Summary
BibleProject leadership reflects on 2025 accomplishments including major content releases on Exodus themes (The Mountain, The Exodus Way, Redemption, The Wilderness), expanded Bible reading plans, and global impact across 55+ languages and 2,000+ churches. They announce upcoming 2026 content including a comprehensive 10 Commandments series and a podcast-only exploration of the Letter of Jude.
Insights
- Community-driven content distribution model enables organic adoption by churches and organizations without requiring attribution, suggesting the most sustainable legacy is cultural shift rather than brand recognition
- Unscripted but heavily edited podcast format creates perception of authenticity while maintaining quality, indicating production sophistication can be invisible to audiences
- Free, open-access educational content creates secondary markets (homeschool curriculum, prison education programs, international localizations) without direct organizational involvement
- Patron-supported model enables global content distribution without licensing constraints, allowing rapid international localization across 55+ languages
- Thematic content series (Exodus pattern, redemption, wilderness) create multiple engagement pathways (videos, podcasts, reading plans, classroom courses) maximizing content ROI
Trends
Decentralized content adoption: Organizations using BibleProject frameworks without attribution suggests successful idea transfer and cultural embeddingMulti-format content strategy: Single thematic concept distributed across video, podcast, reading plan, classroom, and app formats to reach different learning preferencesPrison education market: Incarcerated populations accessing educational content via tablet distribution (Pando) represents underserved demographic with high engagementInternational localization at scale: 55+ language translations and integration into regional apps (WeChat in China) indicates global demand for Bible education contentVolunteer-powered operations: 20-30 weekly volunteers addressing envelopes and 80,000+ monthly prayer email subscribers suggest strong community engagement modelCurriculum gap filling: Third-party creators (Nicole, Amber) developing homeschool/family curriculum based on BibleProject frameworks indicates unmet market needLong-form podcast sustainability: 500 episodes over 10 years with consistent audience suggests deep listener loyalty and viable long-form audio business modelApp-centric content discovery: Shift toward bundled 'collections' and integrated resources in proprietary app indicates move away from platform dependencyTheological education integration: Seminary adoption across Pakistan and theological libraries in East Africa suggests institutional validation and B2B education marketGenerosity-velocity model: Explicit positioning of 'moving at the speed of generosity' as operational constraint suggests patron growth directly enables content expansion
Topics
Bible reading plans and digital scripture engagementExodus narrative themes and theological frameworksRedemption theology and biblical interpretationWilderness spirituality and spiritual formation10 Commandments exegesis and contemporary applicationLetter of Jude biblical scholarshipSermon on the Mount theological studyOld Testament Torah interpretationGospel of Matthew classroom curriculumApocrypha and deuterocanonical textsBible app features and content discoveryPodcast production and audio content strategyInternational content localizationPrison education and incarcerated populationsHomeschool curriculum development
Companies
YouVersion
Host platform for BibleProject's reading plans including newly redesigned 'One Story' plan with expanded commentary a...
Pando
Tablet distribution organization providing incarcerated individuals access to BibleProject classroom content in priso...
WeChat
Chinese messaging app platform hosting BibleProject content for mainland China audience through Weed of Oat app integ...
Street Light
Localization partner translating BibleProject videos into 55+ languages for international distribution
People
John
Co-host and CEO of BibleProject; leads podcast conversations and strategic direction for organization
Tim
Co-host of BibleProject podcast; participates in annual year-end reflection episodes
Steve
Recurring guest on BibleProject podcast for annual year-end episodes; fifth consecutive appearance
Hakim
Team member who provided theological insight on mountain symbolism for 'The Mountain' video series
Melanie
Global team member who presented international impact data on BibleProject content distribution across 55+ languages
Nina
BibleProject team member from Virginia whose church implemented 'The Exodus Way' series independently
Mike
Heads strategic relationships team; identified 2,000+ churches using BibleProject content on their websites
Nicole
Co-creator of homeschool curriculum based on BibleProject frameworks for family Bible study
Amber
Co-creator of One Story Family homeschool curriculum and treasure map visualization of Old Testament narrative
Christopher
Team member who gathers prayer requests and compiles monthly prayer email sent to 80,000+ subscribers
Everett
Artist who created final poster design for Letter of Jude series
Quotes
"I had reached a point where picking up the Bible felt like picking up a brick. It was so foreign and unapproachable to me. Through the Bible project, God healed my relationship with his word and gave me a new taste and desire for it."
Natalie (patron comment)•Early in episode
"Our most enduring legacy as a project isn't going to be all these animations. I hope our enduring legacy is that we've brought more language and culture around this idea of reading the Bible this way."
John•Mid-episode
"It's about the Bible. There was no mention of Bible project. That's what we've longed for. This idea of people reading the Bible as a unified story that leads to Jesus and not about the Bible project."
