Finished. By hook or by crook. I started this maybe two years ago, maybe a little less. I read the NABRE for the Gospels; then I transitioned to listening for the rest of the New Testament. The entire Old Testament I listened to. For the Pentateuch (the first five books--the Jewish Torah), I listened to the English Standard Version. I learned that this is the more traditional and less politically correct version compared to the New Revised Standard Version (which I think I started with). Bible translation and history are rich and deep fields, and I spent many hours in the last two years reading about different translation philosophies. I read the NABRE for the New Testament because that's the Bible the Catholic Church uses (actually, the only version the Holy See approves for use by priests in church is the NAB (1970), but I could only find the Revised Edition online for purchase), which is the denomination closest to my heart.
The app I used was Bible.is. It's pretty good. Sometimes it's glitchy, actually, a lot of the time it's glitchy, but after occasionally futzing around with different apps I settled on Bible.is. The app didn't have the NABRE version of the New Testament (hence I used the English Standard Version). I would say I listened to three quarters, perhaps 7/10, of the Old Testament using the English Standard Version, before switching the King James Version. I've always remembered a bumper sticker I saw in college--"If It Ain't King James, It Ain't Bible." Funny, but it is true that many of the great phrases, terms, and lessons of Western Civilization come the KJV. Not to mention that outside of Shakespeare's corpus, the KJV is probably the most important work of writing in the English language.
I listened to the vast majority of the Bible while hiking in the foothills above Pasadena. I'll never forget the time I spent up there listening to the Bible. We're a lost generation, those of us who grew up in liberal, secular households and attended public education in the 80s and 90s. Adding insult to injury, I went to a Liberal Arts College, but instead of reading the Western Canon, I spent most of my time reading Foucault and Deleuze, then threw more gasoline of the trash heap of intellectual incoherence by going to graduate school and focusing on Critical Theory. Life's a journey and this is where I am currently--baptized in the Episcopalian Church last Easter Vigil and still being pulled by a tractor beam towards full communion with the Catholic Church.
Grappling with the Bible is something that takes place over the course of a lifetime. I'm only about two years in, but I'm glad I started the journey.
It's all here. It's the basis for our civilization in the West. Avoid the Bible at your own peril.