Robert Courson

Rhema - The Future of Bible Study

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Most Bible apps give you the text and maybe a devotional. Rhema puts 2,000 years of Christian commentary next to Scripture. Read alongside the Church Fathers, pull from 7 commentary sources, trace OT-to-NT connections, and explore visual timelines, genealogies, and maps. For the people who keep 12 tabs open when they're studying a passage.

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Robert Courson
Hey 👋 I built Rhema because my Bible study workflow was all over the place. I'd be reading a passage, want to know what someone like Chrysostom or Augustine said about it, and end up with 6 tabs open across sketchy archive sites, losing my place every time. Most Bible apps are built for daily devotionals. Nothing wrong with that, but I wanted something for the nights where you're three hours deep in a cross-reference rabbit hole. So Rhema puts 7 commentary sources (including the Church Fathers), OT-to-NT connections, and visual tools like timelines, genealogies and more right next to the text. The Church Fathers piece nearly killed me. 310+ figures, and their writings are scattered across the internet in formats that haven't been updated since the early 2000s. (Over 100 complete texts as well.) Cleaning that up and connecting it back to specific passages took way longer than anything else. (Over 165,000 commentary entries.) For the hunters - use code HUNT at checkout for 50% off your first month (5 day free-trial) or there's a limited time lifetime deal as well. (Many features are free) I'm curious what passages you'd study first.