Bible Editions

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Merida

Active member
Oct 26, 2018
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#21
The NLT is a very loose and biased translation, which makes it a poor choice for study. People who use it often come off looking like idiots in debates.
I don't really want to debate :)
So hopefully I don't have to worry about looking like an idiot.
 

Davenport

Active member
Oct 22, 2018
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#22
I had no idea about the corn issue. lol
Aside from words that look strange, the King James has many words which you think you know, but they had very different meanings back in 1611.

Many people that encourage others to read the King James don't understand it as well as they think they do. I've seem them spam this phrase from the King James many times, "Study to shew thyself approved unto God" thinking the verse means to study something. "Study" means to work hard.
 

Davenport

Active member
Oct 22, 2018
155
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#23
The NLT frequent changes word and adds words for no readily apparent reason. For example, when Jesus tells the parable of the Good Samaritan (Samaritans aren't Jewish), the NLT says, “A Jewish man was traveling from Jerusalem down to Jericho..." The problem is, no transcript on the planet identifies the traveler as Jewish. The NLT translators just pulled out of their b*tts that the man is Jewish. So, if you study the NLT, you'll be thinking the Bible says things it just plain doesn't.
 

lightbearer

Senior Member
Jun 17, 2017
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HBG. Pa. USA
#24
I'm so confused on what would be the best edition to buy as a gift for someone else, and what the best edition is for study. Any suggestions would be appreciated. Thanks, from a Bible newbie.
Hello Merida!
It is personal. One should want the best translation possible. Are you aware that there are two separated Greek text to which our translations are translated from?
 

trofimus

Senior Member
Aug 17, 2015
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#25
Hello everyone, I'm new and this is my first forum thread. I'm not new to Christianity, but I'm fairly new to the Bible. I read it once years ago, but didn't really read it well, to be honest. I'm re-reading it, but am curious as to what the real differences are between the types of Bibles available, and what most people choose? I was on a Christian store website looking to purchase a new Bible for my Mom, and I'm so confused on what would be the best edition to buy as a gift for someone else, and what the best edition is for study. Any suggestions would be appreciated. Thanks, from a Bible newbie.
Hi, I am not a native English speaker, so be tolerant to my English.

The Old Testament

a) canon
There are various canons used in Christianity. Oldest ones have more books (used by the RCC, by the Orthodox Church), protestants used them too, but in 19th century they decided took them out of the Bible). Jews had their canon closed in the 1st century, officially. Also the Palestinian canon differs from other books used by Jews elsewhere.
Canon of the Old Testament is a complex and unclear situation, today.

b) textual variations
There are several textual lines for the Old Testament. Most protestant Bibles use the Masoretic text. Its a text edited and "cleaned" by Jews, its oldest copy is from the 9th century.
Older churches and the first church used the Greek Septuagint, which is a Greek translation of Hebrew Scriptures from 300 BC. The oldest copy we have is from the 4th century AD.
There are also discovered scrolls from the Dead Sea, this scrolls witness that in the first century, there were several textual variations used together and it seems that the church chosed one and the Jews chosed another, a less Christ-like text.

Also, the Old Testament is so ancient, that we have no chance to be certain what the original text said in various places, sometimes whole books differ. But it is not as huge problem as it seems, when we consider the fact that the Old testament was given to Israel, not to us. We should use it mainly as a historical witness about our Lord, not as something where we must take every sentence as we have it in our specific edition of the Bible.

The New Testament
a) canon
The canon of the New Testament is quite clear, the situation here is much better than with the Old Testament. First chuch did not have any type of canon and even not the idea of it. But when various heretics and various heretical writings appeared, the church declared the 27 books we have today as the most trustworthy and apostolic. All Christian churches have the same canon of the New Testament.

b) textual variations
Situation is again much better than with the Old Testament, simply because the New Testament is a thousand years younger. We have very old scraps not more than few decades away from the events. The oldest complete texts of the New Testament are from the 3rd, 4th century AD.
It must be said though, that 1,500 years of hand copying also created several textual variants of the New Testament. These variants are many, but mostly insignificant (like wording or even not translatable things as punctuations).
There are some places, though, where changes the meaning of the text. But no Christian basic doctrine depends on this places.
Two most spread variations today are:
The majority text
- its an edition kept mainly by the Eastern Orthodox churches (who use the Greek language from the beginning), its a clean, traditional text, good for liturgical purposes;
The minority text
- ancient text of the New Testament from outside the byzantine empire, it was a dominant textual variant for the first Chuch until the islam came and the copy making stopped; because the eastern byzantine empire was not conqured by muslims, their textual variant became majority in time.

