Brooklyn Teen Challenge is a Christ-centered, faith-based residential program offered to those who struggle with life-controlling issues. The Teen…
Christian ministries that help believers actually read, understand, and live from the Bibles they own — through study curricula, reading plans, devotionals, visual content, and the patient work of cultivating Scripture-shaped lives in a Scripture-scarce culture.
Christian nonprofits in this focus area that have been verified against The Most Trusted Standard.
Brooklyn Teen Challenge is a Christ-centered, faith-based residential program offered to those who struggle with life-controlling issues. The Teen…
The Bridge Haiti exists to invest in Haitians; encouraging them to pursue their God given callings to radically impact the lives of others.In April…
The Bridge of Hope does Christian relief work in Sierra Leone, Africa. They plant churches and mentor pastors. They feed and sponsor children in a…
The ministry of The Brooklyn Tabernacle has grown under the leadership of Pastor Jim Cymbala, from a small handful of members to over 10,000. Pastor…
The City School, formed over time, out of the mergers of Spruce Hill Christian School, City Center Academy and Philadelphia Mennonite High School…
Our mission at The Friends of Israel is focused—we are a worldwide evangelical ministry proclaiming biblical truth about Israel and the Messiah…
The Gospel Coalition supports the local church in making disciples of all nations by providing resources that are trusted and timely, winsome and…
The Village Church exists to love God, love people, and make disciples of Jesus Christ. Our mission drives everything we do, from the ministries we…
Theopolis Institute is a biblical institute whose mission is to teach men and women to lead cultural renewal by renewing the church. Participants in…
The purpose and desire of Third Reformed Church is that those who come in contact with the Third Reformed Church body will experience the Fruit of…
Vitality Women's Clinic is a Christ-centered ministry dedicated to fostering life, strength, and hope through compassionate medical care, meaningful…
Thrive Women's Clinic, is a life-saving, life-affirming ministry that works with women in unplanned pregnancies. Our purpose for the past 40 years…
394 nonprofits
Helping people read, understand, and live from Scripture takes many forms — from carefully crafted study curricula to viral video content, from daily reading apps to multi-year discipleship programs. Each format serves a different need.
Published Bible studies, video series, and discussion guides used by small groups, Sunday school classes, and home Bible studies — providing structure and depth that solo reading often lacks.
Daily reading plans, devotional content, and structured journeys through Scripture — building the habit of regular Bible engagement one day at a time, in formats that fit modern life.
Animated explainers, video commentary, illustrated Bibles, and digital teaching tools that make complex theological themes and biblical books accessible — reaching audiences print alone cannot.
Structured programs teaching Christians to study Scripture deeply — observation, interpretation, and application methods that produce lasting biblical literacy rather than surface familiarity.
Children's Bibles, family devotional resources, Scripture memory programs for kids, and curriculum for Christian schools and homeschoolers — building biblical foundations early.
Studying how Christians actually engage Scripture, what works, what doesn't — and developing programs that respond to the real, measured decline in biblical literacy across the church.
American Christians own more Bibles per household than at any point in history — and read them less than at almost any point in living memory. Research consistently shows that only a small fraction of regular churchgoers engage Scripture daily. Many can't articulate the major themes of the books they say they revere. Bible literacy among the next generation is in measurable decline.
This is not because people don't want to read the Bible. It is because the Bible is hard. It was written across more than a thousand years, in three languages, in multiple genres, by dozens of authors, in cultural contexts radically different from our own. A modern reader opening Leviticus or Habakkuk without help often closes the book again within minutes. Without a guide, the Bible can feel inaccessible to the very people who most want to know it.
Bible study and engagement ministries exist to be that guide. They produce the resources that turn a confused first reading into a sustained encounter — small group curricula that give shape to study, animated explainers that decode complex books, reading plans that build the habit of daily engagement, devotionals that connect ancient text to daily life, and structured study methods that move Christians from surface familiarity to genuine biblical literacy.
This work also fills a gap most local churches can't fully cover. Pastors preach weekly; small groups meet monthly. But the hard work of actually equipping believers to read Scripture themselves — between sermons, throughout the week, across years — requires resources, formats, and methods that specialized ministries can produce in ways a local church alone cannot. Donors supporting this work strengthen something that doesn't always show up in any single church but shapes the church everywhere.
Beyond our standard verification framework, here are factors specific to Bible study and engagement ministries that thoughtful donors often weigh.
Excellent Bible engagement ministries help people encounter the actual text, in its actual context — not Scripture filtered through a particular political, cultural, or sub-theological agenda. Look for ministries whose curricula draw out what the Bible says rather than using selected verses to support predetermined conclusions.
Christian Bible study ministries vary in their theological commitments — Reformed, Wesleyan, dispensational, charismatic, denominational, broadly evangelical. These commitments affect their study materials in subtle ways. Excellent ministries are transparent about their doctrinal frame so donors can support work aligned with their convictions.
Christian publishing produces both excellent and mediocre material. The best Bible engagement ministries have rigorous editorial processes — scholars or pastors reviewing content, fact-checking historical and theological claims, ensuring exegetical accuracy. Look for ministries whose materials hold up to scrutiny by those with serious biblical training.
Distributing study materials matters less than whether people actually use them. Excellent ministries track real engagement — reading plans completed, study guides finished, repeat usage, testimony of life change — not just units sold or app installs. Beware of impact claims that count distribution rather than transformation.
Some Bible engagement resources are aimed at trained pastors and scholars; others at ordinary Christians; others at children or new believers. All are valuable. What matters is that the ministry is honest about its audience and produces content actually accessible to that audience — not scholarship dressed up as devotional, or devotional dressed up as scholarship.
Bible engagement ministries vary in business model — some are nonprofits providing free resources; others operate as Christian publishers selling materials. Both can be legitimate. Look for ministries transparent about how they're funded, where revenue comes from, and how that affects what they produce.
Explore verified Bible study and engagement ministries above — or browse Christian ministries by other causes, locations, and award levels.