John•Mid-episode
"We really move at the speed of generosity. We won't do this without you. If there weren't a group of people that found value in what we were doing, does it really need to be done?"
John•Late episode
"The wilderness is a place that makes us ready. God will reclaim this unfortunate tragedy of being in the wilderness, saying, well, this will be the training ground so you can be garden people."
Tim•Mid-episode
Full Transcript
Hey, this is John, and before we get started on today's episode, I wanted to let you know about our new expanded show notes. These are really cool show notes. Now, have chapter by chapter summaries, reflection questions for you to dig deeper. Every time we reference scripture or look at a biblical word, that's all going to be referenced in the show notes. And you can find a link in our episode description. You could also find them in the Bible Project app. All right, here's the show. Hey Tim. Hey John. Hi. Hi. Hello Steve. Hello John. Hello Tim. Steve. Here we are. Great to have you here. It must be the end of the year. Yes, it is. That's right. Once again, giving to me what they want. A little bit of Steve. That's right. That's right. Steve's the little fifth time you've come and joined us at the end of the year. Yeah. To do this is become quite a tradition. It's what I'm living for, John. Right here, man. I just I work out all year trying to get ready for this. It's on the list of holiday events that you look forward to. I do. Actually, I do. I look forward to this. It's fun. No, I do too. I open up presents on Christmas morning, but what I really am excited for is the end of the year drop. After Christmas. Yeah. Okay. So what we want to do is just reflect on the year and just celebrate all of you who are listening, who've been a part of this and celebrate what we've gotten to do together. Yeah. Because there's so many bad things that have happened. So many. And I mean, we got to make and release a lot of create content. Yeah. It's in media, but also just some really beautiful stories have emerged about what God's doing in the lives of people through the spirit, activating scripture and pointing people to Jesus. But we get to be a part of it because we're making stuff about the Bible and we get to hear all these cool stories. We want to share some of those with you too. Yeah. Can we start with the patron comment? Sure. Yeah. I get patron comments. So we'll several of us do every morning. There's an email that comes in around 9 a.m. And there's usually 20 or 25 patron comments. And one that came in earlier this year just really jumped out to me because I felt like it's like a composite. Natalie is who sent it in and it captures what we hear from so many people. But this was the way she framed it. I had reached a point where picking up the Bible felt like picking up a brick. It was so foreign and unapproachable to me. I always had the desire to read the whole Bible, but never knew how through the Bible project. God healed my relationship with his word and gave me a new taste and desire for it. Your videos and podcasts have helped me understand it and see it in a completely different way now. The hardest thing for me was always reading the Old Testament. But through the podcast series on the Torah, I finished it for the first time in my 24 years of life. Thank you. Well, thank you, Natalie. Yeah. So cool. And way to go. Yeah. It's no small feat to read through the Old Testament. What I love about Natalie's story is it's similar to my story. It's like I think there is what I've experienced is there people have a felt need to want to understand this book. And yet trying to do it on your own can be so challenging. Yeah. And the gift for me, being a part of this project is being able to live out our mission statement where I feel like I'm experiencing the Bible. It's a unified story that leads to Jesus that was so foreign to the tradition and the way that I was raised. Yeah. You know, it's funny is our mission statement is to help people and you really like the word help in there. I do. And I stop saying it in our outros because of your sentiment right there, it's like I'm actually experiencing the Bible. And I want to emphasize this like we're doing it together. So I just started saying to experience the Bible as you know, if I swear and you brought up like help is important. And it made me rustle with that and be like, yeah, you're right. That helps us stay focused. But I like what you just said, which is that's how I'm experiencing it too. Maybe we get to help but we get to also join in. Oh, that's, you know, we said we had our staff retreat in September. And I remember talking to our team and saying, hey, it is amazing that we get to be a part of something that is not only helping people out there, but it's helping us. It's like we're working on something that's working on us. Yes. Yeah. That is so amazing. 100%. Yes. It's really cool. Yeah. One thing we could then talk about is the new reading plan that we have. Yes. Yeah. Speaking of reading through the Bible, I think this is a big news. So let's up top talk about it, which is we've have a through the Bible reading plan that's been on you version for years. And a lot of people have done it. And we have a number of plans on the you version Bible app. But then we have one that has been like read through the whole Bible. Like go find the one story reading plan. Exactly. The one story reading plan. And I think every week we hear from someone who said I did it. Yep. And thank you. Yeah. And that was kind of their entry point into knowing what we're up to. That's right. Because it's reading plan, but has both like commentary and our videos interspersed. So you're never just alone with some weird passage. In the book of Jeremiah or Zikiel, there's always something there to help you understand and move forward. And the one story reading plan that had been on you version for a long time. And in our scholar team just spent. Yes. Almost the entire year, at least I think more than a year. Yeah. More than a year. Yeah. A number of my colleagues on this scholarship team