A reading companion · free in your inbox

Read it for yourself.

You own a Bible. Maybe you even revere it. But if you're honest, you've never really read it. Not slowly, not in a way that felt like yours. The Margin walks you back into the text, a passage at a time, until it finally opens.

Ten minutes, read or listen · Free, forever · No noise

01If this is you

You were never taught how.

Stalling out in Leviticus isn't a character flaw. Feeling lost in a book everyone around you seems to understand isn't a lack of faith. Nobody ever handed you a way in, so the most important book you own sits mostly closed.

You can't get through it

You've opened to Genesis more than once. You've bogged down in the lists and the laws, quietly closed the cover, and meant to come back. The good intention never quite becomes a habit.

It feels like everyone else gets it

There's a low hum of embarrassment: that you should understand this by now, that asking the simple question out loud would give you away. So you nod along and stay quiet.

You shouldn't need a gatekeeper

The most consequential book in the world shouldn't require a degree, a translation war, or someone on a stage to read it to you. It was always meant to be yours to open.

02You don't have to do it alone
A few steps ahead Not a stage. Not a syllabus. Someone reading carefully, just ahead of you, pointing out what's easy to miss.

The Margin is written by an ordinary reader who sits with Scripture slowly every morning, and who remembers exactly what it felt like to find the book closed. There's no gate to get through here, and no hurry to get you to a conclusion.

Here's the quiet good news. Slow, close reading is the oldest, most reliable way to understand any text, and it's completely learnable. We do the patient work of context and careful attention, then hand the passage back to you, so the next reading is yours. You won't be lectured here. You'll have company.

03How it works

Three steps. That's the whole plan.

No app to learn, no streak to keep, no course to finish. Just a simple rhythm you could start this week.

1

Subscribe (it's free)

Add your email. A short welcome note arrives, and you're in. No cost, now or ever; unsubscribe anytime.

2

Read along, ten minutes a week

Every other week, one passage lands in your inbox, read slowly alongside you. Prefer to listen? Every note comes read aloud — for the commute or the morning coffee.

3

Open your own Bible

Then go read the chapter yourself, and watch yourself notice something new. Every note ends with one “so what for today” — and a question worth taking to a friend.

04Here's what one looks like

A passage you've heard, read closely.

Genesis 3 · 8–9

8And they heard the sound of the Lord God walking in the garden in the cool of the day, and the man and his wife hid themselves from the presence of the Lord God among the trees of the garden. 9But the Lord God called to the man and said to him, “Where are you?”


“Where are you?” is the first question in the Bible, and God already knows the answer. So He isn't gathering information. He's giving the man a chance to come out of the trees and say it himself. You could read the whole of Scripture as God asking that one question, in a hundred forms, and waiting for you to answer.

This is a margin note. You get one like it, free, every other week — and the first week of every series is open to read before you ever subscribe. See a full reading →

05What changes for you

You'll start seeing it.

Read along for a few months and something shifts. The book stops being a wall and starts being a place you know your way around. Here's what you'll be able to do on your own.

01

You'll slow down

And discover that the verse you used to skim is exactly where everything was happening all along.

02

You'll read closely

Catching the repeated word, or the name that turns up where it shouldn't, the way a careful reader does without thinking.

03

You'll read in context

Knowing a psalm from a proverb, so the text gets to say what it actually meant to say.

04

You'll read it yourself

Until you don't need us. You'll open the book alone and find the thread before anyone points it out. That's success.

06Where you can start

Pick a thread and follow it.

You don't begin at page one and grind forward. You pick a series, whether a whole book or a single question, and follow it the whole way through. We don't dodge the hard parts — much of the reading starts in the Old Testament, where readers tell us they feel most lost. Here's where it begins.

Start here
A single idea · traced across Scripture

The Questions God Asks

God as questioner, Genesis to Revelation

“Where are you?” · “Where is your brother?” · “Whom shall I send?” God asks far more than He explains. Follow the questions across the whole story — and sit, honestly, in the ones still addressed to you.

Thread series · 6–10 notes Begins autumn Read from the start →
A whole book · the overlooked kind

Ecclesiastes

The Bible's most honest book

“Everything is vapor.” A short, literary read for anyone allergic to easy answers. The book that makes you say “I didn't know that was in there.”

Book series6–8 notesFor the seeker
A whole book · the overlooked kind

Esther

The book where God is never named

A whole narrative built around a striking absence. God is never mentioned once, yet His hand is everywhere. Ten chapters you won't want to put down.

Book series6–10 notesNarrative
A single passage · dwelt in

John, slowly

The opening hymn, read daily

The long, steady read underneath everything: the Gospel of John, a passage at a time, for as long as it takes. The home you can always come back to.

OngoingThe long readAlways open
A single person · the one we skip

The Unnamed & Unexpected

Tamar, Hagar, the women of Matthew 1

The people Scripture refuses to leave out: wronged, foreign, and woven straight into the line of Jesus. Read fresh, without the flannelgraph.

Figure seriesComingRead fresh

Browse every series →

07Why it matters

Two ways this goes.

If nothing changes

It stays on the shelf

Another year of meaning to. The book stays closed, faith stays something other people seem to understand better than you do, and the questions you actually carry go unasked, and unanswered.

If you start reading

It becomes yours

The strange, vast book turns familiar, then turns personal. You stop borrowing other people's faith secondhand and start meeting God in the text directly, in your own two hands.

08Begin

Open the book this week.

Free forever · A welcome note arrives the moment you join · Unsubscribe anytime.