biblebridge-mcp
Provides structured access to Scripture through the BibleBridge API, enabling semantic search, contextual verse retrieval, and cross-reference analysis. It supports natural language reference normalization and comparative theological exploration across different passages.
README
biblebridge-mcp
Lightweight, production-ready MCP server for fast, structured Scripture access, semantic exploration, contextual retrieval, and theological analysis via the BibleBridge API.
Requirements
- Node.js: 18+
- BibleBridge API Key: Free tier included — upgrade at holybible.dev for higher limits
Quick Start
git clone https://github.com/your-username/biblebridge-mcp.git
cd biblebridge-mcp
npm install
node server.js
Runs instantly with a built-in demo key (bb_free_demo) — no setup required. Each installation gets its own quota via a unique client ID, so you won't share limits with other users. For production use, get a free personal API key at holybible.dev/signup.
Installation & Setup
1. Clone and Install
git clone https://github.com/your-username/biblebridge-mcp.git
cd biblebridge-mcp
npm install
2. Configuration
The server works out of the box with the demo key. To use your own API key (recommended for any real usage):
Copy .env.example to .env:
BIBLEBRIDGE_API_KEY=your_key_here
Get a free key at holybible.dev/signup — 500 requests/day, no credit card required.
3. Execution
Run the server:
node server.js
Debug with MCP Inspector:
npx @modelcontextprotocol/inspector node server.js
# Opens MCP Inspector for interactive tool testing
Client Configuration
Claude Desktop
Add the following to your configuration file:
- macOS:
~/Library/Application Support/Claude/claude_desktop_config.json - Windows:
%APPDATA%/Claude/claude_desktop_config.json
{
"mcpServers": {
"biblebridge": {
"command": "node",
"args": ["/absolute/path/to/biblebridge-mcp/server.js"],
"env": {
"BIBLEBRIDGE_API_KEY": "your_key_here"
}
}
}
}
Claude Code
claude mcp add biblebridge -- node /absolute/path/to/biblebridge-mcp/server.js
After adding, restart Claude Code to load the MCP server.
Tools
| Tool | Endpoint(s) | Description |
|---|---|---|
explore_scripture |
/topics + /search + /passage |
Primary entry point for most Bible questions, especially open-ended queries like "What does the Bible say about X?" Tries the topic index first (semantic), falls back to keyword search if needed, and returns relevant passages with full text. Use this by default unless the query clearly calls for a more specific tool. |
get_passage_with_context |
/passage + /context + /passage |
Default choice for single-verse queries. Retrieves a verse along with its surrounding neighbors so the full thought and narrative are preserved. Use this for interpreting, explaining, or analyzing a verse. Best suited for single-verse inputs. |
get_passage |
/passage |
Exact text retrieval for multi-verse passages or ranges (e.g. "Romans 8:1-4, 28; 12:1-2"). Do not use for single-verse interpretation — use get_passage_with_context instead. |
get_cross_references |
/cross-references |
Thematically related verses for a given verse, ranked by connection strength (very_high → low). Use to discover related passages or follow a theme from a specific verse. |
compare_passages |
/diff + /passage |
Compare two Bible passages to reveal shared and unique verses. Shows overlap, what is unique to each, and full verse text for all sections. Use to analyze overlap, contrast themes, or study differences between passages. |
search_scripture |
/search |
Exact keyword or phrase match (e.g. "faith without works"). Use only when searching for a specific phrase or wording — otherwise prefer explore_scripture for thematic or general questions. |
get_verse_of_the_day |
/votd |
Returns today's curated Verse of the Day (KJV) — rotates daily. |
resolve_reference |
/resolve |
Validates and canonicalizes a Bible reference. Returns structured identifiers (book_id, chapter, verse, osis_id). Use only when you need to verify or normalize a reference before further processing. |

Tool Selection Guide
Which tool to use?
| Use Case | Tool |
|---|---|
| General or topic-based questions | explore_scripture ← default |
| Single verse — interpreting or explaining | get_passage_with_context |
| Multi-verse passage or range | get_passage |
| Exact phrase search | search_scripture |
| Compare two passages | compare_passages |
| Related verses from a specific verse | get_cross_references |
| Today's verse of the day | get_verse_of_the_day |
| Validate or normalize a reference | resolve_reference |
Tool Hierarchy
The tools form three natural layers:
High-level (LLM-friendly defaults)
explore_scripture— semantic orchestrator, the default entry pointget_passage_with_context— default for single-verse workcompare_passages— structured passage analysis
Mid-level (direct retrieval)
get_passage— exact multi-verse retrievalget_cross_references— thematic traversalsearch_scripture— verbatim phrase matchingget_verse_of_the_day— daily curated verse
Specialized
resolve_reference— reference validation and normalization; most tools handle resolution internally, so reach for this only when you specifically need the canonical output
resolve_reference — Handling Messy Input
When you do need to validate or normalize a reference, resolve_reference is the most capable tool available. It handles typos, abbreviations, encoding artifacts, and informal phrasing, returning a stable canonical form.
