Spirituality, New Age & Alternative Beliefs › Religion
The Great Book of Bible Verses, Prayers & Decrees Review 2026: Does It Work?
Worth $6 for someone who wants a single, ready-made pdf: A $6 collection of Bible verses, prayers, and audiobooks that delivers what's promised, but the $125-value framing is pure marketing math. Skip it if you're comfortable searching biblegateway.com or a free bible app.
You want practice, not catechism.
— Iris Marlowe, Reiki Level III (2014) · Tarot reader, 12 yrs · 60+ programs tested
Fair place to start. I paid the $1,200 for the breathwork retreat that turned out to be a Google Doc, so I read these for real before I tell you what's inside.
Reading the receipts
Three observable signals. Each one updates what's reasonable to believe — nothing more.
- Market traffic Gravity 0.4
Effectively dormant. Almost nobody is making consistent sales right now. The offer is on the marketplace but the funnel is quiet.
- Vendor split $6.14 · 75%
Vendor keeps a thin margin (75% to the affiliate). They're optimizing for affiliate enrollment over per-customer profit. The work might still be good — the math is just calibrated for scale.
Bottom line
A $6 collection of Bible verses, prayers, and audiobooks that delivers what's promised, but the $125-value framing is pure marketing math. Worth it only if you want the convenience of a single download.
Affiliate link — we earn a commission if you buy. How links work.
What works
- 60-day ClickBank refund window is real — you can get your $6 back if the PDF isn't useful
- At $6, the price is low enough that the risk is minimal even without a refund
- The audiobook files are standard MP3s that play on any device, no proprietary app required
- The prayer journal template is a nice touch if you actually print and use it
- No upsells surfaced at checkout on the date reviewed — one payment, one download
Where it fails
- The $125 'value' claim is fabricated marketing math; the actual content is worth about what you pay
- The sales page says $9.99 but the ClickBank checkout price is $6 — the discrepancy is a trust erosion
- All Bible verses and prayers are in the public domain; you're paying for curation, not content
- The four Gospel audiobooks are free Librivox-style recordings you can find on YouTube in five minutes
- The 'healing' framing is generic — the verses aren't annotated or contextualized, just listed
Best for
- Someone who wants a single, ready-made PDF of healing-themed Bible verses and prayers instead of searching online
- Buyers who will use the refund window — download, read it in an afternoon, decide if it's worth keeping
- Anyone who specifically wants the four included Gospel audiobooks and treats the PDF as a bonus
Avoid if
- You're comfortable searching BibleGateway.com or a free Bible app for the same verses
- You expect original commentary, study notes, or anything beyond a verse list
- The hypey '$125 value' language makes you distrust the product before you even open it
What The Great Book Of Bible Verses, Prayers & Decrees is, in one sentence.
A $6 digital bundle of healing-themed Bible verses, prayers, spoken decrees, and four public-domain Gospel audiobooks, sold through ClickBank with a 60-day refund window.
The marketing calls it a $125 Healing Bundle. The actual files are a curated PDF and some MP3s. The gap between those two descriptions is the only thing you need to understand before you click.
What you actually get
Five digital items, none of them original content:
- The main PDF. A collection of Bible verses and prayers organized around healing and restoration. No commentary, no study notes, no theological framework — just the verses and prayers laid out in sequence. If you’ve ever copied verses into a Word document for personal use, you’ve made something similar.
- The decree guide. A separate short PDF with spoken declarations meant to be read aloud. These are affirmations rooted in scripture, not new revelation. Useful if you’re into that practice, skippable if you’re not.
- Four Gospel audiobook MP3s. Public domain recordings of the Gospels. These are the kind of files you’d find on Librivox or a free Bible app. They play fine, but there’s nothing exclusive about them.
- A printable prayer journal template. A one-page fill-in-the-blank sheet. This is actually the most practical piece — if you print it and use it, you’re getting something the other free resources don’t package as neatly.
- No physical products, no membership area, no ongoing content. One download link, one set of files, no recurring charges.