took it on as a project to rewrite the whole thing and really beef it up more substantially. So that it's kind of like having a Bible nerd that you're reading the Bible along with helping you through literally every part of every book of the Bible with videos and like short form commentary. So it's a whole new one story reading plan that's released. I think it's available now. Yeah. It's up on you version. Brand new. If you want to read through the Bible with us, it's awesome. It's fantastic. And you version has it's a great app. And it allows you you could actually do it with a group of people where you could have friends and connect with friends and yeah, they're sharing and collaborative reading. Yeah. It's like having an online group that you're reading through the Bible with. That's helpful for me. Yes. Knowing there's other people going through it. So there's a group of us in the office that have all said, hey, let's do this. It's like John, a couple years ago, you and I were going to do the sermon on the mound. The playlist. Weekly playlist. Uh huh. Yeah. One of us completed one of us made it. So I guess in a way we both did it. And so it's so encouraging because it's hard to do by yourself. Yeah. Absolutely. And I think part of why we're excited about it is the podcasts and the videos that we make. The ultimate goal isn't just the people watch a video. Yeah. We're listening to podcasts. We really want to ourselves and help y'all actually read scripture for yourselves with greater wisdom. And so we're excited about a Bible reading experience that can hopefully help a lot more people with a scholar in your pocket. With this colorful, spookable, no, no, your pocket. It's funny to me that reading through the Bible in a year has become such a thing. Isn't it interesting? Yeah, because a year. Yeah. Why a year? Why a year? I mean, it's great because a year is such a. It's mental. Yes. It's like we live in years. But dividing the Bible into sections. It's a bit artificial. It's a bit artificial. It is. But it's like it's like running a race. It's nice to know when you have a start. Yes, it's the pace. That's what it is. I think it just creates some guardrails for people. And it helps them. It's like focuses. But I think when you read it through, completely, I think you begin to see, you know, like Sally Lloyd Jones has every story whispers his name. And then when you can read it at a different pace and marinate for longer periods of time, it's just it's helpful. But I think it's it's fun. I don't. Bible wasn't designed to be read the year. But it's not a bad thing. That's right. Let's do it either. Yeah. Yeah. And you will find that on the you version Bible app. So if you don't have that, be sure and get it and you go there. And if you don't have the Bible app, I mean, don't they have like a billion downloads now? Wonderful. Yeah. They're over a billion. Yeah. Yeah. One stop shopping center. And is it true? I think we have a guarantee that if you read through the Bible in a year with us, you will have zero questions afterwards. I think so. Yeah. Sorry. I'm a project guarantee. It is. The Bible project one and done is what we're calling us. Whoa. Wow. That one passed my editing overview. I'm just happy and excited. You know, the thing too, I would just say to people as encouragement because in the past, you may have done these and you may have done it with other people. And you can get two or three days, two or three weeks behind. And then just say, oh yeah. I would just say pick up where the rest of the group is. Just feel free to 100%. Yeah. Just let those go. You can come up pick up those chapters later at another time, but don't be burdened by it. Allow it to be something that it truly is, which can be life-giving. Yeah. Very cool. Let's talk about what we released this year. We spent the year going through themes that are connected to the Exodus story in a very important way. Yeah. Unique themes, the book of Exodus, just kind of like comes into its own. That's where the book of the Bible. These are unique contributions that Exodus makes to the storyline of the Bible. So we started with the mountain. Earlier in 2025, you know, Mount Sinai, pretty significant. Yeah. There's mountains before Mount Sinai. And there's mountains after Mount Sinai, but Mount Sinai kind of gives you in the fullest form the meaning of the mountain that makes you both read backwards into Genesis and forwards. So that was cool. And I think actually for the podcast, yeah, it was after Sermon on the Mount in 2024. We actually started the mountain series to kind of end of the year. And then the video came out at the beginning of this year. And then the podcast ended right as the video came out. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. I was so encouraged by that series. But full confession, when you all told me you were doing a video on the mountain, I was like, oh my goodness. We've ran out of ideas. We're running out of topics. We've run out of the bucket videos on mountains. Oh, no. But it was in a conversation I had with Hakim where he talked about the significance of mountains. And it's those places where heaven and earth meet. It's the edges where he talked about also like where the heavens meet the ocean. It's like why are we drawn to looking? Yeah. But those places where those edges meet the heavens and the earth meet and come together. And then also the challenge to be people of the mountain that then go down into the valley and live there. It's just I was like, oh my goodness, why did I doubt it was so good? Really enjoyed that. Yeah. And then we did the Exodus way, which is taking the idea of liberation out of slavery that happens in Exodus and looking at as a theme about really what's happening with all creation. The way out of slavery, the way through the wilderness, and the way in and the way in to the promised land, to the garden. Yeah. Actually that was satisfying one of the fun project to work on and develop. But also that was a video that was on one of the first lists that I brought to you back in 2013. Yeah. Mountain was in on that