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The KJV Audio Bible

The KJV Audio Bible

By: Elizabeth Whitworth
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About this listen

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.Copyright 2025 All rights reserved. Christianity Spirituality
Episodes
  • Exodus 7
    Mar 21 2026

    Read Exodus 7.

    God spoke to Moses, reaffirming his role as a prophet to Pharaoh, with Aaron serving as his spokesman. God warned Moses that he would harden Pharaoh's heart so that, despite the signs and wonders performed, Pharaoh would not listen — and, through this, God's power would be demonstrated and his people ultimately delivered from Egypt.

    Moses and Aaron obeyed and approached Pharaoh. Aaron threw down his staff, and it became a serpent. Pharaoh, unimpressed, summoned his own wise men and sorcerers, who replicated the feat through their dark arts — each of their staffs also becoming serpents. However, Aaron's staff swallowed up all of theirs. Even so, Pharaoh's heart remained hardened, just as God had said, and he refused to listen.

    God then instructed Moses to meet Pharaoh at the bank of the Nile the following morning. Moses was to take his staff and declare that the God of Israel had sent him, warning that Pharaoh's continued refusal to release the Israelites would bring consequences. Aaron was to strike the water of the Nile with his staff as a sign of God's authority and power.

    Aaron struck the Nile, and all of its water turned to blood. The fish in the river died, the water became foul, and the Egyptians could not drink from it. The plague extended throughout all of Egypt, affecting water held in vessels of wood and stone. Yet again, Pharaoh's magicians were able to replicate this sign, themselves turning water to blood, which gave Pharaoh cause to dismiss the miracle. He turned and went back to his palace, unmoved. The Egyptians, meanwhile, were forced to dig along the banks of the Nile in search of drinkable water, as the river itself had become undrinkable.

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    4 mins
  • Exodus 6
    Mar 18 2026

    Read Exodus 6.

    As recorded in Exodus 6, God reassured Moses after his initial failed attempt to secure the Israelites' release from Pharaoh. God reminded Moses that He had appeared to Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob as God Almighty, though His name "the LORD" (Yahweh or JEHOVAH) had not been fully revealed to them. God affirmed that He had established a covenant with the patriarchs to give them the land of Canaan and that He had heard the groaning of the Israelites under Egyptian bondage and remembered that covenant.

    God then gave Moses a series of promises to deliver to the Israelites: He would bring them out from under the burdens of Egypt, free them from slavery, redeem them with an outstretched arm and great acts of judgment, take them as His own people, and be their God. He promised to bring them into the land He had sworn to give to Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. Moses relayed these words to the Israelites, but they didn't listen to him because of their broken spirit and cruel bondage.

    God then instructed Moses to go again to Pharaoh and demand that he let the Israelites go. Moses resisted, asking how Pharaoh could possibly listen to him when even the Israelites hadn't.

    Exodus 6 then pauses to provide a genealogical record of the Israelite tribes, beginning with Reuben and Simeon and then focusing in detail on the tribe of Levi. The Levite lineage was traced down through several generations. This genealogy culminated in the introduction of Aaron and Moses as the sons of Amram and Jochebed, descendants of Levi. Aaron's own line was also recorded, noting his marriage and the birth of his sons and grandson.

    Exodus 6 concludes by returning to the events of the time, reaffirming that it was this same Moses and Aaron whom God commanded to bring the Israelites out of Egypt. God again directed Moses to speak to Pharaoh, and Moses again expressed his doubt, saying he was of "uncircumcised lips" — meaning he felt himself to be slow of speech or stammering. So, Moses figured, Pharaoh would never listen to him.

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    5 mins
  • Exodus 5
    Mar 13 2026
    4 mins
All stars
Most relevant
A crisp and well paced delivery reinforces what I've read. Listening is another tool to committing scripture to my heart instead of forgetting what I'd studied.
it's a clear, well paced narration and a pleasure to listen to. There's a shortage of female narrators reading The KJV Bible. I'd definitely buy the audio/audible book if the entire Bible was collated.
Well recommended - with thanks

Update: In light of this podcast, I listened to Elizabeth's other one (which I will review soon) . These podcasts are that good that me and some friends are ACTIVELY promoting the links on Twitter. They're that good. I'd love to see audio/audible books when enough material has been collated.

Great aide to daily studies

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