Archive for the ‘NASB,NIV,KJV’ Category

First KJV Bible

Friday, November 6, 2009
posted by Buying4Him

bibleVirtually every culture and religion has a set of rites that adolescents must go through before they are considered an adult by the elder members of the community. Growing up in a Christian household, this rite of passage included going through confirmation and receiving my first communion. At my church we also received a Bible to commemorate the ceremony.

I remember being nervous as I was forced to kneel in front of the entire congregation to receive the communion. Following this, I was presented with my own KJV Bible with my name inscribed in it. The ceremony had little impact on me, honestly, and seemed more important to my parents and family.

A Trusted Translation

Wednesday, October 7, 2009
posted by Buying4Him

 

king-james-version-bibleLeading up to the beginning of the 17th century, several English monarchs had commissioned translations of the Latin Bible, but the results had been murky and middling at best. It wasn’t until 1604 that King James I convened a special conference to have a new version drafted that would correct previous mistakes and make the content more clear and concise.

By 1611, the King James Version Bible was complete. To this day, Christians continue to read this version of the Bible. Many people find comfort and solace in its pages. The ancient parables add up to a moral guidebook that acts as a compass for believers to this day. Without the King James Bible and its clear, decisive language, the word of God wouldn’t have been understood by the masses to the extent that it is today.

New American Standard Bibles

Thursday, September 17, 2009
posted by Buying4Him

mychristiansupply-newamericanstandardbibles

The Bible was the first book to ever be mass produced by means of printing. Thus, it is also the oldest book ever written – The Gutenberg Bible. Since its original version, the Bible has taken on many new editions. Some even include and a workbook and reader’s guide. But the important factor to really focus on is that it’s the Bible’s popularity and an undying faith of the Christian religion that has caused such an expansion of followers.

One version in particular, the New American Standard Bibles, has emerged as a terrific source to study the word of God. Ultimately popular with prayer groups and Sunday school classes, this new bible has totally revamped the way we come to learn and understand religion. Just ask any devoted church-goer, and I bet they will have heard of this wonderfuly new religious tool of grace.

Spreading the Word of God Near and Far

Thursday, September 3, 2009
posted by Buying4Him

mychristiansupply-bibles

Last spring my church, The Sanctuary of Universal Life, organized a missionary project to help build clay huts for the families of who had lost loved ones to the deadly and vicious disease malaria. Our journey began in a small village outside the African Congo. Traveling only by bus or foot once we had reached our new continent of exploration, we journeyed through rainforests and deserts in an effort to reach out to as many shelter-less people as we could. After three weeks of hard labor and nearly sleepless nights we had built more than 85 huts from the ground up.

Once the strenuous work had been completed, we stayed an additional week to spread the word of God. During our twice-daily prayer sessions, all the villagers gathered around Pastor Boba Fett in awe of his pressed white robes and authoritatively squeaky voice. For hours on end they sat atop a tattered, burlap blanket and listened. Before parting ways with our newly beloved Christian pen pals and heading back to the land of the mighty, we granted their wish of a concrete wisdom of the Lord. And thus, we gave them bibles.

Translation Information about the New American Standard Bible

Thursday, June 4, 2009
posted by Buying4Him

nas

The New American Standard (or NAS) Bible is widely regarded as the most literally translated of 20th-century English Bible translations. According to the NAS Bible’s preface, the translators had a “Fourfold Aim” in this work:

• These publications shall be true to the original Hebrew, Aramaic, and Greek.
• They shall be grammatically correct.
• They shall be understandable.
• They shall give the Lord Jesus Christ His proper place, the place which the Word gives Him; therefore, no work will ever be personalized.

As its name implies, the NAS bible is a revision of the American Standard Version of 1901. This translation was begun as an alternative to the Revised Standard Version (1946-1952/1971), itself a revision of the ASV, but considered by many to be theologically liberal. Using the ASV as its English base, the NAS Bible’s translators revised the ASV as literally as possible.

Seeing the need for a literal, modern translation of the English Bible, the translators sought to produce a contemporary English Bible while maintaining a word-for-word translation style. In cases where word-for-word literalness was determined to be unacceptable for modern readers, changes were made in the direction of more current idioms. In such instances, the more literal renderings were indicated in footnotes.

The greatest perceived strength of the NAS Bible is its reliability and fidelity to the original languages, which, along with other literal translations, also allows for ambiguities in the text’s meaning.

New American Standard Bible

Thursday, May 28, 2009
posted by LBJ

nas-bibleThe New American Standard Bible did not start out as a complete Bible and was published in stages. The New Testament was first published in 1963 and the complete Bible was published in 1971.

As its name implies, the New American Standard Bible is a revision of the American Standard Version of 1901. This translation was begun as an alternative to the Revised Standard Version of the Bible which is also a revision of the American Standard Bible.  The New American Standard Bible is widely regarded as the most literally translated of 20th-century English Bible translations.

The New American Standard Bible did not start out as a complete Bible and was published in stages. The New Testament was first published in 1963 and the complete Bible was published in 1971.

As its name implies, the New American Standard Bible is a revision of the American Standard Version of 1901. This translation was begun as an alternative to the Revised Standard Version of the Bible which is also a revision of the American Standard Bible.  The New American Standard Bible is widely regarded as the most literally translated of 20th-century English Bible translations.