Can You Write in a Cambridge Clarion?

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I’ve always been avid Bible marker but I haven’t had the courage to mark up my Cambridge Clarion. I was afraid of bleed-through. I’ve also had several readers ask about this, so I know I’m not the only one. Well, Christopher Lewis marked in his and I have to say that I’m impressed.

Here’s what Christopher had to say about writing in his KJV Clarion:

I use the Micron 01 and a Zebrite medium bible highlighter. The pen has no more bleed through than the type inside of the clarion. The highlighter does a great job. The paper in the Clarion is way better than most give it credit for. I have had some curling issues, but not enough to bother me. I wouldn’t recommend using anything other than bible pens or highlighters though, but with the proper pens, it really holds up well. I will also add that a little bleed through doesn’t bother me as long as it doesn’t interrupt the reading. I use this bible also in Sunday School at church. I find that marking in it has helped me tremendously with finding passages that were tough to find originally because of the paragraph format. It has almost turned the Clarion into a scripture map.

Here’re his photos, showing both sides of the page:

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Thanks for sharing Christopher.

Click here to see my review of the Cambridge Clarion in KJV.

About The Author

Lucinda Brown

Homemaker, Pastor's Wife, and former homeschooler (my kids graduated). I love to read (especially God's Word) but am a reluctant writer. Besides reading I enjoy cooking, gardening, and a large variety of crafts. I don't consider myself an expert at any craft and am always finding new crafts and art mediums I want to try.

24 Comments

  1. Christopher Lewis

    Thanks for the post. I hope this encourages others to actively write in their bibles. The Word is alive, an writing in it makes me an active part of it. I want to let you know that I very much appreciate your site Randy.

    Reply
    • Randy Brown

      Thanks Christopher. I appreciate you being a part of it.

    • Nate

      Mr. Lewis,
      I am an avid bible note taker as well. I was wondering if you find room enough to take notes in your clarion? Specifically I have a fair amount of notes in Hebrews 10 do you find room enough in the margins to take notes there?
      Thank You

    • Brian mOrgan

      Randy,
      Is there a way for you to connect me with Christopher? I am struggling with which binding option to purchase on the Clarion. He seems very happy with the calf split, but with the passing of time, I wanted to see how it is holding up. I really prefer black, but am hesitating spending the money on the goatskin. Calfskin is only brown.
      I am happy to provide my personal email if that is helpful.
      Thanks again!
      Brian

    • Randy A Brown

      I’ll try to connect with him. I’ve used my calfsplit Concord and calfskin Clarion for several years. My Concord is starting to look worn where the Clarion still looks new. I think in the long run the calfskin will hold up better.

  2. Christopher Lewis

    Now I just need to decide whether my next one will be the goatskin or brown calf. I take care of 4 very young children so saving money is priority number one. So it may be a while.

    Reply
    • Randy Brown

      My daily reader is the brown calfskin. I like it because it’s easy to hold flat in one hand. The goatskin would be more floppy and harder to hold, but also softer and more elegant. It’s a tough choice.

    • Christopher Lewis

      I advise not to get the goatskin version. So far it is the one purchase that I completely regret. The calf split with the paste down binding is the way to go for this small bible. It opens up better and lasts a long time. Mine is still in great shape. I will admit that I gave it to a friend, but he reads it everyday and I get to see it often. As far as doing a lot of notetaking, this is not thebible for that. There is room for notes but not for many notes.

    • Christopher Lewis

      I would advise buying the calf. My goatskin Clarion is the worst purchase Ive ever made

  3. Christopher Lewis

    If thats the case, then it sounds like the calfskin is up my alley. I love the way the split calf sits in my hand. Everything about this bible is done right. Cambridge hit it out of the park with the Clarion.

    Reply
  4. Jbn

    When the KJV Clarion first came out, I thought it wasn’t worth the paper it was printed on because of the distracting show-through. Now I’m wondering if Cambridge has changed the paper quality since then.

    I’m also wondering about this remark a reviewer made on Amazon:

    “The other disappointment was in the information in the combined concordance and encyclopedia type information in the back of the Bible. I was startled to read that the Apostle Peter did NOT write either of the two books attributed to him by name in the Bible itself. The commentator believes that the books were written by some guy who claimed to be the apostle Peter at a date when Peter would have been dead. If this were so, then the writer of these two Bible books would have lied about who he is and would have LIED ABOUT BEING AN EYE WITNESS TO HIS MAJESTY as he claimed in 2 Peter.”

    Can anyone verify this? Is this trash denying Peter as the author of his two books really in the Clarion?

    Reply
    • Randy Brown

      Here’s the entry you’re talking about:

    • Randy Brown

      Note, the asterisks for Catholic refers to another entry that says the term is used in NT letters that are addressed to the Church in general.

  5. norm

    I certainly don’t know, but everyone has a distinct writing style and the issue with the authorship over the various books of the Bible is not a new debate. I copied this short answer online, which might help clarify whatever statements might exist in the Clarion.
    “Based on his command of the Greek language and his familiarity with the Greek Septuagint (LXX), the author of 1 Peter may have been a Jew of the Hellenistic diaspora.
    On the other hand, Peter says in 5:12 “with the help of Silas, whom I regard as a faithful brother, I have written to you briefly”. Professional scribes such as Silas would have no trouble at all writing eloquent Greek.
    2 Peter
    More people have challenged 2 Peter as “authentic” than any other book of the New Testament. None of the early Fathers definitely quoted 2 Peter and it was not even mentioned in the second century.
    2 Peter has a different style of writing than 1 Peter, but the same literary style as Jude. Most of 2 Peter and Jude are parallel, and 15 of 25 verses in Jude actually appear in 2 Peter. So the author of 2 Peter is most probably not the same person as the author of 1 Peter, but may be the same as the author of Jude.

