Cornerstone 66-Book Bible Study Guide
- ✓ Make sense of all 66 books of the Bible (39 OT + 27 NT) simply and clearly.
- ✓ Learn about key themes, symbols, imagery, and characters.
- ✓ Perfect for personal or group study.
Designed to help believers of any denomination understand God's Word with clarity — backed by our 30-day guarantee.
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"I'd been trying to get more consistent with my Bible study, but it always felt overwhelming. This guide changed everything. It breaks down each book with themes, imagery, and life applications in a way that's easy to understand but still deep. I've even started using it during my women's Bible group — everyone loves it!"
Six layers of context.
On every single page.
The Author & Timeline
Who wrote this book, when they wrote it, and what was happening in the world the moment the words were first put down.
Original Audience Context
Who this book was written for and why — the cultural reality that made every line land with weight the first readers couldn't miss.
Chapter-by-Chapter Breakdown
A clear walkthrough of every chapter so you always know where you are in the story and what you're about to read next.
Key Themes
The major threads running through each book — the recurring ideas God is weaving into the larger story of Scripture from beginning to end.
Symbolism & Imagery
The hidden symbols, prophetic imagery, and cultural references most readers walk right past — finally surfaced and explained.
Practical Application
How this ancient book actually connects to your modern life — what to take with you when you close the page and walk back into the world.
Here's what one of the 66 pages actually looks like
An inside look at how every element of the framework is laid out on a real spread from the guide.
Most Christians have heard these words their entire lives.
"My God, my God, why have you forsaken me."
— The Cry From The Cross
That line is not a cry of despair. It is a direct quotation — the opening verse of Psalm 22, a psalm written by King David roughly one thousand years before Jesus was born.
Jesus was not losing His faith on the cross. He was quoting Scripture. And in ancient Jewish tradition, when a rabbi quoted the first line of a psalm, He was invoking the entire psalm. Everyone at Golgotha who knew the Torah would have recognized exactly what He was doing.
Here is what makes that staggering. Psalm 22 was written roughly a thousand years before crucifixion was ever invented. Yet look at what David wrote:
"They pierced my hands and my feet… they divide my garments among them and cast lots for my clothing… I can count all my bones."
— Psalm 22, ~1000 BC
Crucifixion did not exist when those words were written. David had no framework for it. And yet there it is — written into the Hebrew Scriptures a millennium before the method of execution that would fulfill it had ever been conceived.
Psalm 22 does not end in agony. Its final verse declares total victory in a single Hebrew phrase: "He has done it." The same idea Jesus spoke with His final breath — "It is finished." He did not die quoting the beginning of Psalm 22. He died fulfilling the end of it. Not in defeat — in victory. And most Christians have read right past it their entire lives.
We're not going to tell you that this exact moment is printed on the Psalms page of our guide. It isn't. What's on that page — and on every one of the other 65 — is the foundation that makes moments like this discoverable. The author. The timeline. The cultural world it was written into. The themes running underneath the surface. The roots.
Because insights like the one you just read aren't hidden in some commentary. They're waiting in the text itself. You just need the context to see them. And Psalm 22 isn't a one-off — moments like this are buried throughout Scripture:
- The crimson worm in Psalm 22:6 — a worm that dies on a tree, breaks open, and stains everything beneath it scarlet.
- The ram caught in the thicket on Mount Moriah — the same mountain where Jesus would later be crucified.
- The Greek word tetelestai — the same word Jesus spoke on the cross — stamped on Roman receipts to mean "paid in full."
Most Christians read right past these moments their whole lives. Not because their faith is weak. Not because they don't care. But because nobody ever gave them the roots to see what they were looking at.
Or you can finally see them.
The MildWell Team
Backed By A Public Statement Of Faith
Four ways people try to study the Bible.
Only one gives you the roots.
| Reading Plans | Study Bibles | Bible Apps | Cornerstone | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Time Per Session | 20–45 minutes of dense reading on a fixed daily schedule | 30+ minutes of cross-referencing footnotes and commentary | 5 minutes of scrolling, often interrupted by notifications | 5 minutes per page — read at your own pace, no timers |
| Where You Start | Genesis chapter 1, then push through book by book | Wherever you flip — usually a familiar passage | A pre-built daily verse, often without context | Any book of the Bible — each page stands on its own |
| What You Walk Away With | Pages read, often without comprehension or retention | Academic footnotes that can feel disconnected from real life | A streak count and a verse you may forget by lunch | Real understanding of the book's roots — author, themes, symbolism, application |
| When You Fall Behind | Schedule breaks down by mid-February (the "Leviticus wall") | Easy to put down for weeks without progress | A broken streak that can feel like spiritual failure | No streaks. No deadlines. Pick up exactly where you left off. |
| Best For | Disciplined readers with seminary-level patience | Pastors, scholars, and serious theology students | Quick daily reminders, not deep comprehension | Everyday believers who want to actually understand all 66 books |
Frequently Asked Questions
The 30-Day Love-It Promise
Try the Cornerstone Study Guide risk-free for 30 days. If it doesn't deepen your understanding or strengthen your faith, send it back for a full refund — no questions asked. We back every guide with a hassle-free money-back guarantee, so the only risk is staying stuck on page one.