New to the Bible

For people still finding their footing.

You don't need a seminary vocabulary to start. You need somewhere to put the questions, the verses that land, and the thoughts that show up when you're reading — without feeling like you're doing it wrong.

There's space for you here

Bible study looks different for different people. Some folks have decades of notes. Some are opening Scripture for the first time. Harvous is a memory tool either way — save what stood out, link it to the verse, find it again later.

We're not a Bible reader and we're not a course. Keep whatever app or paper Bible you already use. Harvous is where the notes go.

Start small. Stay oriented.

A daily passage can give you a place to begin. A thread can hold "questions I have" or "things that surprised me." When a theme keeps coming up — hope, forgiveness, who Jesus is — a topical thread keeps those notes together across books.

You don't have to organize perfectly. Write in your own words. Search will meet you there.

What that looks like in Harvous

  • Write like yourself

    No templates required. A short note next to a verse is enough. The point is remembering, not sounding polished.

  • A gentle place to start

    When you're not sure what to read, the daily passage gives you a starting point and room to jot what stays with you.

  • Look up words without leaving

    Easton's dictionary is built in — so an unfamiliar word doesn't send you down a rabbit hole of tabs.

  • Follow a theme when curiosity pulls

    Noticing "grace" everywhere? A thread can hold notes from wherever they show up, at your pace.

Ways people like you study

Use cases are how the work shows up day to day. These are the ones that fit this audience best.

Features

What helps when you're getting started

A starting point, simple capture, and tools that explain without overwhelming — so you can build a record as you go.

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Works alongside other tools

Harvous does a different job than most Bible apps. Many people use it next to something they already love.

For people still finding their footing.

Curious, new to faith, or finding your footing again.