When Did We Get Chapters and Verses? A Quick Answer

January 13, 2026 00:02:38
When Did We Get Chapters and Verses? A Quick Answer
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When Did We Get Chapters and Verses? A Quick Answer

Jan 13 2026 | 00:02:38

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Show Notes

Chapter and verse divisions in the Bible are a relatively modern innovation. In this post Bart looks at their development.

Read by Steve McCabe.

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Episode Transcript

[00:00:01] When did we get Chapters and Verses? A Quick answer by Bart Ehrman after doing this blog for going on 14 years now, I've got better at anticipating questions that my posts will get. [00:00:14] I've just finished a short thread dealing with how we got the Old Testament or Hebrew Bible, both how the canon was formed and how the texts were copied. [00:00:23] And I'd bet my bottom dollar, whatever a bottom dollar is, that I'll be getting questions on when we got the chapters and the verses in the Bible. [00:00:31] I've dealt with the question on the blog before, but it's been years and it's the kind of thing that's a bit hard to recall without reiteration. So here I reiterate Given the fact that ancient manuscripts did not use punctuation or paragraph divisions or even spaces to separate words, it will come as no surprise to learn that the chapter and the verse divisions found in modern translations of the Bible are not original, as if Isaiah or centuries later, Paul would think to number his sentences and call them verses. [00:01:03] In order to facilitate the reading of these books, especially in public, scribes began to make chapter like divisions in the New Testament as early as the 4th century. [00:01:12] But the chapters and translations of the Bible used today go back to just the beginning of the 13th century, when a lecturer at the University of Paris named Stephen Langton introduced major divisions into the Latin Bible. [00:01:28] Verse divisions were not to come along for another three centuries. [00:01:32] In 1551, a Parisian printer named Robert Stephanus published a Greek and Latin translation of the New Testament in which each chapter was divided into separate verses, followed by the 1555 Latin edition of the entire Bible, with the Old Testament versified as well. [00:01:51] These are the verse divisions still in use today. [00:01:54] They first appeared in an English translation in the 1560 Geneva version. [00:02:00] An interesting anecdote Stephanus Son indicated that his father made these verse divisions while on horseback, that is, On a journey from Paris to Lyon. [00:02:10] Presumably he meant that his father took the text along with him and worked on it at night during his layovers at inns along the way. [00:02:17] Some wry observers have noticed, though, that in places our verse divisions make little sense. [00:02:23] Sometimes they occur right in the middle of a sentence, and have suggested that Stephanus literally worked on horseback, so that whenever his steed hit a pothole, it inadvertently caused a slip of the pen.

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