Then there is also so called Textus Receptus, an edition made by the RCC priest Erasmus. This is based on just few manuscripts that were accessible in Europe in the 16th century, but most European reformation translations are based on this (as is the KJV), so few people today believe that this text is somehow perfect. And manytimes want to call it the majority text, but it is not.

Translation methods:
a) literal translation
Translation commiteee will translate word for word the text literally. Bad for reading, may be misleading and produce misunderstandings. But generally faithfull to the underlying text.

b) dynamic translation
Translators will translate though with thought. That means they do not want to give you words of the underlying text, but the meaning of it in your cultural understanding and in your language.

c) paraphrase
Very free translations, where a translator just give you a message, and his work with the text is very subjective. Most Christians do not recommend this.

d) underlying text
Most protestant Bibles use the Masoretic text for the Old Testament fixed in some uncertain or too unchristian places with the Septuagint reading. Non-protestant Bibles use the Septuagint or the Latin Vulgate with some corrections from the Masoretic text.

For the New testament, most today's Bibles use the minority text as presented in the Nestle Aland compilation. Older, reformation Bibles, used some edition of the Erasmus compilation.
 

John146

Senior Member
Jan 13, 2016
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#26
My friend, please follow this thread and see where the angst, acrimony, hatred comes from. Those of us who prefer modern versions are okay with others reading the King James Bible. We see it as a version of God's word.

However, those who hold to the King James Bible only stance will not tolerate others reading anything other than the King James Bible. All others are corrupted and can not save anyone.

Its liberal ideology at its finest. Its either agree with them or you are an idiot.
Can more than one version be the word of God? They all contain different words with different meanings and even contain different truths. God is not the author of confusion. The same God who gave us His words to live by, did He not also preserve them for us today to live by? If so, where are they? If not, why should we read any so called version of the bible?

Do you have a version you hold to be the holy, pure words of God without error?
 
Oct 25, 2018
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#27
Can more than one version be the word of God? They all contain different words with different meanings and even contain different truths. God is not the author of confusion. The same God who gave us His words to live by, did He not also preserve them for us today to live by? If so, where are they? If not, why should we read any so called version of the bible?

Do you have a version you hold to be the holy, pure words of God without error?
My friend, any bible I hold in my hands, I cherish it. What is your basis for believing the King James Bible as the only viable word of God?
 

John146

Senior Member
Jan 13, 2016
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#28
Isn't if funny? You come here is a newbie and asked for the best edition for study, and then a battle follows of people arguing over which translation is best.

Without intent of entering the circus, you should choose the ESV. The ESV is easy to read is and more faithful to the original meaning than most modern translations.

The King James Bible uses outdated language which can be both difficult to read and misleading. For example, if you read the word "corn", you think, oh, the thing that you make popcorn out of. That's not what corn meant when the King James was written. The translators of the King James had never heard of corn. Yet, the word "corn" is in the King James over 100 times.
You should probably let her know that there are many passages of truth left out of the ESV bible that she will miss out on if she decides to use it.
 

John146

Senior Member
Jan 13, 2016
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#29
My friend, any bible I hold in my hands, I cherish it. What is your basis for believing the King James Bible as the only viable word of God?
It has never been proven to be false. I have studied where it came from compared to the manuscripts that all new versions use.
 
Oct 25, 2018
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#30
It has never been proven to be false. I have studied where it came from compared to the manuscripts that all new versions use.
Well, then explain how a Latin word employed by Jerome in the Latin Vulgate got inserted into the Hebrew's text in Isaiah 14. The Latin word for 'Lucifer' is Luciferum. A Latin word got inserted into a Hebrew text and you are fine with that.
 

John146

Senior Member
Jan 13, 2016
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#31
Well, then explain how a Latin word employed by Jerome in the Latin Vulgate got inserted into the Hebrew's text in Isaiah 14. The Latin word for 'Lucifer' is Luciferum. A Latin word got inserted into a Hebrew text and you are fine with that.
Does this passage depict Satan's fall? Who or what is the "day star" as depicted in the ESV?
 

trofimus

Senior Member
Aug 17, 2015
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#32
Well, then explain how a Latin word employed by Jerome in the Latin Vulgate got inserted into the Hebrew's text in Isaiah 14. The Latin word for 'Lucifer' is Luciferum. A Latin word got inserted into a Hebrew text and you are fine with that.
I am afraid you opened a battle here :) But why not, when they started it:

"...God shall take away his part out of the book of life, and out of the holy city, and from the things which are written in this book."
(Rev 22:19)


Erasmus did not have the Greek manuscripts for this part of the text, so he translated it from Latin and so created a reading that does not exist in Greek at all. Greek has "out of the tree of life".
 
