Actually reading the Bible every day is harder than it sounds
You know the feeling. You download a Bible app with good intentions, open it twice, then forget it exists somewhere on your home screen. The Simple Bible Daily Verse Alarm takes a different approach — it doesn't wait for you to remember. It sends a verse straight to your notification bar at a time you choose, and that's really all it needs to do.
The KJV scripture of the day is the default, which is nice if you prefer that translation's rhythm. But here's what surprised me: the personalized prayer feature isn't some generic "Dear Lord" template. You type in a few things you're actually dealing with — work stress, a sick friend, whatever — and it weaves those into a prayer based on the daily verse. It feels less robotic than I expected. The alarm part works exactly like your morning wake-up call, except instead of a blaring tone you get a Bible verse and a short prayer prompt. You can set multiple alarms for different times, which I use for a morning verse and an evening wind-down.
Some things you should know:
- No ads. None. Not even a banner at the bottom.
- You can switch between KJV and a few other translations, but the daily verse defaults to KJV unless you change it in settings.
- The prayer journal saves your entries locally, so don't expect cloud sync.
The interface is plain — white background, simple buttons, no fancy graphics. That's either a plus or a minus depending on what you want. I prefer it this way because I'm not trying to browse a digital cathedral at 6 AM. One thing that tripped me up: the alarm won't work if you force-kill the app. It needs to be running in the background, which is standard for alarm apps but worth noting if you're aggressive about battery management.
If you've tried those "read the Bible in a year" plans and quit by February, this is the opposite approach. One verse. One prayer. One alarm. No guilt about missed chapters. It's for people who want consistency over volume, and at over a million downloads with a 4.8 rating, it's clearly hitting that note for a lot of folks.