By Michael L Waddell – I’m honored that my Flashcard tool for learning Greek is highlighted as a resource in this community! I wanted to share some free resources that I found particularly useful, and to invite you all to share any free resources you know of that others here might benefit from.
- https://www.biblegateway.com/ – For those who don’t know, Bible Gateway has many, many translations of the Bible completely searchable online, for free. Many scholars recommend the NRSV-ue, and I also like the NAB-re, NASB, the Orthodox Jewish Bible, and the NET Bible (especially for the footnotes). Besides translations, note that the SBL critical edition of the Greek New Testament is also available there, as is the Westminster Leningrad Codex of the Hebrew Bible.
- https://biblehub.com/interlinear/ – BibleHub has a very useful Greek interlinear, along with a Hebrew interlinear as well. Their choice of recension and punctuation is sometimes suspect, promoting a conservative reading of the original Greek, but still, the interlinear itself is excellent.
- https://www.billmounce.com/greek-dictionary – This site lets you look up any Koine Greek word in the New Testament and see where and how it was used elsewhere in the NT, along with a wealth of nuanced translation information.
- https://pressbooks.pub/ancientgreek/ – “Ancient Greek for Everyone” is a great textbook for learning Greek, and it’s available under a Creative-Commons license, which makes it free for anyone to read on the internet.
By Joel Bartley – I’ve also found https://www.blueletterbible.org/ to be a useful site. Maybe it’s just because I’m more familiar with it, but I often find it’s easier to navigate around. I also like https://netbible.org/, particularly their extensive notes.
For going beyond the canonical texts, I can’t recommend highly enough https://www.earlychristianwritings.com/ and https://www.earlyjewishwritings.com/ and a good complement is https://www.ccel.org/ ( Christian Classics Ethereal Library ).
By Paul M. Summitt – I’m ignostic. I also like https://www.earlyjewishwritings.com/ and https://www.ccel.org/ Others I use include https://thebible.org/gt/index and http://www.parallelbible.com/ as well as https://www.tertullian.org/.
By Megan Kraege – Sefaria: a Living Library of Jewish Texts Online – Everything you could ever dream of related to the Hebrew Bible and other Jewish texts with great translations, resources, commentaries, dictionaries, comparative tools, and so much more. That it allows you to not only choose Hebrew, English, or both, but also customize your settings such as vowels and cantillation marks makes it my go-to for Hebrew Bible reading.