How the marketing oversells
The vendor’s affiliate page describes this as a “$125 Healing Bundle” that “prints money” and “converts cold traffic like crazy.” That’s affiliate-recruitment language, not a product description. The actual product is a $6 PDF bundle that would cost about $6 to compile yourself if you value your time at zero.
Two specific claims to flag:
“$125 value.” This number is fabricated. There is no breakdown of how the content adds up to $125. The Bible verses are free, the prayers are free, the audiobooks are free, and the journal template is a single page. The only thing you’re buying is the convenience of not assembling it yourself.
The price discrepancy. The sales page prominently displays $9.99, but the ClickBank checkout price is $6. This isn’t a bait-and-switch — you pay less than advertised — but it’s a trust erosion. If the vendor can’t keep the price straight on their own sales page, what else is inconsistent?
What it costs and how the refund works
$6 one-time, no recurring billing surfaced at checkout on the date reviewed. The 60-day refund window is standard ClickBank policy: email ClickBank support with your order ID and the $6 comes back in 3–7 business days. The vendor can’t slow-walk you.
At $6, the refund window is almost irrelevant — you’re risking less than a fast-food lunch. But the fact that the refund exists means you can download the files, read them in an afternoon, and decide if they’re worth keeping.
Who should buy, who should skip
Buy this if you want a single, neatly packaged PDF of healing-themed Bible verses and prayers, and you’d rather pay $6 than spend an hour compiling the same thing yourself. The audiobooks are a nice bonus if you don’t already have a free Bible app.
Skip this if you’re comfortable using BibleGateway, YouVersion, or any free Bible website. The verses are identical. The prayers are generic. The audiobooks are on YouTube. You’re not missing anything you can’t assemble in an afternoon with a search engine.
The honest read
This is a $6 convenience product dressed up as a $125 spiritual resource. The content is real — you get the verses, the prayers, the decrees, the audiobooks — but it’s all available for free elsewhere. The marketing is pure affiliate hype, and the price discrepancy between the sales page and checkout doesn’t inspire confidence.
If you buy it, you’ll get what you paid for: a curated PDF and some MP3s. If you refund it, you’ll lose nothing. The only real question is whether the convenience is worth $6 to you. For most readers, a free Bible app and a quick Google search will get you the same result without the marketing noise.
— House Editor
Here's what I'd actually do
If you've read every "manifest your timeline" thread and you want to know if any of these actually move the body:
The Great Book of Bible Verses, Prayers & Decrees Review 2026: Does It Work? has a real practice or two buried inside packaging I wouldn't have chosen. The refund window is your insurance — open it, listen carefully, decide on day five.
Don't buy this if: Do not buy this expecting the sales page to be honest about what's inside. The marketing is louder than the work.
— Iris Marlowe
Questions, briefly answered
FAQ
Is The Great Book Of Bible Verses, Prayers & Decrees a scam?
No. You get the PDF and MP3s you paid for. The product exists and the download works. The issue isn't existence — it's that the marketing inflates the value far beyond what a $6 curated collection of free material is worth.
What exactly do I get for $6?
A PDF of healing-themed Bible verses and prayers, a separate decree guide, four Gospel audiobook MP3s, and a printable prayer journal template. Everything is digital. There is no physical book, no coaching, and no community access.
Is the 60-day refund real?
Yes. ClickBank processes refunds for all products, including this one. Email ClickBank support with your order ID within 60 days and you'll get your $6 back. The vendor can't block it.
Why does the sales page say $9.99 but the checkout says $6?
The vendor likely runs split-price tests or uses a discount that drops the price at checkout. Either way, you'll pay $6. The higher number on the sales page is there to make the $6 feel like a deal.
Sources
- Vendor sales page — ClickBank-listed sales page (active as of catalog import)
How this works
This isn't sponsored. I don't take money from vendors. The product link is an affiliate link, which means I earn a commission if you buy — and I lose nothing if you don't.
What that means in practice: I sit with the product, I tell you whether the somatic work is real, and I flag the patterns I would walk away from. The refund window is real. The rating is what I'd tell a friend after a long phone call.
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