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#11
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Tim & People,
Thanks for the sound advice. I'll smile and say I'm telling the truth with grace the next time I have to say some one is a liar. Atlas |
#12
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Tim,
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That is a very valid point now that you bring it up. Thanks. We really need to make a 100% FULL LIST. I know there are a few other Bibles out there. There are just so many it's just hard to keep up. Like the Gay and Lesbian Bible for example. http://gayandlesbianbible.com/ Quote:
I know you guys are as moved as I am that the Gays and Lesbians now have a Bible that they can understand. Praise the Lord!!!!!! Atlas Last edited by atlas; 09-25-2008 at 07:21 PM. |
#13
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Vulgate-based, especially Rheims NT and the Rheims-Challoner revision and there was also Nary and Witham way back, possible list additions. Early Peshitta NT translations were Murdock and Etheridge, the latter looks like it is not on the list. There may be some English NT editions using texts from Griesbach or Alford or Lachmann or Tischendorf or others that are mixed texts, with influences other than the TR. Definitely Alford anyway. And a number of the versions above are OT only. For OT there are some omitted (Judaica Press, Soncino, Living Torah-Living Nach, another recent JPS revision, all leaving aside Pentateuch-only) although in a sense the OT-only could be its own section. Moving forward to more recent, on the Majority Text translations the list has the EMTV, there may be also the ACV and WEB. On the Peshitta add Paul Younan's translation on the web, Janet Magiera (Aramaic Peshitta New Testament Translation) and the AEINT (an Interlinear - the Aramaic English Interlinear New Testament) with was used for the HRV (Hebrew Roots Version) plagiarism. Sacred name versions are lightly represented, they have their own sub-culture of Bible revisions. Harmonies are understandably also omitted. And smaller independent works (publishing or web-publishing) are very likely to be missing, even if the translator felt they would change the world. One section needing more info are the entries like "Holy Bible 1797.." since they should have a name if they are not KJB. e.g. 1876 is likely Julia Smith who did her own translation. Some others could possibly be KJB commentary editions, as done by Adam Clarke and others, and if so they would not be separate translations or revisions, unless the text was changed significantly as done by Webster. Maybe there are some other KJB-update versions that could be added. Incidentally the TR-based NT versions on the list do include Youngs, the NKJV and the Jay Green editions like the MKJV and the Deuel editions like the KJ21. Their revision is the "Millenium Bible" different from the George Wallace New Millenium Bible listed. And there may be an Orthodox-based addition or two to consider with a close-to-TR text base. Anyone looking to expand the NT list could work with the following web-lists (have not checked if the Innvista based are the same) maybe Atlas could indicate which ones he has referenced. http://www.tyndale.cam.ac.uk/Scriptures/index.htm English Bible Translations - Tyndale from Innvista http://www.tyndale.cam.ac.uk/Scriptures/more.htm Other English Versions - Tyndale from Innvista http://www.innvista.com/culture/reli...ons/nindex.htm New Testament http://www.innvista.com/culture/reli...ns/onindex.htm Both Testaments English Versions - Innvista http://bibles.wikidot.com/indexpage List of English Translations - Internet Bible Catalog http://www.bible-researcher.com/versbib10.html Twentieth Century English Versions - Michael Marlowe Somebody really industrious could go to spreadsheet mode, where you would indicate name, date, OT or NT or whatever, source-text, translator, notes, etc. Just a thought, not a recommendation . Shalom, Steven Last edited by Steven Avery; 09-26-2008 at 04:40 AM. |
#14
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I think I personally will.........pass on that one
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#15
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#16
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Lest anyone embark on a venture to reinvent the wheel, a similar work has already been done, albeit it doesn't include the most recent "versions."
A Brief History of English Bible Translations |
#17
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Uh, oh. That book was written by one of those narrow-minded heretical KJBOs. Can we trust it not to be slanted with distortions and biases?
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#18
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Tim,
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Atlas |
#19
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New List Of Bibles
1.King James Bible
----END OF LIST---- |
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