At 3:16 the clock shows John 3:16. At 4:13, Philippians 4:13. Tap any verse and the passage opens up, with a short note on where you are and a link to keep reading in your own Bible.
Live demo, running right now in your browser — open the full-screen clock and tap the verse.
Selah shows up about seventy-four times in the Psalms, usually in the middle of a verse. Nobody is fully sure what it meant to the people who first sang these songs. Most readers take it as a pause: stop, let the last line settle, before the next one starts. A rest written into the music.
That's what this clock is for. Not another feed to check. Just a small pause, once a minute, if you want it.
A verse on a screen is a small thing — one line lifted out of a much larger story.
So nothing on this clock ends at the verse. Every minute leads somewhere — into the psalm, the letter, the morning in Galilee it was written from.
A small bedside e-ink device is in the works. Offline, silent, no account, keeps time on its own. Leave an email and we'll let you know when the first batch is ready.
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