list. Just the mountain was not but Exodus pattern was I think just I have a fondness for how that works. And so it was really fun to finally see that come to fruition. That's great. Video, great podcast series. Love what the studio did. The kind of the board game. The doodle deluxe is what they call that style. It was so good. The board game aesthetic. Yeah. Yeah. Because I just see that in my own life. Yeah. Yeah. And how that over and over again. Yeah. It's just beautiful. Yeah. Okay. And then we did redemption. Redemption. The theme of redemption. That was heavy. And then it was kind of heavy video. Yeah. I mean, we're talking about life and death and the meaning of the universe. Yeah. And the character of God. Who is God towards pretty and the death of Jesus. We're in creation and the meaning of Jesus's death. Yeah. Really substantial themes. It was heavy. But it was also this element of hope. It just was so powerful. And to me it felt like it just permeated that video and that picture of home and what that can look like. Yeah. The podcast series was amazing. I've recommended it to so many people because again, it was just such a reframing for me and the tradition that I was raised in and then listening to it. And when you talked about the repo man, it was like, oh my goodness, I never read the session. I loved it. Yeah. It was so helpful. Yes. Just realizing repo man, they've got a bad image. But they're really good people because they're restoring taking and putting things back where they belong. Yeah. It's a branding issue for the repo man. We did. Anyway, it was really powerful. So thank you guys. That was a great series. It was a great example where I came in thinking I understood what it was I wanted to share with you, John, and talked through. And it was a much deeper rediscovery and new discovery even. So much so that we even shifted the fundamental definition of redemption. In my mind, it was release of a slave from slavery. But that's only one way. It's really about God reclaiming as his own something that has wrongfully left God's possession. And that's the essence of the idea. And it's slavery is one way you can go out of God's possession. But that's sticky. It's stuck with me. And it's really became helpful frame to view the whole story of the Bible. So cool. That was good. And John, you kept pushing. You kept asking them the same question over and over. Yeah. Yeah. That's right. That's it. My job is quite simple sometimes. Just keep asking the same question over and over again. Full three year old. Why? Why? Yeah. I love it. Yeah. Don't let everyone know how simple my job is. You know, what I love is the number of people that will say to me, oh, love the podcast. I don't know how those guys do it. They talk as though it's unscripted. And well, it is. You know why it sounds that way? Yes. Yes. I tell people it's unscripted, but it's highly edited. Yes. So yeah. Lastly, we did the wilderness. And for me, actually, maybe because it's the freshest. But I think also because it's so surprising to me in many ways. It became my favorite theme of the year. Why is that? You know, it feels trite and simplistic to talk about how God could take a bad thing and make it good. And I thought that's kind of a sub-theme we were talking about in the wilderness. But when we started talking about how God's preparing us for garden life and we can prepare in the garden, like that's a possibility. But that actually might be a better for us. It's a harder way to learn. Yeah. Yeah. How do you learn? We have so much abundance. We actually can't learn how to be the kind of people who trust in God's word. And so God will reclaim this unfortunate tragedy of being in the wilderness, saying, well, this will be the training ground now. So you can be garden people. So the wilderness is a place that makes us ready. It felt really significant to me. Yeah. Yes. I think where it pushed me was in like the big philosophical questions about the meaning of non-existence. Oh. Yeah. Which is whatever. Like you force me to make all that much more clear and practical and not talk about all the time. Which is great. But I have every project we do. I learn because of just sitting and talking for hours. I just, yeah, I have so many great learning memories of from that podcast too. Yeah. It's great, man. Speaking of learning, one of the podcasts I learned to bunch on was how the Bible is formed. Yes. That was so good. That's right. That was a little mini series. A little mini series in the middle of the year. And why did we do that little mini series in the middle of the year? Yes. Because we wanted to create a video series in read scripture style that we did for the read through the Bible for the in betweeners. The books that are part of the Catholic Doodrow Canon or the Protestant apocrypha. These are books that have always been a part of the wider library of the Christian scripture collection. And they've fallen out of use in some Protestant traditions in the last 500 years. And we wanted to help, of course, correct on that. And introduce our audience to these really amazing second-templed Jewish texts. So we released a series of videos on those. They're on our website and in the app. And on new version. And on new version. And then we wanted to provide kind of a rationale, which was a crash course in the making of the Bible. Specifically focusing on where did these wider, where did the wider library of texts around the Bible come from? It's great. So encouraging. And then finish the year with Advent. Yeah. The four Advent words. Yes. That was fun too. It was fun. I really enjoyed working on this. Yeah. I guess the main theme is that we're enjoying making all this stuff. Yeah. But that we're also like learning constantly ourselves. And we as each say, we are experiencing the Bible as a unified story. The least of Jesus as we make this stuff that we help other people do the same. Yeah, it's wild to think all this stuff we get to create. However, when we think about what we're doing, it's not just about what we get to do. We do also love to think about we don't have the