
Testament Timeline
Five moments from Scripture. Put history in order.
Testament Timeline hands you a set of moments — a battle, a birth, a covenant, a letter — and asks you to arrange them chronologically. It’s harder than it sounds and more satisfying than it should be, and it quietly builds the one thing most Bible readers never get: a sense of when everything happened.
This game is launching soon
We are putting the finishing touches on Testament Timeline. Sign up and we will let you know the moment it goes live — plus you will get a Bible trivia question every morning.
Notify MeGetting Started
How to Play
Review the day’s events — they can span Genesis to the early church.
Drag each event into the timeline slots from earliest to latest.
Submit once to grade the whole arrangement; each slot shows green or red.
Study the corrected order — the "why" is where the learning lives.
Play Smarter
Tips & Strategy
Build a backbone of eras
Creation → Patriarchs → Egypt & Exodus → Judges → United Kingdom → Divided Kingdom → Exile → Return → Jesus → Church. Slot each event into an era first; exact order inside an era matters less than getting the eras right.
Kings and prophets travel in pairs
Remember who preached to whom: Elijah confronts Ahab, Isaiah counsels Hezekiah, Jeremiah watches Jerusalem fall. Anchoring prophets to their kings dates half of the Old Testament for free.
Letters come after journeys
In the New Testament era, Paul’s letters follow the missionary journeys that founded each church. Acts is the spine; the epistles hang off it.
Scripture Spotlight
Scripture cares about "when"
The Bible goes out of its way to timestamp itself — "in the year that King Uzziah died", "in the fifteenth year of the reign of Tiberius Caesar". Its claims live in history, not once-upon-a-time, and the writers wanted readers to know exactly where each moment sat in the story.
A timeline in your head changes how you read. The Psalms of exile ache differently once you know what fell in 586 BC; the silence between Malachi and Matthew makes the angel’s sudden greeting in Luke feel like a held breath finally released. Order isn’t trivia — it’s context.
“But when the set time had fully come, God sent his Son, born of a woman, born under the law.”
Galatians 4:4
“I am God, and there is none like me. I make known the end from the beginning, from ancient times, what is still to come.”
Isaiah 46:9-10
Good to Know
Frequently Asked Questions
Do I need to know exact dates?
Never. The game only asks for relative order — was this before or after that? Eras and relationships are enough to solve every board.
How is this different from Books of the Bible Blitz?
Blitz orders the books as they’re arranged in your Bible; Timeline orders events as they happened in history. Job likely lived before Moses, but the book of Job sits in the middle of your Bible — that gap is exactly what this game trains.
Are the events only from the Old Testament?
No — boards mix both Testaments, and the trickiest ones stitch them together: exile, return, silence, and then the events of the Gospels and Acts.
Enjoying This?
Get a new challenge every morning
Join free and a Bible trivia question, the full answer with Scripture, and a short devotion will be waiting in your inbox tomorrow. Build a streak, unlock more games and quizzes.
Free forever · No spam · Unsubscribe anytime
Advertisement
This game is free and supported by ads.
Keep Playing