Using Your Tablet for Bible Studies

Some weeks ago, we talked about a specific case of using several applications across one’s mobile and tablet to do bible studies. The response from that article has been quiet, but there has been something quite consistently stated: the amount of inking, drawing, and pictures was a bit overwhelming. So, how about we scale things down a bit to just using your tablet (iPad, Nook, Kindle Fire, etc) for studies.

screenshot of pages from John 8:1-11 study

[click for larger view]

The Setup

  • Safari Mobile Web Browser
  • Penultimate
  • Evernote
  • Dropbox

We are keeping things simple here with the use of the built-web browser, Penultimate to collect and organize our content, and then Evernote and Dropbox for the purposes of archiving and sharing (you only need one of these, but am including both as Penultimate works seamlessly with both).

The Study: John 8:1-11
Many of us might be familiar with this section of the Bible. Here, a woman is brought before Jesus by scribes and Pharasees and she is charged with adultery. This was one of those studies where we were given the text before the meeting, and then had to come to the study with items to contribute. I decided to collect my thoughts within Penultimate, and then again use the app during the study to capture additional thoughts.

Before the study, I read the text and started in Penultimate with some questions that came to mind about aspects of the section of text: location, timing, what the Temple looked like, etc. After getting a few of these, I began just by using a simple search to look them up, and then started collecting facts and images from image searches, Wikipedia, and other places.

Then in Penultimate, I just went at it. What I liked here is that my notes very quickly started looking like something in a composition book, but with better links to images and data. What’s missing from Penultimate is some kind of screen that keeps track of the items that you grab from websites (like of like an automated biblography).

During the study, I went back to the document that I started, and just added additional pages to correspond to the questions being asked. No styli, no keyboard. Just grabbing snippets of images and writing as I see fit.

The end product looked like this PDF. I exported the Penultimate file into Dropbox, and it created this PDF. I also did an export into Evernote which gives me the opportunity to view this notebook on my mobile or anywhere else that Penultimate doesn’t exist (aka, anything not named iPad).

All in all, this has become a pretty neat workflow and exercise. Its only one of a few ways that you can use your tablet for Bible studies. Of note, the ability to mashup content within your notes is something you should take advantage of, or encourage those you teach to take advantage of. If you can do somethingl ike provide them with an outline to start with, and then let them cut/create as they go, you’ve got the starts of building understanding (Proverbs 4:7) with the text – note just memorization and rote learning.

Could this work for you? Or, do you have your own workflow for how you use a tablet with Bible studies? Chime in the comments and share.

  • Brickman65

    I would like to do this more but I need to figure out how to “flip” back and forth between Note Taking and my Bible on my iPad. My iPad has replaced my physical Bible. (Of course it was about 30 years old. It was time for a new one anyway.) It lamppost seems to be better to have a physical Bible and use iPad for Notes.

  • Brickman65

    I would like to do this more but I need to figure out how to “flip” back and forth between Note Taking and my Bible on my iPad. My iPad has replaced my physical Bible. (Of course it was about 30 years old. It was time for a new one anyway.) It lamppost seems to be better to have a physical Bible and use iPad for Notes.

  • You know, you can use the multi-finger gestures or the home button switcher to go between screens? I have the bible on my mobile and I just let the notes happen on the iPad. Not that I can’t do a Bible on the iPad, but its been an easier flow to things.
    You should also look at YouVersion and OliveTree apps, which have the capacity to take notes alongside the text. Though, none of them are doing this kind of drawing/inking (yet?).

  • You know, you can use the multi-finger gestures or the home button switcher to go between screens? I have the bible on my mobile and I just let the notes happen on the iPad. Not that I can’t do a Bible on the iPad, but its been an easier flow to things.
    You should also look at YouVersion and OliveTree apps, which have the capacity to take notes alongside the text. Though, none of them are doing this kind of drawing/inking (yet?).

  • Brickman65

    Yeah, I actually experimented with that tonight in Bible Class. Worked pretty well. I may use my iPhone or a Physical Bible and see how that works. I have the NIV Study Bible and BibleXpress on my iPad. BibleXpress has a nice notation capability. I like your Penultimate idea better though.

  • Brickman65

    Yeah, I actually experimented with that tonight in Bible Class. Worked pretty well. I may use my iPhone or a Physical Bible and see how that works. I have the NIV Study Bible and BibleXpress on my iPad. BibleXpress has a nice notation capability. I like your Penultimate idea better though.