right language for this. But sometimes we call it a bigger movement. What we're doing is we're saying, let's read the Bible as a unified story. We lead to Jesus. And then this project is us doing it in our way. Like with our voice and personality and our creative way of doing that. But that's just one expression of reading the Bible as unified as a totally as Jesus. The bigger thing this idea of reading the Bible is one story is way bigger than this project. And when people get excited about what we're doing, we kind of have to remember what they're really getting excited about. It's the Bible. And then it's one story. And that's unlocking. And I think our most enduring legacy as a project isn't going to be all these animations. I think one day, you know, decades from now, they're just not going to be as useful. Don't be something else. But I hope our enduring legacy is that we've brought more language and culture around this idea of reading the Bible this way. And people are starting to do it in their own way, in their own communities. And it becomes a thing much bigger than us, this idea of the Bible's one story. Yeah. And one way it already is much bigger than us because it's older than us. Yeah. And way more international and cross-cultural than us. So there's a lot of cool things brewing that we've gotten to witness or hear about or link arms with. Yeah. We were just together as a staff and someone from our team made a comment that was really cool about her church. Yeah. It's Nina lives in Virginia and was talking about her church is doing a series the Exodus way. And it was really all of the resources we had from when we released the Exodus way and they were using it. When you say using our resources, like they were you built it like a reading plan. Okay. And there was like they're going through a series as a church that was focusing on the way out the way through the way in. Yeah. And it was all this stuff. And the thing that was so exciting is it wasn't about us. It's about the Bible. There was no mention of Bible project. Yeah. It's so great. I actually got kind of tearied because I thought that's what we've longed for. This idea of people reading the Bible as a unified story that leads to Jesus and in about the Bible project. We've talked internally about this idea of stewarding our moment and then disappearing. And that is this idea of the enduring long-lasting legacy is we could see this huge shift on how people read the Bible. Yeah. That a church could use similar language or use the language we were kind of inviting us all to think about Exodus way and the three parts. And to not feel like, hey, that's ours. And if you're going to use it like credit us, but actually how cool is it? It felt like this moment of like it's working. Like the ideas getting in underneath and people are embracing it as their own. Yeah. You know, for people in that church community, they don't hear their leaders saying, here's something that I learned from this thing that's made by these guys who live on the west coast and it re- but it's like people in that church are hearing their pastoral leaders present it. Like this is what we're learning, how we're reading the Bible. They're learning from their teachers in their community that they know. Yeah. And that's how Bible reading has always worked in the history of the Jesus movement. It's about communities of learning in local places. That's so vital to how scripture does its most powerful work. It can do powerful work if you're alone in a hotel room, you know, discover the Gideon's Bible. But it's even more powerful when it's a part of a learning community in local church. That's the good stuff right there. And so that's what it is. Every time I read these comments from patrons and it says, you know, love Bible project. It's like, I just want to lose the project part of that off of there because it isn't about us. Yeah. And Mike, a guy on our team that heads up what we call strategic relationships, he mentioned to me just the other day that his team has identified over 2000 churches that actually have our content on their website. And so it's like my hope is that just more and more people are beginning to read and they're using this content in their own context. Yeah. It's wonderful. Another really cool story is two women, Nicole and Amber began to write some kids curriculum using homeschool type curriculum based around really the paradigm. And it was really good. And they then started to just in earnest write more and more of this kids curriculum. And this was happening. I didn't really know what was going on. And then Amber came and kind of shared what she was doing in this map that she made of like a little one page treasure map. Yeah. Of how the Old Testament works. And what you've called the melody before. Yeah. She was kind of tracing that idea and how all these stories were connected. It was just a beautiful way to think about the Bible. And it was so much seeing the Bible as one story. But doing it away, the kids could really like grasp. Yeah. It's so cool. And I would love it if they just were like able to keep going. They understand homeschool. But also they have a vision that's bigger than homeschool. They're trying to create curriculum that like the whole family gets developed. You know, gets discipled by reading the Bible together. But they understand homeschool curriculum. Yeah. So over the years, so many people have reached out saying, you guys should make kids curriculum. And we've just said that's. Yeah, it's not us. That's not us. That's not what we do. But they get it. They do. And I've saw if people recently since having met Amber when they reach out, I'll just send them the link to her website. Yeah. Onestoryfamily.org. And these aren't folks that are homeschooling. They're just saying, I want something to go through with my kids. Do you guys have anything? It's like, no, but here we go. Yeah. And a couple of responses I've got super encouraged by what they've been able to do with their kids with her resources. Yeah. Yeah. And it would warm my heart if they got some gifts at the end