How much does Matthew Henry Bible Commentary earn?
iOS app
from Oleg Shukalovich
· Food & Drink
ML forecast★ 4.9 · 11K→ StableFreemium
~1.2K/mo
ML revenue forecast.
Calibrated against 2020 apps in this category.
Confidence band
±15%
High — many comparable apps with verified data
At a glance
Earns 1.81× more than the category median (642/mo).
Ranks #779 of 2,020 in Food & Drink (top 38.6% by revenue).
Launched Apr 24, 2015 · last updated Jun 10, 2025.
24 months of snapshot history tracked.
What the app looks like
Live screenshots from the App Store, captured by our snapshot worker. Tap any image to enlarge.
Matthew Henry Bible Commentary's revenue trajectory
Forecast revenue from snapshot history. Last 24 months.
Where Matthew Henry Bible Commentary sits in Food & Drink
Revenue distribution of 2020 comparable apps. Matthew Henry Bible Commentary highlighted.
Matthew Henry Bible Commentary vs comparable apps
Revenue trajectory side-by-side. Bold = Matthew Henry Bible Commentary, ghosted = peers.
App spec
Version
5.3
Last update
Jun 10, 2025
Launched
Apr 24, 2015
Min OS
15.0
Rating
4+
Price
Free
Monetization
Freemium
Languages
EN, FR, PT, ES
What Matthew Henry Bible Commentary actually does (from App Store listing)
Matthew Henry Complete Commentary on the Whole Bible
Originally written in 1706, Matthew Henry's six volume Complete Commentary provides an exhaustive look at every verse in the Bible.
Matthew Henry's well-known six-volume Exposition of the Old and New Testaments (1708–1710) or Complete Commentary, provides an exhaustive verse by verse study of the Bible. covering the whole of the Old Testament, and the Gospels and Acts in the New Testament. After the author's death, the work was finished (Roman…
Matthew Henry Complete Commentary on the Whole Bible Originally written in 1706, Matthew Henry's six volume Complete Commentary provides an exhaustive look at every verse in the Bible. Matthew Henry's well-known six-volume Exposition of the Old and New Testaments (1708–1710) or Complete Commentary, provides an exhaustive verse by verse study of the Bible. covering the whole of the Old Testament, and the Gospels and Acts in the New Testament. After the author's death, the work was finished (Romans through Revelation) by thirteen other nonconformist ministers, partly based upon notes taken by Henry's hearers, and edited by George Burder and John Hughes in 1811. Henry's commentaries are primarily exegetical, dealing with the scripture text as presented, with his prime intention being explanation, for practical and devotional purposes. While not being a work of textual research, for which Henry recommended Matthew Poole's Synopsis Criticorum, Henry's Exposition gives the result of a critical account of the original as of his time, with practical application. It was considered sensible and stylish, a commentary for devotional purposes. Famous evangelical Protestant preachers such as George Whitefield and Charles Spurgeon used and heartily commended the work, with Whitefield reading it through four times - the last time on his knees. Spurgeon stated, "Every minister ought to read it entirely and carefully through once at least." Henry's reputation rests upon his renowned commentary, An Exposition of the Old and New Testaments (1708-10, known also as Matthew Henry's Commentary on the Whole Bible). He lived to complete it only as far as to the end of the Acts, but after his death other like-minded authors prepared the remainder from Henry's manuscripts. This work was long celebrated as the best English commentary for devotional purposes and the expanded edition was initially published in 1896. Instead of critical exposition, Henry focuses on practical suggestion, and his commentaries contains rich stores of truths.
🆕 What's new · v5.3
Bug fixes and performance improvements
Comparable iOS apps
The five apps in Food & Drink with the closest revenue to Matthew Henry Bible Commentary. Click any to see its detail page.
Each forecast combines App Store rating, ratings count, monetisation model, pricing tier, IAP signals and ad-supported flag.
The base estimate is then multiplied by a per-category scaling factor learned from apps with founder-verified MRR.
Every number on this page comes from public APIs and bumetric's own snapshot history.
Full methodology covers input variables, accuracy bands per category and how we treat apps without comparable anchors.
See also the live data on Matthew Henry Bible Commentary's tracker page for current rating, reviews and snapshot timeline.
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