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I have asked this before, but I am looking to possible purchase another Bible. I am wanting a Life Application Study Bible. So my version choices are limited I suppose. I am wondering which version you all use. The LASB choices I have narrowed it to, are NIV (2011), NKJV, or HCSB. Which do you all recommend out of these? I have heard and expressed the same sentiment before, that the NIV 2011 is gender neutral. The SBC condemned it, which has me concerned. Thoughts?
My home Church used to be very KJV only. Personally I found the language very difficult and for personal Bible study I used a NKJV. Then around 10 years ago I discovered the ESV and that's been my favourite ever since.
Like the KJV/NKJV, the translators have aimed to be as literal as possible to the original and have tried not to add personal interpretation.
I have a languages degree and so I understand different approaches to translation. The above Bible translations aim at literal translation. Others such as the NIV aim to translate the thought rather than the exact words, but I feel that requires interpretation. Others such as the Message are not really translations at all but rather paraphrase which definitely involves interpretation.
Personally I'd go for a literal translation and the ESV would be my preference. Incidentally, the ESV study Bible is a very balanced one in terms of notes exploring different positions on controversial topics.
I used the MKJV for a long time but then at Bible College I found a much better idea. I used a free PC bases Bible study tool called e-Sword (e-Sword: Bible Study for the PC) on my home computer. I now have 25 different Bibles with the option to compare them side by side to see the difference between any of them. The King James + version has Strong's Greek dictionary numbering system for every word in the King James Bible. This great reference allows you to see the original Greek language word meaning(s) It also has 25 Bible commentaries that are inter linked with the Bibles so when you are studying one verse just click on the "Commentaries" button and it will bring the commentaries up for the verse you are looking at. It has 14 Bible dictionaries which are also linked to the particular word you are investigating. This wonderful tool also has NASA satellite images of the middle east, the red sea, the Nile and many other great pictures. So much more in this FREE program. you can download it FREE at:I have asked this before, but I am looking to possible purchase another Bible. I am wanting a Life Application Study Bible. So my version choices are limited I suppose. I am wondering which version you all use. The LASB choices I have narrowed it to, are NIV (2011), NKJV, or HCSB. Which do you all recommend out of these? I have heard and expressed the same sentiment before, that the NIV 2011 is gender neutral. The SBC condemned it, which has me concerned. Thoughts?
I have asked this before, but I am looking to possible purchase another Bible. I am wanting a Life Application Study Bible. So my version choices are limited I suppose. I am wondering which version you all use. The LASB choices I have narrowed it to, are NIV (2011), NKJV, or HCSB. Which do you all recommend out of these? I have heard and expressed the same sentiment before, that the NIV 2011 is gender neutral. The SBC condemned it, which has me concerned. Thoughts?
I have asked this before, but I am looking to possible purchase another Bible. I am wanting a Life Application Study Bible. So my version choices are limited I suppose. I am wondering which version you all use. The LASB choices I have narrowed it to, are NIV (2011), NKJV, or HCSB. Which do you all recommend out of these? I have heard and expressed the same sentiment before, that the NIV 2011 is gender neutral. The SBC condemned it, which has me concerned. Thoughts?
What anyone should want is the most accurate word-for-word translation. Of those you mentioned the NKJV would best fit a word-for-word translation. The NIV is not a word-for-word but a "dynamic" translation where you get man made theology inserted. The NIV is so bad I do not even consider it to be God's word. The HCSB follows the NIV in veering away from a word-for-word translation inserting the doctrines of men.
The King James Bible came into being at the command of King James in 1604, it was completed in 1611 written in the King's English. The previous Bible used in the Church of England was written in Latin and the common people had no way of reading it for themselves. King Henry VIII was a Catholic who started the Church of England after being chastised by the Pope. The Church of England became a Catholic Church with the King as its head. There was great upheaval in the streets of England between the Catholics, Protestants and the Puritans. When King James died another king took the throne but died shortly afterwards. Mary the next in line was a devout Catholic and had more than 300 Protestants executed earning the name of "Bloody Mary" After Queen Mary died, her sister Elizabeth, a Protestant, became Queen the protestants were granted validity as a religion in England. When Elizabeth died there was no blood relative to pass the rule of England to. Searching historical records the King of Scotland was found to be a relative of King James and he was anointed the King of England. in 1604 King James ordered the brightest scholars of the Catholics, the Puritans and the Protestants to search the original writings, such as they had, and write a true translation of all the Greek, Latin, Hebrew and other manuscripts into the Kings English and all Church services would now be performed in the King's English instead of the traditional Latin which very few people understood. The King James Bible has the greatest history of any Bible in the English language. It was researched by Catholic, Protestant and Puritans and a conclusion was reached by Order of King James. Bibles were printed in the King's English, delivered to every church and chained to the pulpit. Suddenly the number of people who volunteered to clean the church grew tremendously.I have asked this before, but I am looking to possible purchase another Bible. I am wanting a Life Application Study Bible. So my version choices are limited I suppose. I am wondering which version you all use. The LASB choices I have narrowed it to, are NIV (2011), NKJV, or HCSB. Which do you all recommend out of these? I have heard and expressed the same sentiment before, that the NIV 2011 is gender neutral. The SBC condemned it, which has me concerned. Thoughts?
Dynamic translation means they did NOT do a word for word but inserted their own thoughts. Have you read the NIV preface? It discredits itself in the preface alone.Dynamic does not mean that theology has been inserted. It does mean that a phrase in English is sometimes needed to get closest to what is said in Hebrew or Greek. Some disagree with this approach because words are added that are not present in the original text. Also, most of the NIV and all translations are actually word for word, the 'dynamic' element comes in when meaning isn't conveyed by a single English word. Man-made theology can be inserted into word for word translations too by choosing words which convey a different meaning than what the text actually says.
Dynamic translation means they did NOT do a word for word but inserted their own thoughts. Have you read the NIV preface? It discredits itself in the preface alone.
To be fair, dynamic means they tried to stay as close to the original wording, but also made it easier to read in our modern language. When people read in Greek back then, you could say it was in a dynamic equivalence style because it was written in their everyday tongue. Which is what dynamic means.
I really suggest going modern - get a tablet. Then get the olive tree and kindle apps. It won't be much more $ and in the long could save you some $.
With the olive tree app I can switch between NIV, NLT, ESV, KJ21, ...,. I have over 20 bible versions now. I can set the font size as big or small as I want, highlight text in any color I want (or delete a highlight), tag sections, add notes, word search...,
Then you can add on additional tools such as Life Application commentary, Strongs numbers, Greek/Hebrew word meanings,
Quest study notes, First Century study notes, Archaeology study notes, .....
Every once in a while Olive tree offers a Bible version add on at reduced price or for free - so check the App Store deals weekly. They also have many free study tools. If something isn't free I check Amazon and download a free sample of the kindle version to check it out.
Then i can switch between bible versions with a finger swipe. Best part - all my notes, study tools (life application, quest, word study,..), tags, highlights, and comments are there in every version. If I see a bible different version I like - I don't have to worry about all my notes and tools - I just add it to my library. Bible versions and tools are also cheaper than paper copies.
Make sure you register your copy. Then you can have the app on your tablet, smartphone, computer, ... and all your notes sync across versions. Tablet breaks - download the app on a new on and everything is back.
Eyes getting old - make your font as big as you want.
I still have my paper bibles - more for comfort than use.
Now that I have my bible on my phone and tablet I find I read it more and actually use those study tools. I can pull out my tablet or phone and read it whenever I feel like it. I never wish I had my bible - because I always have it.