of the year from people who are like, Oh, I believe in that. Yeah. I can support this because what they're doing is same things we're doing is everything's free. And they just want to like give it up for free. So she's great. Yeah. Cool. One of the things that encouraged me this year, it was Melanie from our global team sharing about some stuff. And she did it in a way where she was sharing with the entire staff. And so my assumption is it would surprise our audiences much as it surprised our staff. But she went through a list of things and she said she emailed me the list this morning. And this list said, would it surprise you to learn that a librarian Rwanda, one of the largest theological libraries in East Africa, host, Kenya Rwanda videos that our team has made. But it's surprised you to learn that seminary schools and theology conferences across Pakistan integrate videos into their curriculum and gatherings. Pastors from desert rural and city communities gather to watch and study them together. What it's surprised you to learn that a coffee shop and Bulgaria becomes a weekly gathering spot for Bible project discussions. What it's surprised you to learn that our Chinese content is available in mainland China through the Weed of Oat app. What it's surprised you to learn that Y-Wam school in the Ukraine includes our videos in its curriculum. And the list goes on and on. Here's a fun one. What it's surprised you to learn that a 15-year-old Norway's Lutheran Church confirmation program watches our videos. So encouraging to see over and over again. So just thank you to our patron community that allows us to just give all this stuff away and push it out there. We're not having to sit and think about licensing agreements or any of that. It's just we can scatter this seed everywhere. Whether it's one story or it's folks all over the world as our global team gets these were over 55 languages street lights, localizing our videos to their audience. And just all of that that you have made possible that we can just give it away. And so exciting to see and so encouraging. Yeah. I am regularly at a loss for words when I sit back and think about the scope of where all this is gone. And I think it's just a testament to when who Jesus really is is on full display through scripture. And people are encountering Jesus the way scripture really does on its own terms present him. It's lapargasting. It's like the most beautiful thing in the world. And it just is its own I don't know. It's its own momentum. And I feel like that's what we're getting to get a front seat to witness for this season of the project. And it's just such a great privilege. And it is because of the generosity of all of the thousands of people who have come around this project. So thanks be to God for that. It is so cool. So cool. A couple of things that have been going on that made people unaware of. We have classroom classes. There's more. There's more. Yeah. And we released two classes this year. One on the story of Joseph. Joseph and his brothers. Oh my gosh. It's so good. So good. That wraps up a whole six classes on the book of Genesis. Yeah. Yeah. Talk through all of Genesis. Mm hmm. So rich. Yeah. So rich. One of the great privileges of my middle-aged adult years. Yeah. Was just sitting Genesis for years crawling through with the students. Yeah. Lots of people are taking it. Mm hmm. And finding it so valuable. Yeah. And also we are beginning a long multi-class series through the Gospel of Matthew. We thought we'd take the first book of the Old Testament. Yeah. And then we're starting to release what will eventually be seven classes on the book of Matthew. So class number two came out. Yes. Which is on Matthew five through seven. Cermin on the Mount. We called it the Messianic Torah. Yeah. So if you haven't got enough Cermin on the Mount. Here's another one. Here's another way to go through it. Classroom setting. Yeah. Can you ever get enough of the Cermin on the Mount? No. Is there a point where you know I'm full? I know more Cermin on the Mount. Of course. And you're speaking of classroom super encouraging too. And we may have mentioned it last year, but it just is growing and growing is there's an organization called Pando. Oh yeah. I think they they make a tablet that they get into prisons across the country. Yes. Yes. And some folks that are incarcerated that we're watching our content asked if we would put the classroom videos on there. And so there's folks that are incarcerated that are going through the classroom classes. Some of them doing it in groups. Yeah. So they can go through together. And a patron comment I received earlier this year was from a woman named Rachel. And she said, Oh my goodness. I watched your content, your videos in classroom when I was incarcerated. I didn't know you were out here in the free world. And I wanted to support you. She thought that we were. Yeah. So encouraging. She said, you have no idea the difference this content is making for folks that are incarcerated. And so so encouraging. That's cool. Yeah. We should also just mention we have an app. And we've never spent a lot of time like advertising around. And just we keep tweaking it, making it better. And it's got no point where it's like, Oh, this is actually cool. People are using it hundreds of thousands of people every month. I think it's a great way to listen to our podcast. It's a great way to do classroom. Yeah. You can take classes and listen as if it were a podcast. Yeah. Yeah. On the audio only mode. You could find our resources in a couple different ways through like a catalog in there. But also like each chapter of the Bible has resources that we have connected to that chapter. And then there's also we have these like collections. Like when we go through the mountain, for example, it's like, there's a lot of stuff we make. We make the podcast. We make the video. We have articles. We have discussion questions that puts it all in one place so that you can kind of choose your adventure and build out like the way you want to study it. Yeah. No, it's the team is then a great job. This last year of really focusing on more coordination as we release all of this content at one place. And the app is a great place to get that where it has that. So like a study guide that you can go through with a small group individually. And it's all there on those top cards on the app. