This is via Google.
This is an example of the query (what you type into Google):
"mat. 25:46" OR "matthew 25:46" site:bible-truths.com
As you can see, you type the verse and put it in quotes.
Quotes tell Google not to seperate what you type inside them. It's the difference between searching for Matthew 25:46 and searching for the name Matthew, the number 25, and the number 46.
OR tells Google to search for an alternate query. This is done because, as we all know, Bible verses can be abbreviated or unabbreviated.
site: tells Google to search a specific website, as opposed to the entire internet (you can have Google search as many individual sites as you want; just keep putting
site:website.com's)
You must use the version of the Bible Truths URL that has the dash (bible-truths) because this is the official URL.After you've clicked a result, you'll obviously need to find the verse on the page. Don't worry, you don't need to scroll and find it; your browser has a feature that lets you search for text on a page (this also applies to Word and PDF documents): Edit > Find...You may find that you may just want to search for a chapter at times. You shouldn't always be too specific when searching. "mat 25" OR "matthew 25" site:bible-truths.com
--
You can also
exclude specific sites, or sections of a website, with the
site: feature. To do this, put a minus sign in front of
site:-site:Here's an example of telling Google to only give results for the main website, and to exclude the forums:
eon site:bible-truths.com -site:forums.bible-truths.com
FYI: The punctuation for the verses (the colon between the chapter and the verse number, and the period in the abbreviated version of the verse) is technically unnecessary, as Google doesn't register it. You can technically type it in like this: "mat 25 46" OR "matthew 25 46" site:bible-truths.comhttp://www.google.com/help/cheatsheet.html