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Logos, a Bible study platform, released its study Logos Chronicled, revealing the reading habits of Christians in 2025. The study was an aggregate of 76 million study sessions, which represents how 4 million people throughout the world studied the Bible in 2025. Logos broke down the findings into three key themes.

The first theme of the study was “Logos Users Want to Know God.” Logos found that “God,” “Jesus,” and, “Spirit” topped the list of searches respectively. This showed an interest in the Trinitarian identity of God. The book of Matthew was the most studied book of 2025. The book of Matthew dives into the nature of Jesus as Messiah as well as his position as the Son of God, falling nicely into the Trinitarian focus that Logos’s users seemed so interested in.

The second theme was “Logos Users Know the Power of the Word.” This stems from the top-searched Bible verse, 2 Timothy 3:16, which states “All scripture is given by inspiration of God, and is profitable for doctrine, for reproof, for correction, for instruction in righteousness,” in the King James Version. The second most-highlighted verse was Matthew 16:18, which states, “On this rock will I build my church,” a reference to the disciple Peter that Catholics view as establishing the papacy. Logos allows it users to study the original language meanings of the words in Scripture, with users’ most-searched Greek term being λόγος, or logos, meaning “word,” “reason,” or “message.” Users also most used Logos’s “Guides” feature, which enables users to look up commentaries, original language tools, and other in-depth study tools.

The final theme Logos highlighted was “Logos Users Span the Globe.” Logos found that its users came from 164 countries and 35 territories. Five of the top ten countries that utilized Logos were not primarily English-speaking (Brazil, Germany, Mexico, South Korea, and Singapore). It’s Logos putting Matthew 24:14 into practice, which states “And this gospel of the kingdom shall be preached in all the world for a witness unto all nations; and then shall the end come.” “We at Logos are building technology to increase biblical literacy and accessibility for every Christian around the world. Our vision is as far-reaching as the Great Commission, and we know it will take continued effort,” said Logos president Chris Migura. “Still, we’re overjoyed to see the progress we’ve made in equipping believers everywhere to go deeper in light of the Bible.” Overall, according to Migura, the findings go to the heart of why Logos exists. “These findings confirm what we’ve always believed: People are hungry for more than surface-level Bible reading,” he said. “They want tools that help them read Scripture in depth—with the help of the Bible’s original languages, centuries of theological insight, and the ability to trace themes across the entire canon. That’s exactly what Logos provides.”

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