Oct 25, 2018
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#33
It has never been proven to be false. I have studied where it came from compared to the manuscripts that all new versions use.
It has never been proven wrong? The hundreds, maybe thousands, maybe even millions of people who have died from being bitten by a poisonous snake during a snake-handling meeting would disagree with you, my friend.

“Go into the world. Go everywhere and announce the Message of God’s good news to one and all. Whoever believes and is baptized is saved; whoever refuses to believe is damned.

17-18 “These are some of the signs that will accompany believers: They will throw out demons in my name, they will speak in new tongues, they will take snakes in their hands, they will drink poison and not be hurt, they will lay hands on the sick and make them well.”(Mark 16:15-18)

Those who advocate snake-handling use this passage to support their belief. Jesus said "they will take snakes in their hands, they will drink poison and not be hurt." So, either this passage is false or Jesus lied, seeing they took snakes in their hands and died, when He said they would not be hurt.

The Church of Christ also uses this as 'proof' water baptism is necessary for salvation. No other place in the four gospels does Jesus add baptism as a necessity of salvation. Yet, the CoC and some Baptists, hold to this view based on this longer ending in Mark 16.
 
Oct 25, 2018
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#34
I am afraid you opened a battle here :) But why not, when they started it:

"...God shall take away his part out of the book of life, and out of the holy city, and from the things which are written in this book."
(Rev 22:19)


Erasmus did not have the Greek manuscripts for this part of the text, so he translated it from Latin and so created a reading that does not exist in Greek at all. Greek has "out of the tree of life".
I heard that from Dr. James White. Erasmus did not have access to Vaticanus, either. And Sinaiticus was not discovered to almost 250 years later. I heard Erasmus got it from a commentary on Revelation? That is what I am thinking.
 

John146

Senior Member
Jan 13, 2016
17,129
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#35
It has never been proven wrong? The hundreds, maybe thousands, maybe even millions of people who have died from being bitten by a poisonous snake during a snake-handling meeting would disagree with you, my friend.

“Go into the world. Go everywhere and announce the Message of God’s good news to one and all. Whoever believes and is baptized is saved; whoever refuses to believe is damned.

17-18 “These are some of the signs that will accompany believers: They will throw out demons in my name, they will speak in new tongues, they will take snakes in their hands, they will drink poison and not be hurt, they will lay hands on the sick and make them well.”(Mark 16:15-18)

Those who advocate snake-handling use this passage to support their belief. Jesus said "they will take snakes in their hands, they will drink poison and not be hurt." So, either this passage is false or Jesus lied, seeing they took snakes in their hands and died, when He said they would not be hurt.

The Church of Christ also uses this as 'proof' water baptism is necessary for salvation. No other place in the four gospels does Jesus add baptism as a necessity of salvation. Yet, the CoC and some Baptists, hold to this view based on this longer ending in Mark 16.
These people have false doctrinal beliefs. This is a poor argument. One can hold the words of God in their hands, read it, study it, and can still fall under false teachers. Ever read the book of Galatians?
 
Oct 25, 2018
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#36
These people have false doctrinal beliefs. This is a poor argument. One can hold the words of God in their hands, read it, study it, and can still fall under false teachers. Ever read the book of Galatians?
You are moving the target here. You are failing to address that which I posted and sidestepped it, my friend. Why not address it?

I know for a fact some Baptists use the longer ending of Mark 16 to prove baptism as a necessary to being saved. And so do the Church of Christ.
 

John146

Senior Member
Jan 13, 2016
17,129
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#37
You are moving the target here. You are failing to address that which I posted and sidestepped it, my friend. Why not address it?

I know for a fact some Baptists use the longer ending of Mark 16 to prove baptism as a necessary to being saved. And so do the Church of Christ.
Moving the target? I am simply stating that these different beliefs are not the fault of the words of God, but failure to heed the command to rightly divide the word of truth.
 

John146

Senior Member
Jan 13, 2016
17,129
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#38
You are moving the target here. You are failing to address that which I posted and sidestepped it, my friend. Why not address it?

I know for a fact some Baptists use the longer ending of Mark 16 to prove baptism as a necessary to being saved. And so do the Church of Christ.
Even if we had the "originals", there would be groups of so called believers using these "originals" and teaching false doctrines.
 
Oct 25, 2018
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#40
It has never been proven to be false. I have studied where it came from compared to the manuscripts that all new versions use.
If you compare the King James Bible to the manuscripts used to translate it into English, of course there is no difference. That would be like building a house using blueprints, and then comparing that house to the blueprints used in building it. That is circular reasoning you are using, my friend.

The manuscripts used in the modern versions have been proven to have been written closer to the time of Jesus. Use manuscripts written in 325-350 AD or use manuscripts that were written between 1000-1200 AD? I will go with those written the earliest.