The Most Complete Ethiopian Bible
What's Missing From Your Bible
(And Why It's Still Sitting in Ethiopia)
If you've ever felt like something was missing from your Bible reading, you're not imagining it. Here are 7 things every Christian deserves to know about the 22 books that were quietly removed from Western scripture — and the one nation that never let anyone touch them.
Yes, Show Me the Full Canon →The Timeline They Never Taught You
2,000 years of Christian scripture in five waypoints. Read it like a receipt.
~AD 50
The apostles quote Enoch, Jubilees, and Maccabees by name in the New Testament.
AD 380
Ethiopia canonizes the full 88-book canon. They never remove a single book — for 1,600 years.
AD 1611
The original King James Bible is published — with all 22 Apocryphal books included.
AD 1826
The British and Foreign Bible Society votes to stop printing the Apocrypha. The cuts begin.
AD 1947
The Dead Sea Scrolls are discovered. They contain Enoch, Jubilees, Sirach — matching Ethiopia exactly.
7 Things Every Christian Should Know Before They Open Their Bible Tomorrow

The Apostle Jude Quotes a Book That Isn't in Your Bible
Open your Bible to Jude verses 14 and 15. You'll find this: "And Enoch also, the seventh from Adam, prophesied of these, saying, Behold, the Lord cometh with ten thousands of his saints…"
Now try to find where Enoch said that. You can't. Because the book Jude is quoting — the Book of Enoch — was removed from Protestant Bibles centuries ago. But Jude treats it as scripture. The Dead Sea Scrolls confirmed it existed in the first century. The early church fathers — Tertullian, Irenaeus, Clement of Alexandria — cited it as authoritative.
If a New Testament apostle quoted it by name, the question isn't whether Enoch belongs in your Bible. The question is who decided it didn't.

The Watchers, the Nephilim, and the Story Genesis 6 Doesn't Finish
Genesis 6:1–4 mentions "the sons of God" who took human wives and produced the Nephilim — giants who "filled the earth with violence" until the flood. Then Genesis goes silent. No names. No mechanism. No explanation of why God's judgment had to be so total.
The Book of Enoch finishes the story. It names the 200 Watchers who descended onto Mount Hermon. It describes what they taught humanity — weapons, sorcery, astrology, the corruption of the bloodline. It explains why the flood was an act of mercy, not just judgment.
When Peter writes about "the angels that sinned" being "cast down to hell" (2 Peter 2:4), or when Jesus speaks of "the days of Noah" — they're referencing a story their audience already knew. A story your Bible never finishes telling you.

In 1826, a Committee Voted to Make Your Bible Smaller
Most Christians assume the 66-book Protestant Bible has been the same since the Reformation. It hasn't. The original 1611 King James Bible included the Apocrypha — 14 additional books placed between the Old and New Testaments. So did Luther's German Bible. So did the Geneva Bible. So did every major Protestant Bible printed for over 200 years.
Then in 1826, the British and Foreign Bible Society voted — for budgetary and doctrinal convenience — to stop printing the Apocrypha. American Bible Societies followed. Within a generation, an entire shelf of scripture had been quietly retired from the average English-speaking household.
They weren't removed by God. They weren't proven false. They were removed by a print-budget meeting in London. Most Christians today don't even know they're gone.
This is why your reading has been feeling incomplete.
You haven't been reading a wrong Bible. You've been reading an edited one. There's a place that never edited theirs.
See the Full 88-Book Canon →
Ethiopia Is the One Nation That Never Let Anyone Edit Its Bible
In Acts chapter 8, Philip baptizes an Ethiopian eunuch on the road from Jerusalem. That man went home and helped found one of the oldest unbroken Christian traditions on earth. The Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church was established in the 4th century — within decades of Christianity itself.
While Rome convened councils and councils convened printers and printers convened budgets, Ethiopia kept copying scripture by hand inside rock-hewn monasteries that no empire ever conquered. Not Roman, not Ottoman, not British. Even Italy's attempted colonization in 1896 was repelled at the Battle of Adwa.
When the rest of the world was deciding what to remove, Ethiopia was the one place where nobody was allowed to ask.

In 1947, the Dead Sea Scrolls Vindicated Ethiopia
For 1,800 years, Western scholars dismissed the books in the Ethiopian canon as legend, folklore, or later additions. Then in 1947, a shepherd boy near the Dead Sea broke open a clay jar.
Inside the Qumran caves, archaeologists found the oldest biblical manuscripts ever discovered — predating every Western text by over a thousand years. Among them: 11 separate copies of the Book of Enoch. Multiple fragments of Jubilees. Copies of Sirach. The same books Ethiopia had been guarding all along.
The scrolls didn't add anything to the Bible. They returned it. They proved that the books Western Christianity had quietly retired were the same books the Jewish community of Jesus's time read as scripture.

