יִקָּהָה
2026 Geneva Bible
A source-first, English-second, interpretation-last public edition of Scripture, built under grammatical apologetics to let the preserved text stand as its own witness. The reader preserves quiet hanging SCL lineation, keeps the textual core free from interpretive scaffolding, and separates search data from the page for fast, disciplined study.
Books
The Editorial Philosophy
This public edition is governed by a quiet, source-first discipline: Hebrew and Greek first, English second, interpretation last. Its modernization is ministerial rather than sovereign; its ellipsis is visible; its SCL lineation preserves source-shaped cadence without turning the page into commentary.
The Old Testament follows the Hebrew Bible order of Torah, Neviʾim, and Ketuvim, while the New Testament remains in the standard canonical sequence. Scrivener’s 1894 Textus Receptus governs New Testament correction, and the reading page keeps the textual core distinct from interpretive scaffolding.
Index totals: 66 books · 1,189 chapters · 31,104 verses · 80,328 SCL clause lines.