Liberty BIBL 110: New Testament Survey
BIBL 110 surveys the authorship and contents of the New Testament books, with attention to key persons, places, events, and chapters. Alongside the reading, the course builds basic academic research skills through Bible study assignments with scholarly sources and structured reflective-reading templates.
Fennie is independent and not affiliated with Liberty University. This is an unofficial study guide.
Build my BIBL 110 study planWhat makes it hard
The detail level is the load: assessments reward knowing which book covers what, who wrote it, and where the key events sit — a lot of specific recall in 8 weeks. The research assignments also introduce formal formatting and scholarly sourcing, which trips up students who treat them as casual reflections.
What you'll cover
- • The Gospels and the life of Jesus
- • Acts and the early church
- • Pauline epistles
- • General epistles and Revelation
- • Authorship, audiences, and settings
- • New Testament research basics
The BIBL 110 study guide
How to study for Liberty BIBL 110, step by step.
- 1
Pace the reading with the module calendar
Twenty-seven books in 8 weeks rewards a steady daily portion over weekend marathons. Falling a module behind in a survey course means double reading the next week, every time.
- 2
Track books, authors, and key chapters in one chart
The assessments reward exactly this organization — which book, by whom, covering what. A running chart built as you read becomes the single best review document in the course.
- 3
Drill the persons, places, and events
Detail recall is the course's real test, and spaced flashcard review handles it better than rereading. A few minutes daily on who did what where turns detail questions into easy points.
- 4
Treat the research assignments as formal work
The Bible study assignments require a thesis, scholarly sources, and correct formatting — they're graded as academic research, not reflection. Read the template and source requirements before writing.
- 5
Build the review system in Fennie
Upload the BIBL 110 schedule and Fennie's Daily Plans portion the reading daily toward each deadline, auto-generating flashcards on books, authors, and key events from your actual course materials. It's free to start.
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How Fennie helps with BIBL 110
Upload the BIBL 110 schedule and Fennie's Daily Plans portion the New Testament reading across each week so assessments land on reviewed material, with flashcards on books, authors, and key events generated from your actual course content. Chat through how the epistles connect to Acts' timeline when the big picture gets blurry.
FAQ
Is BIBL 110 hard?
The concepts are accessible; the volume of specific detail — books, authors, places, events — is the workload. Students who keep a steady reading pace and review details daily find it very manageable.
What's the difference between BIBL 110 and BIBL 104?
BIBL 104 surveys the whole Bible; BIBL 110 covers the New Testament in more depth, paired with BIBL 105 for the Old Testament in some degree plans. Your degree completion plan determines which sequence you take.
What are the BIBL 110 assignments like?
Reading-based assessments plus structured Bible study assignments that require a thesis, scholarly sources, and academic formatting, along with reflective-reading templates. The research pieces are graded as formal academic work.
Pass BIBL 110 with a plan, not a cram
Upload your BIBL 110 materials and Fennie generates a Daily Plan paced to your deadline — plus chat, flashcards, and quizzes built from the actual course content.
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