The "400 Silent Years" Aren't Actually Silent
Most pastors describe the gap between Malachi and Matthew as "The Intertestamental Period" or "The Silent Years." Four centuries where God supposedly stopped speaking.
God wasn't silent. Those 400 years produced the Maccabean revolt, the rise of the Pharisees and Sadducees, the Hasmonean dynasty, the transition from Persian to Greek to Roman rule, the development of synagogue worship — every piece of context you need to understand the world Jesus walked into.
That history is recorded. In 1 Maccabees, Sirach, the Wisdom of Solomon, Tobit, Judith — books the Ethiopian canon never lost. When John 10:22 mentions Jesus celebrating "the Feast of Dedication" (Hanukkah) in the Temple, that holiday is from 1 Maccabees. Without those books, you don't understand why the Pharisees obsessed over the Law. You don't understand why the crowd wanted a military Messiah. You don't understand the powder keg Jesus stepped into.

The Living Word Brought It All Into One Volume
For decades, the only way to read the complete Ethiopian canon in English was to buy six or seven separate books — most of them academic editions priced for seminary libraries, none of them in plain modern English.
The Living Word changed that. The Most Complete Ethiopian Bible contains all 88 books in one premium paperback edition, printed large for comfortable reading, with a QR code inside that unlocks the entire digital companion library:
→ 1,412 digital apocrypha, pseudepigrapha, and ancient texts
→ 100 hours of audiobook for the entire canon
→ 220 hours of video lessons for deeper study
→ The Master Apocrypha Collection, including Enoch, Jubilees, Maccabees, Sirach, Wisdom of Solomon, and the Ascension of Isaiah
→ Free shipping in the US, 90-day money-back guarantee
Your First Year With the Complete Canon
What 15,000+ believers say their reading journey actually looks like
How It Compares to Your Current Bible
The simple side-by-side most readers want to see first.
What Readers Are Saying
"I absolutely love it. After years of reading my Bible and feeling like something was missing, I finally discovered that we are supposed to have 88 books from God's word, not the 66 we've been given. I highly encourage every Christian out there to buy a copy of the Ethiopian Bible if you don't have one already."
Sara M. Verified Buyer
"I've been reading from this Bible since early last year, and I can honestly say it has made all the difference in my faith. Passages I had read a hundred times suddenly made sense in a way they never did before. If you're on the fence, just get it. You won't regret it."
John T. Verified Buyer
"This is wild. I grew up only knowing the regular 66-book Bible and had no idea how much was missing. The printed book feels solid and the digital library blew my mind. I spent the first night reading Enoch and Jubilees on my phone and then switched to the audiobook while cooking."
Sofia R. Verified Buyer
"My husband and I sit down together in the evenings, go through books we never even knew existed, and have the deepest conversations about God's word that we've ever had. It's brought us closer to each other and closer to God at the same time."
Brittany R. Verified Buyer
"I was a KJV reader for as long as I can remember. The day I switched to the Ethiopian Bible was the day everything changed."
Anna L. Verified Buyer
The 90-Day "Read the Truth" Guarantee
Open it. Read it. Compare it to your current Bible. If within 90 days you don't believe this is the most complete scripture you've ever held, return it for a full refund. No questions. No hassle. We'd rather you hold the truth than hold our book.

Claim Your Copy Today
You'll receive the full premium paperback Ethiopian Bible plus everything below — free, included, with no surprise charges:
Frequently Asked Questions
Is the Ethiopian Bible legitimate?
Yes. The Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church has preserved this 88-book canon since the 4th century — one of the oldest unbroken Christian traditions on earth. It contains many of the same books later confirmed by the 1947 Dead Sea Scrolls discovery, which predate every Western manuscript by over a thousand years. These aren't new books. They're the original books that were quietly removed from Western Bibles centuries ago.
Is this a Christian Bible?
Yes. The Ethiopian Bible is fully Christian. It comes from the Ethiopian Orthodox Church, established in the 4th century — within decades of Christianity itself. It contains all 66 books in your current Bible, plus the 22 additional canonical books that were removed by later Western publishing decisions.
Can I get this on Amazon?
No. We tried. Amazon rejected our listing. We're the only non-Ethiopian publisher with the rights to print the complete 88-book canon in this edition, so we sell direct from our website. That's also why every order ships with a 90-day money-back guarantee — we want you to actually hold it before you decide.
Is the text easy to read?
Yes. Every page is printed in clear, comfortable large print — the kind you can actually read without squinting or holding the book at arm's length. The book also lays flat, has thick smooth pages, and includes illustrated sections for visual context.
What's included with my order?
The full premium paperback Ethiopian Bible containing all 88 canonical books, plus four free digital gifts unlocked via a QR code inside the book: 100 hours of audiobook, 220 hours of video lessons, 1,412 digital apocrypha and ancient texts, and a companion e-book edition. Total free-gift value: $146. Free USA shipping. 90-day money-back guarantee. Dispatched in 1–2 business days.
What if I don't like it?
Return it within 90 days for a full refund. No questions. No hassle. We're not interested in keeping money from anyone who doesn't believe in what we're sending.