🎯

More Free Bible Quizzes

🌟 Kids Bible Quiz πŸ“– Easy Bible Quiz πŸ“œ Old Testament ✝️ New Testament πŸ™ Life of Jesus πŸŽ„ Christmas Quiz ✝️ Easter Quiz 🎯 Hard Bible Quiz πŸ“š View All 15 Quizzes

πŸ“– New Testament Bible Quiz

30 Free KJV Questions with Instant Answers | Gospels to Revelation

Explore the New Testament with our comprehensive Bible quiz! This 30-question trivia covers Matthew, Mark, Luke, John, Acts of the Apostles, Paul's epistles, and the Book of Revelation. Test your knowledge of Jesus' ministry, early church history, and New Testament theology. Ideal for Bible study groups and seminary students.

30
Questions
~10 min
Duration
Free
Always
🎯 Start Quiz Now!

πŸ“š Topics Covered:

βœ“ Four Gospels
βœ“ Life of Jesus
βœ“ Acts of Apostles
βœ“ Paul's Epistles
βœ“ Early Church
βœ“ Book of Revelation
βœ“ Miracles & Parables
βœ“ Apostolic Teachings

πŸ“’ Share This Quiz

Facebook Twitter Pinterest WhatsApp

Everything Points to Jesus

The New Testament is where all God's promises come together in one personβ€”Jesus Christ. This free New Testament bible quiz walks you through His life, death, resurrection, and the explosive growth of the early church. From the angel's announcement to Mary in Luke's gospel, to John's apocalyptic visions in Revelation, these 27 books tell the story Christians have been living for 2,000 years.

You'll answer questions about Jesus' birth and ministry, His parables and miracles, His final week and resurrection appearances. Then the quiz moves into Acts, where the apostles turn the world upside down. Finally, you'll tackle Paul's letters, the general epistles, and John's revelation. It's the complete New Testament story in 30 questions.

Whether you're new to Christianity and learning these stories for the first time, or you've been reading the New Testament for years and want to test your knowledge, this new testament bible quiz meets you where you are. Every question uses the King James Version, and the instant feedback helps you learn as you go.

Why Four Gospels Tell One Story

Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John all wrote about Jesus, but they each had different audiences and purposes. Matthew wrote to Jews, showing them that Jesus fulfilled all the Old Testament prophecies. Mark wrote to Romans, presenting Jesus as a man of actionβ€”notice how often he uses the word "immediately." Luke, a physician, carefully researched and organized his gospel for a Greek audience. John wrote last, focusing on Jesus' deity and inviting readers to believe.

That's why the same events sometimes appear differently in different gospels. It's not contradictionβ€”it's perspective. Four witnesses describing the same person from different angles. Matthew includes Jesus' Sermon on the Mount. Mark rushes through the miracles. Luke gives us parables the others didn't record. John captures long theological discussions about bread and light and life. Together, they paint a complete picture.

When you take this new testament quiz, you'll see questions from all four gospels. Sometimes you'll need to remember which gospel recorded which story. Other times you'll need to know what Jesus said or did. The more familiar you are with each gospel's unique perspective, the better you'll doβ€”and the richer your understanding of Jesus will be.

From Jerusalem to the Ends of the Earth

Acts picks up where the gospels endβ€”Jesus has risen, given final instructions, and ascended to heaven. Now what? The disciples waited in Jerusalem until the Holy Spirit came at Pentecost, then everything exploded. Peter preached and 3,000 people believed in one day. The church grew despite persecution. Saul the persecutor became Paul the apostle. The gospel spread to Samaria, then to the Gentiles, then across the Roman Empire.

Acts is essential history. It shows you how the church went from a frightened group hiding in an upper room to a movement that threatened the Roman Empire. It explains how Christianity transitioned from a Jewish sect to a worldwide faith. And it sets the stage for all of Paul's lettersβ€”because once you know the story of Paul's missionary journeys in Acts, his letters to those churches make so much more sense.

The letters themselvesβ€”from Romans to Judeβ€”aren't random theological essays. They're real correspondence addressing real problems in real churches. Paul wrote to Corinth because they were divided and tolerating sin. He wrote to the Galatians because false teachers were corrupting the gospel. He wrote to Philemon about a runaway slave who'd become a Christian. Every letter had a context and purpose. This bible quiz helps you remember who wrote what to whom, and why it mattered.

How to Study the New Testament Well

Here's what will help you ace this new testament quiz and actually understand what you're reading:

Read one gospel all the way through. Don't bounce around between books. Pick Matthew or Luke (they're longest and most complete) and read it start to finish like a story. You'll catch things you missed when you only read scattered chapters.

Understand the structure of Paul's letters. He typically starts with theology (what God has done) then moves to application (how we should live). Romans 1-11 is theology; Romans 12-16 is application. Ephesians 1-3 is theology; Ephesians 4-6 is application. See the pattern? Knowing what to expect helps you follow his arguments.

Learn the key verses. Some New Testament verses are foundational to Christianity: John 3:16, Romans 3:23, Romans 6:23, Ephesians 2:8-9, Philippians 4:13, 2 Timothy 3:16. Memorize these not just for the quiz but for life. They'll come up again and again.

Connect it back to the Old Testament. The New Testament constantly quotes and references the Old Testament. When Jesus says "It is written," He's quoting Hebrew Scripture. When Paul builds theological arguments, he cites Genesis and Isaiah and Psalms. The better you know the Old Testament, the more you'll understand the New.

Your Questions About This New Testament Quiz

Do I need to know Greek? Absolutely not. All questions use the English text from the King James Version. We're testing your knowledge of the content, not your language skills.

Will this help me understand Revelation? The quiz includes questions from Revelation, yes. But honestly, Revelation requires deeper study than a quiz can provide. Use this to test whether you know the basic structure and key symbols, then dig deeper with a good commentary if you really want to understand John's visions.

Is this appropriate for new Christians? If you've been reading your Bible and attending church for a few months, you'll know enough to take this quiz. You might not get every question right, but that's okay. Use the questions you miss as a study guide for what to read next.

Can I retake this quiz? As many times as you want! It's completely free with no limits. Some people use it as weekly review while they're reading through the New Testament. Others take it multiple times to prepare for Bible exams or teaching positions. Use it however helps you learn best.

✝️ Start New Testament Quiz

✝️ You Might Also Like

Continue your Bible learning journey with these related quizzes:

✝️ You Might Also Like

πŸ™

Life of Jesus

Focus on Christ

πŸ“–

Old Testament

The foundation

✝️

Easter Quiz

The resurrection

πŸ“š View All Quizzes

πŸ“’ Share This Quiz

Help others discover Bible trivia! Share on your favorite platform:

πŸ“˜ Facebook 🐦 Twitter πŸ“Œ Pinterest πŸ’¬ WhatsApp