Novum Testamentum Graece

Ἡ Καινὴ Διαθήκη

Slow, attentive reading of the Greek New Testament.

Read chapter by chapter, then move into verse study, grammar review, vocab, audio, and translation comparison. Grammar serves meaning, and meaning serves formation.

Start Reading

Choose a book below and begin reading the Greek text.
Difficulty at rank:

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Gospels & Acts

Begin here if you’re new to reading Greek narrative.

Paul

Letters—dense but rewarding. Read slowly.

General Letters & Revelation

Shorter letters; strong repetition and vocabulary.

How Readability Is Measured

Readability in Anagnōsis is not based on English translation, but on the structure of the Greek text itself. Each book is evaluated across three dimensions: vocabulary familiarity, sentence complexity, and the presence of New Testament-wide hapax legomena.

Vocabulary familiarity is shown relative to the selected rank. Syntax reflects average verse length and markers of subordination. Hapax measures how many words occur only once in the entire New Testament.

These factors are weighted together to provide a balanced estimate of reading demand — not as a judgment of theological depth, but as a guide for steady formation through the text.