well.
Moses listened to his father-in-law and carried out everything he suggested. He chose capable men from all of Israel and appointed them as leaders over the people at various levels. These men judged the people at all times, bringing the hardest cases to Moses while handling the simpler ones themselves. After this, Jethro left and returned to his own land.

Wednesday Apr 22, 2026
Wednesday Apr 22, 2026
Read Exodus 19.
In the third month after the Israelites had left Egypt, they arrived at the wilderness of Sinai and camped at the base of the mountain. Moses went up to God, and the LORD called to him from the mountain, delivering a message for the people of Israel. The LORD reminded them of how he had carried them out of Egypt on eagles' wings and brought them to Himself. He then offered them an agreement: If they would obey His voice and keep His covenant, they would be His treasured possession among all peoples, a kingdom of priests, and a holy nation.
Moses descended and gathered the elders of the people, laying before them all that the LORD had commanded. The people responded with one voice, pledging that they would do everything the LORD had spoken. Moses brought their answer back to the LORD. The LORD then told Moses that He would come to him in a thick cloud so that the people would hear God speaking with Moses and would believe in Moses permanently. The LORD also instructed Moses to return to the people and have them consecrate themselves for two days—washing their garments and abstaining from sexual relations — so that they would be ready for the third day, when God would come down on Mount Sinai in the sight of all the people.
The LORD set strict boundaries around the mountain, warning that anyone who touched it — whether person or animal — would be put to death. No one was to go up the mountain or even touch it.
On the morning of the third day, there was thunder and lightning, a thick cloud on the mountain, and the sound of a very loud trumpet blast. All the people in the camp trembled. Moses led the people out of the camp to meet God, and they stood at the foot of the mountain. Mount Sinai was wrapped in smoke because the LORD had descended on it in fire, and the whole mountain quaked. As the trumpet blast grew louder and louder, Moses spoke and the LORD answered him.
The LORD came down on the top of Mount Sinai and called Moses to come up. There, God again warned Moses to go back down and instruct the people not to break through to look at Him, or they would die. Even the priests who came near were required to consecrate themselves. When Moses pointed out that the people couldn't come up because God had already warned them to set limits around the mountain, the LORD instructed him to go down and bring Aaron up with him — but the priests and the people were not to break through to come up. Moses went back down and spoke to the people.



