Bible chapters and verses as used in printed Bibles in modern times were not part of the original texts.
The chapter framework generally in use today grew from a 13th century English Catholic Cardinal’s system, and the verse framework from a 16th-century French publisher.
The 16th-century Russian Ostrog Bible, the pioneering print-published Bible in the Slavic Orthodox world, used the chapter framework but did not specify verses. So cross-referenced citations used chapter numbers but not verses, for example. However, it did use sections in the New Testament for liturgical use, similar to Gospel and Epistle books in the Orthodox Church today. Such sections were also found in Byzantine scriptural texts. This 2024 edition Orthodox Bible: The Holy Gospels uses the Ostrog Bible format with an English translation from the 16th-century Great Bible of Myles Coverdale, with the same typeface as the latter: https://a.co/d/1Vh0Mwc.
For details, see this informative article.
