Versification is slightly different in some Bibles.
The chapters and verses will always follow the first Bible or Commentary listed, which is displayed in bold.
This is important because different versions occasionally have different divisions of chapters and verses. See more here . For example, the last verse in the Old Testament is Malachi 4:6 in English but it is 3:24 in Hebrew because the English starts a new chapter at 3.19.
These kinds of differences may effect the display when different kinds of versions appear together as columns, interleaved, interlinear, searches.
The Bible was first divided into chapters in the 13th century, and then divided into verses in the 16th century. Before that, people used to refer to a section by citing the first few words. For example instead of referring to “Psalm 23”, they’d refer to “The Lord’s my shepherd”.
Remarkably, all Bibles are in complete agreement about almost all chapters and verses though there are many small differences. Most of the differences occur in the Psalms, for a few reasons:
Here is a complex example:
The verse “For you have delivered my soul from death…” (ESV Psalm 56:13) can have four different references.
All this mean that this same verse is: