The Living Bible was well received in many
Evangelical circles. Youth-oriented
Protestant groups such as
Youth for Christ and
Young Life accepted it readily. In 1962
Billy Graham received a copy of
Living Letters – a paraphrase of the
New Testament epistles and the first portion of what later became
The Living Bible – while recuperating in a
hospital in
Hawaii. He was impressed with its easy readability, and he asked for permission to print 50,000 paperback copies of
Living Letters for use in his evangelistic crusades. Over the next year he distributed 600,000 copies of
Living Letters. There is also
The Catholic Living Bible, which only has an
imprimatur and
nihil obstat on the deuterocanonical text which are
deuterocanonical books listed after Revelation. The Catholic Living Bible does not use the word "paraphrased" on the front cover; but earlier editions may instead place the word on the title page, underneath which is written "A Thought-For-Thought Translation". The added words "A Thought-For-Thought Translation" in the subtitle of the title page are not unique to Catholic editions, they are also in the later printings of the Protestant editions, even though the Bible is a paraphrase.
The Living Bible was a best-seller in the early 1970s, largely due to the accessibility of its modern language, which made passages understandable to those with weak reading skills, or no previous background in Bible study.
The Living Bible was the best-selling book in the U.S. in 1972 and 1973. From the very beginning of its publication, Taylor had assigned the copyright to
Tyndale House Foundation, so all of the royalties from sales of
The Living Bible were given to charity. == Criticism ==