This degree essay highlights the transformations in the personal and group identity of readers who engage a specific biblical text, as well as the interpretations of other communities of the same text. The investigation had as base the empirical materiel generated in the process of Intercultural Reading of the Bible of John 20, 1-18 of four communities of the Resurrection Parrish in Bogota, Colombia. The analysis was made in two moments of the process: the spontaneous reading to the text made by each community and the reading made for interpretation purposes by a group outside Colombia. The reading was guided by the appropriation hermeneutics and the empirical hermeneutic. Data management was made based on the Grounded Theory of Anselm Strauss and Barney Glaser with the assistance of the data management software, Atlas Ti. The work has 4 chapters: the first one is about the empirical data obtained from the reports analysed on the identity of the Colombian communities given their eclessial and lay character, the second is the theological thoughts which have arisen from the first chapter, the third is about the image of God that the Colombian communities have and His daily action among them, the fourth is the theological reflexion on the third chapter.