Posted on 04/08/2017 8:07:59 AM PDT by madison10
My favorite Bible is a tie between the NRSV Catholic Edition and the Jerusalem Bible.
I once asked a Greek scholar if the Greek had a ‘high’ Greek, similar to the high English found in KJV. He said, “No”. The high English appeals to the flesh of many, but has no spiritual benefit.
Although it is not perfect, I like the KJV and have at least 20-30 different editions of it. I wish someone would produce a Catholic version of the KJV. The closest you can come to that now is the Cambridge editions that include the “Apocrypha”.
Peter Kreeft has also wanted a Catholic KJV for some time: http://www.newoxfordreview.org/article.jsp?did=0400-kreeft
Very wise (and biblical!) advice.
I have NEVER heard a fire and brimstone preacher (Phil Kidd, Lester Roloff, etc.) preach from anything BUT the KJV.
I was saved at the age of 33 in 1981 and I was rooted and grounded in the faith under KJV preaching.
My mind can NOT accept other words.
NIV is a translation, not a paraphrase
For reading large passages - say the Book of Romans - I prefer the NLT or the Holman. For closer study, I prefer the NASB. I also like Tyndale’s translation:
“And as Moses lift up the serpent in the wilderness, even so must the son of man be lift up, that none which believeth in him perish: but have eternal life.
God so loved the world, that he gave his only son for the intent, that none that believe in him, should perish: But should have everlasting life. For God sent not his son into the world, to condemn the world: But that the world through him, might be saved. He that believeth on him shall not be condemned. But he that believeth not, is condemned all ready, because he believeth not in the name of the only son of God.” - modern spelling
http://www.faithofgod.net/WTNT/john_3.html
The NIV is not a paraphrase.
I like the Dead Sea Scroll version.
:) The discovery of the Dead Sea Scrolls one of the best for Bible scholars.
People died getting the Bible into the hands of the common man, for that I am grateful.
You should learn how to translate it for yourself, that is the whole point. I mean, eveyr atheist I meet tells me the Bible has been translated and retranslated and who inows what is in it now, but then they make no effort to read original texts directly derived from the hebrew virtual word for word transcription.
The KjV is difficult to read because it is not English, but really Hebrew using english words.
I’ve alwayas found the JB Phillips version to be precise, easy to read.
If it is, then the znaiV is oneof the worst translations ever. It simply does not follow thenhebrew texts and even leaves some huge meanings aside that the KjV kept.
The difficulty with the Authorized Version (aka King James or KJV) is that most people educated after ~1970 haven’t learned to read Elizabethan English (as almost all of us whose education began earlier did by reading Shakespeare, poetry,etc.) or to use a prescriptive dictionary through which older meanings are readily discerned.
That said, the modicum of effort required to use the AV is almost always more than repaid by the richness of language and the sense of walking hand in hand with our forebears for whom it eas THE BIBLE.
I find most newer translations aesthetically flat and without impact. But, in fairness, when I was small, the VV was being replaced by the RSV and just preferred the sound of the AV. Newer translations even make the RSV sound decent.
What would the Jews have ever done without the Catholic Church preserving their own scriptures for them?
You’re welcome to point out the translation errors of the Hebrew and Aramaic Scriptures that the CC preserves. I’m not aware of any.
You’re in turn welcome to point out any failures among the Jewish people in preserving their own scripture themselves. It’s the height of arrogance to presume that your church was responsible.
Northrop Frye’s “The Great Code” is a marvelous argument for the continued respect for the KJV. The majesty of the text requires one to slow down and consider what is the true meaning of the verses. The glib modern versions are too easy to read.
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/318117.The_Great_Code
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