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. I think like our core audience, the people who are like in this with us are finding it useful and using it. It's probably the easiest place to go through the maze of all of our library stuff. Yeah. And I think we're getting better. Early days of Bible project. I remember somebody said to me, you have amazing content. It's just like going into a library with no shelves and all the books are on the floor. And so as we continue to grow and mature as an organization, our team is really finding ways to make everything more searchable and allow people to find it. But it's the one place that you can go that has everything. And it's all right there. Yeah. Yeah. Perhaps last but not least is the very way that we're talking to y'all right now is on the podcast. Oh yeah. And this was a milestone year for the Bible project podcast. We've been doing this podcast for 10 years now. It's our 10th year as a podcast. That's ancient. That's ancient for podcasts. We're like podcasts like dinosaurs. That's weird to say. A grandpa's grandpa sounds better. Yeah. Okay. So yeah, somewhere near the end of 2025, we released our 500s hour of talking. That is 500 episode. Yeah. So wild to imagine. But that happened. And some people have listened to all 500. It's so wild. It's a lot of spending time with us. Yeah. So I'm sorry. And you're welcome. Yeah. It's my companion every Monday morning. I'm going to take my walk. I enjoy it. It's great. Some people might think, Hey, as the CEO, are you not listening to these before we send them out to the wild? No. I'm right there with all of you hearing it when it comes to this great. Yeah. And so what's coming out next year on the podcast? That's going to turn it all sorts of resources. Well, I guess we're not yet going to wave goodbye to Exodus. We've got one more Exodus kind of theme. Oh, like a capstone theme to Exodus in a way. Yeah. We're going to do a whole video series and podcast series on your favorite page of the Bible in mind, the 10 commandments from Exodus Chapter 20. All 10. We're going to do all 10. Yep. Yep. Yeah. Complete it. And I think I'll just say I was surprised as we started to work on it. How much more excited I got about the 10 commandments than I had been before. Yeah. While doing it. While doing it. Yeah. Yeah. I felt the same way. Yeah. It was so fun. Both the conversations, you know, that the podcasts will be but then the videos. Yeah. It's so surprising. Yeah. I think that's all I want to say. It's going to be a big series because there's going to be like an intro video. Yeah. And then a video for every one of the commands. Yeah. Big series. And so yeah, it's going to be a lot of content and animation studios. It's such a cool. So amazing. Really are that. I keep finding myself walking around the animation studio a little more these days. And looking at videos. Yeah. And having seen some of the early stuff that they've been working on. Yeah. So encouraged and surprised. I mean, I'm old. You hear 10 commandments. You think Charlton has to know that maybe that would play every Easter. And oh my goodness. I think our yeah. I think y'all will be so encouraged by this series. Yeah. That's next level. Before that. Yeah. A little kind of detour. Yeah. A little way. A little many series that isn't going to have any other content associated with it. It's just going to be a little podcast only. Little explorations. Yes. On the letter of Jude. The letter of Jude. Half a page in most of our rivals. And how long's the podcast series going to be? Like six episodes. Okay. Yeah. It could but it could have been easily 10 episodes. Yeah. But I bet we could have done like 20. Yeah. Okay. So back story is when we did all the read scripture overview videos. The letter of Jude. I gave myself like two weeks to just immerse myself in all things Jude. Catch up from all my learning in the past. Read the stack of books. Write the script. Draw the poster. Draft to give to Everett who drew the final poster. And it just stuck out in my mind is like whenever I get time, I want to come back here and spend a whole lot more energy and time. And then 10 years went by. Yeah. And so I had this study break plan for earlier this year. And I got the choice to like what do I get to do on the study break? And I was like to just only eat briefly and think about Jude and everything that Jude's connected to. I had so much fun. Yeah. Can't wait. So the podcast series is so what? Jude's wild. Jude is wild. It's a wild ride. It's surprising. It's in the Bible. Wow. Really? I think you know, it's funny is I you know famously show up unprepared for the podcast. And part of my comfort level with it is we usually are talking about some like old testament passage that I just know no one's familiar with. Oh sure. So like yeah, yeah, it's fine. I don't need to be prepared. Yeah. But for some reason, because it's like, oh, this is a new testament book. I almost felt like I should probably have read it recently. And so I think it was the like night before we were going to start. And I read Jude. Yeah. And I realized it's like five minutes, right? It took you. Yeah, yeah, you can read it. Yeah, it's 25 first. But I ended up reading it many times over. Yeah. And it's so confused. And it just occurred to me like, I don't think I've read this for 20 years. Yeah. Yeah. And like I kind of forgot this was in the Bible. Yeah. So yeah, there's a lot of really strange wild stuff in Jude. And what I think you really loved about it that you kept talking about is it's such a unique window into a early form of Christianity. It's different than like Paul's Church Planning Movement. Yeah. Separate from that. Yeah. It was like a Jewish messianic movement in Galilee, in Jerusalem. And it was founded by the brothers of Jesus. Yeah. Jude