Romanian Holy Bible
Cornilescu Bible (1921)
Bible Reading Plans
Chronological, Canonical and historical reading plans for a Year, 180 and 90 days.
You can set notifications, track your reading history, and see the plan every day. Read the Cornilescu Bible in a year easily!
Daily Bible Verses
The app already has daily verses (all books of the Bible), Psalms and Gospels. And you can create your own verse - just choose your favorite books of the Bible! Daily notification, copy / share the verses!
Audio Bible
Tap any verse to listen instantly. Perfect when you can't read!
The app supports seamless audio playback with FOREGROUND_SERVICE_MEDIA_PLAYBACK, ensuring smooth playback and control - even in the background.
Personalized experience
• Highlight verses, add notes and write reflections
• Day and Night modes for comfortable reading anytime
• Customize fonts, text size, spacing and colors
• Adjust the speed and pitch of the sound for a natural listening experience
• Track your progress with detailed statistics
• Sync across devices so your journey is always with you.
• Share your favorite Bible passages with your loved ones
Free & Offline
All these features are free and work offline! Download this Cornilescu Bible app and use all these features in your daily study!
Dumitru Cornilescu (b. April 4, 1891, Slașoma commune, Mehedinți county - d. 1975, Switzerland) was a hierodeacon and author of a Romanian translation of the Bible, published in 1921, a translation that is currently the most widespread translation among Protestant denominations (including neo-Protestant ones).
The Bible (from Greek lb. βιβλιον, pl. βιβλία -books) refers to the sacred scriptures of Judaism and Christianity. These scriptures are compilations of separate documents (called "books") written over a period of about 1000 years. The Old Testament alone has about 100-150 different writers, coming from the intelligentsia in the service of the political leaders. His books were published separately and collected in the 1st-2nd centuries CE. to form the first Hebrew Bible, the Tanach, and later, with additions, the Christian Bible, called by Christians the Holy Scripture.
The first part of the Christian Bible is called the Old Testament (from the Greek "palaia diathékè"). The Old Testament is largely the Greek translation (or from it into other languages) of the Hebrew sacred text as it was in the second century BCE. A division of Jewish origin based on functional criteria of the Old Testament divides it into the Law ("the Law of Moses", the "Pentateuch", i.e. the first "five books" of the Bible), the Prophets and the Holy Writings. The second part of the Christian Bible is called the New Testament.