    Reply
    • norm

      *Excerpt taken from an article written by F.F. Bruce a Textual Critic who defended the reliability of the Canon of the N.T. http://www.bible-researcher.com/bruce1.html
      “One thing must be emphatically stated. The New Testament books did not become authoritative for the Church because they were formally included in a canonical list; on the contrary, the Church included them in her canon because she already regarded them as divinely inspired, recognising their innate worth and general apostolic authority, direct or indirect. The first ecclesiastical councils to classify the canonical books were both held in North Africa — at Hippo Regius in 393 and at Carthage in 397 — but what these councils did was not to impose something new upon the Christian communities but to codify what was already the general practice of those communities.”

  6. Christopher Lewis

    All I know is Jesus is Lord! All scripture is divinely inspired. I encourage you to not give any thought to debates over authorship and such. Any room for doubt will create more room. As far as the Clarion paper… I dont believe anything has changed. The typing bleed through is very easy to look past. I will admit that it bothered me at first, but after a short period I dont notice it anymore at all. I really cant speak highly enough about this bible

    Reply
  7. Don Denison

    Dear Randy and Friends:

    Those who have read my comments about marking a bible know that I do not do this. Others find it helpful, and I agree it can be. The problem for me is that I had marked up textbooks, many of them high in value, a bible, again high in value, only to go back years later and wonder what was wrong with me that I would mark a text as I had. Even worse, the notes and markings were prejudicial to a fresh reading of the text. What I was left with was a bible with notes, basically a biblical notebook that I had outgrown. For these reasons I have repented of marking up anything but cheap paperbacks. I don’t hold any disrespect for those who mark their bibles, I only state that it doesn’t work for me any longer.

    About the textual criticism resulting in questioning the authority of various books of the bible, I’m going to trust those who assembled the Holy Canon, they were closer to the sources and the history of the Word, and I am going to trust their judgement. Paul himself used a secretary for most of his writing, though at one juncture he commented about the large hand he used in writing it himself without a secretary. Paul obviously had trouble with his vision of some kind. Who is to know for a fact that his secretary did not modify his letters? This is highly unlikely, but is possible. If some one put together the writings and sayings of Peter to record his testimony, how is that materially different than what Paul was doing with a secretary? The answer is we from this distance can’t know. I will give my trust to those who assembled the Holy Canon, they were closer to the sources and had information that we can only guess at. The Lord would see that his word was preserved. Having faith in God is not a simple thing, it covers so many different situations. I will go with what we have and not worry about the details.

    Yours in Christ

    Don Denison

    Reply
    • Christopher Lewis

      Don, like most of you, I have a collection of bibles. There are some I will never mark in. I like to give them awaya to people when there is a need, so I like to pass them on with clean pages. But there are some I love to write in. The reason I want another Clarion is for the purpose of keeping it free from marks. Also, if I end up affording a Longprimer, I will never mark the text in it. I guess for me, it just depends on what bible it is. I will agree that I have looked back on some older bibles and wondered why I wrote certain things.

  8. Don Denison

    Dear Christopher:

    Please don’t let me discourage you from marking up your bible, if it works for you go ahead. I for my own reasons have repented of this practice, but if you find it valuable to you, by all means mark away. I shun bibles with included commentary for the same reason that I do not mark up my own. I use the best reference bible I can find, (The Westminister Reference Bible by TBS) and as much as possible let the scripture make its own commentary. I can’t say that I never use included notes and commentary, only that I believe it is prejudicial to a clean reading of the text. Your study habits are probably different than mine, so I say to you please yourself, keep reading your bible, and God Bless You.

    Yours in Christ

    Don Denison

    Reply
  9. Nate

    Hello,
    Do you find ample room in your clarion for writing? Or can you only write the minimum. For example I like to write small introductions to the books of the bible at the beginning or end of a book. Is this possible with the clarion? I do a lot of mission work in countries where iPhones and iPads cannot travel. I need a bible I can take notes in but still carry easily on flights.
    Thank you,
    Nathaniel

    Reply
    • Randy Brown

      Hi Nate. I’d say it’s minimal. There is a little room at the end of some books (See John and Acts here). Most books don’t have that much space at the end. On average it’s probably about an inch of space after the text. Some have as much as 3 or 4. The start of each book has a little space on both sides of the title and above the title, but it’s so small it would be difficult to get much in it. If you’re considering the KJV edition, it has book introductions in the back. You can see more information about it here: The Readers Companion

  10. Belinda

    I have just got brave and marked the last thin page in my brown Clarion. Sigma pens, bible hi-gliders waxy markers, yellow highlighter and derwent colour pencil
    Usually a yellow highlighter shows through the least of any wet highlighter, but this paper is so thin that the moisture stretched and buckled the paper and it doesn’t shrink back when it dries. That was a wedge wide line. A thin point line was ok but nearly invisible!
    The sigma pens do shine through a bit and are so fine that the different colours are not easy to discriminate.
    I quite liked the idea of the waxy highlighters but they do bleed over time and glow through the paper. Pencils are best but should be high quality and soft so you dont imprint the paper in an effort to transfer any colour. A subtle pastel effect

    I was generally disappointed.
    I bought my clarion early 2015 on Amazon in UK at a knock down price. If the paper has improved lately this may be an old ‘second’ which Cambridge let go cheap.

    Reply
    • Randy Brown

      Hi Belinda. Thanks for sharing. I haven’t been brave enough to mark in mine. To my knowledge they haven’t changed the paper. It sounds like you got a good deal.

  11. Fernando

    I mark my Clarion using a black Micron 005. My experience is the same as the author’s although I don’t use a highlighter. It works very well for me.

    Reply

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