and James and that crew. Yeah. And the way that they read the Bible, yeah, it's like Jewish kind of tenac nerds. Yes. It just is like, yeah, hyperlink heaven. Yeah. Wow. I think, you know, I don't know anything about Jude. I think I've always just seen it as the on deck circle for as I try and gear up to read through revelation. It's like, yeah, let's get a little confused before we get really confused. And it's 25 verses. So you plow through it and go chat an entire book done. Yeah. More than any other book is where I'll read a verse in Jude and I'll be like, yeah, I don't get it. And I don't have time to get it. I got this big book called Revelations Down in the face. Yeah. I'm just going to blow through this. Yeah. So that's great. That's going to be awesome. Yeah. Yep. And that's just the beginning of the year. Yeah. There's more. There's more coming out. There's more coming out. Yeah. But we won't belabor this. A few things that I just want to make sure that please as we're reflecting on the year. Yeah. So encouraged by a group of volunteers to come to our office every Tuesday. There's usually 20, 25. I think we've had as many as 30 people that are down their patrons. They're addressing envelopes to say thank you to the folks that support this. Yeah. And they're just they're faithfully doing this. And it's so encouraging to see them. And they're just a great group of people. They're so that their handwriting are thank you. Absolutely. Yeah. Yeah. So cool. It's their part. I mean, I see them as part of our patron care team. Absolutely. To just thank the people that are making this all possible. Yeah. It's so fun to get an actual hand like written envelope. Your name handwritten on a thing. And you're like, look at it. And you're like, wait, this is actually handwritten. This wasn't like an auto pen thing. Yeah. Someone wrote this. Yeah. That's a great team. It's so cool. Just really amazing group of people. And then they do so much more than that too. They just are they're in it with all of us. And so grateful for that. Also for our prayer team. Yes. Over 80,000 people receive a monthly prayer email. Christopher from our team. Gathers requests from around the team. Put the prayer email together. And then sends it out. And so we see that as the absolute foundation for what we do. And it's the bedrock. We've we've talked about over and over again that the impact that the Bible project has had is so much greater than the sum total of all of our very best work. And we just clearly see that God goes before us and it is something he's doing internally. We say that he makes the wave and we just get to ride it. And we are so grateful for this season in which we get to to ride that. And so those things just so encourage me. And then I say is the the 50,000 patrons that joined us this last year and are a part of what's going on here and enable us to really to make the content to scatter these seeds and to push the content out there and allow it to show up on the U version app and allow the folks at street lights and these 2000 plus churches that we know of that are using the content and then localize it all of the world. So on behalf of the entire project, I just want to say thank you for being in this with us. Yes, 100% thank you all for your enthusiasm and support for this. And I know why I'm compelled to be a part of it is as you said, John, I'm experiencing the Bible as a unified story. It's leading me to Jesus. And that's why I give to the project both energy and financially. And this is just so amazing. So yeah, thank you all for doing this with us. It's really incredible. Yeah. Yeah. Good word. We have said we really move at the speed of generosity. And you know, you can hear people say, hey, you know, we couldn't do this without you. I feel from the very beginning, we really said we won't do this without you. Yeah, that's right. Yeah, that if there weren't a group of people that found value and what we were doing. And if it wasn't having an impact on people's lives, where they were motivated to join us, then does it really need to be done? And so we hear you and we'll continue to make content as long as there's people that have a desire for it. Yeah. So that's to another wonderful year. Yeah. And excited for next year. And I hope that as we all end the year, it's kind of just a moment to reflect on what God's doing in our own hearts and families and communities and spend time with family. Start to gear up for like another run at this thing called life. You know, like, yeah, such a weird moment in time to be like, we're going around the sun one more time. Here we go. So it's cool that we're all doing it together. It's wonderful to do with you guys. Wonderful to do it with our whole team and all of our patrons. Yeah. Well, thank you guys for inviting us in on this community of breeding the Bible together that you do and grateful for you guys. Yeah, likewise. You too, Steve. Okay, until next year. Yeah, I'm good. I'm good. I'll let you guys take it for the next 11 and a half months. I will. Come on back. Okay. John and Steve, did you know the Bible project? This crowd funded nonprofit media studio. We are making things to help people experience the Bible as a unified story. Lisa Jesus and this podcast is one of those things. And it's made by, man, such an amazing gifted team of people. She check out the show notes with podcasts. It's all made possible by the generosity of you and you and you and you and you. I see all of you. Thank you. And you can find everything on our project app and Bible project. Hi, my name is Chris. And my name is. And we are from Indiana. We first heard about the Bible project a couple years ago when we're doing a read through the Bible in the year program. I use the Bible project for study and the favorite part so far from the Bible project is how to read the Bible series. We believe the Bible is a fine story that leads to do the Bible project is a nonprofit. Non-profit. Non-profit funded by people like me. Find free videos, articles, podcasts, classes and more on the Bible project. And at BibleProject.com. Thank you.