Greg Linscott:That begs a related question- how do you dispose of a worn Bible (if you do at all)?
The only ones I've EVER seen tossed are cheap copies that have fallen apart or have been invaded by "bookworms", silverfish, etc. Many, MANY people have "family Bibles" that are generations old, and are used as journals to record family births, marriages, and deaths. I have such a Bible, and it's used ONLY as a journal. It's a leather-bound KJV, circa 1858, and it provides me with the names of some ancestors of whom I'd never heard of. I believe this is the "fate" of many an old Bible.
My pastor has several Bibles whose pages look like rainbows where he's used just about every available color of highlighter in them!(Different colors for different topics) About the only pages of text not marked are in lamentations & in the Song of Solomon, neither of which he says he's ever preached from. When he wears a Bible out from frequent use, it goes on his library shelf, He says he simply cannot throw away an "old friend" that's served him so well.
He "breaks in" a new Bible by using it for home study, and in preparing his sermons, but he places his notes & prompts in his "church" Bible, a leather-bound NKJV, using them for bookmarks as well as reminders.
The "type" Bible he prefers is a leather-bound copy made from sturdy materials so it lasts through mucho use, but becomes "broken in" for quick & easy access to any page.