What it resolves
| Raw Input | What's Wrong | Resolved |
|---|---|---|
"Mathew 5:3" |
Common misspelling | Matthew 5:3 |
"john316" |
No spaces or punctuation | John 3:16 |
"Apoc 22:1" |
Alternate tradition name (Apocalypse) | Revelation 22:1 |
"Phil.4:6–7,9" |
En-dash + no spaces + non-contiguous verses | Philippians 4:6-7,9 |
"Ps.23, vv.1—3" |
vv. notation + em-dash from Word |
Psalms 23:1-3 |
"kjv iitim3:16-17" |
Malformed ordinal + no space + translation prefix | 2 Timothy 3:16-17 (KJV) |
Real example — "kjv iitim3:16-17"
{
"type": "single",
"valid": true,
"input": "2 tim 3:16-17",
"book": {
"key": "2TI",
"book_id": 55,
"osis": "2Tim",
"name": "2 Timothy",
"slug": "2-timothy"
},
"spans": [
{
"start": { "chapter": 3, "verse": 16 },
"end": { "chapter": 3, "verse": 17 }
}
],
"osis_id": "2Tim.3.16-2Tim.3.17",
"translation": "KJV",
"parse_quality": 0.92,
"confidence_class": "corrected",
"confidence_explanation": [
{
"type": "book_alias",
"impact": -0.08
}
],
"normalization_steps": [
"translation_extracted"
]
}
Key fields:
confidence_class— indicates whether corrections were applied (exact,corrected, etc.)parse_quality— numeric score usable in agent logic to decide whether to confirm with the userconfidence_explanation— exactly what caused any confidence deductionosis_id— stable canonical identifier for downstream storage and interop
Ambiguity detection
When a reference is genuinely ambiguous, the resolver returns ambiguous: true with ranked candidates instead of guessing silently.
Input: "Samuel 3:1"
{
"type": "single",
"valid": false,
"ambiguous": true,
"candidates": [
{ "key": "1SA", "id": 9, "name": "1 Samuel", "osis": "1Sam", "weight": 70, "score": 0.8275 },
{ "key": "2SA", "id": 10, "name": "2 Samuel", "osis": "2Sam", "weight": 70, "score": 0.8275 }
]
}
An AI agent receiving this can prompt the user naturally:
"Did you mean 1 Samuel 3:1 or 2 Samuel 3:1?"
The ambiguous flag makes the distinction machine-readable so your application can handle it gracefully rather than passing a bad reference downstream.
Example Prompts
- "What does the Bible say about forgiveness?"
- "Read Romans 8:1–10 in the WEB translation."
- "Show me John 3:16 with surrounding context."
- "Compare Romans 8 and Galatians 5."
- "Find verses about covenant."
- "What are the cross-references for Hebrews 11:1?"
- "What's today's verse of the day?"
Response Format
Tools return structured, readable text optimized for direct use in AI responses, while preserving canonical data from the underlying API.
- Deterministic canonical references
- Translation-aware responses
- Structured grouping for comparisons and cross-references
- JSON output for validation and grounding (
resolve_reference)
Design Philosophy
BibleBridge MCP is designed around AI workflows, not raw API endpoints. Instead of exposing low-level primitives, it provides composed tools for:
- Grounded Scripture retrieval
- Semantic exploration of topics
- Context-aware interpretation
- Cross-reference traversal
- Passage comparison and reasoning
All tools accept natural Scripture references (e.g. "John 3:16", "rom 8:1–4, 28") and handle normalization internally — you do not need to call resolve_reference before using other tools.
All tools are built on a deterministic canonical coordinate system to ensure accuracy and prevent hallucination. Internally, all operations are batched and normalized to canonical verse identifiers for efficiency and consistency.
Why BibleBridge MCP?
- Unified Interface: A single point of access for search, context, and cross-references
- Agent-Optimized: Designed for structured, predictable AI consumption
- Plug-and-Play: Works out of the box with zero initial setup
- Built for Study: Supports deeper workflows beyond simple verse lookup
- Canonical Reference Engine: Handles messy, ambiguous, and real-world Scripture inputs with deterministic normalization
Technical Details
| Property | Details |
|---|---|
| API Provider | https://holybible.dev/ |
| Supported Translations | KJV, ASV, WEB, YLT, LSG, RVR, LUT, CUV, ARA, KRV |
| Rate Limiting | Managed per user via client identifiers (IP + API key) |
| License | MIT |
Built for AI agents, Bible apps, and advanced Scripture study workflows.
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