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Featured Have Any Of You Switched?

Discussion in 'Bible Versions & Translations' started by RipponRedeaux, Aug 26, 2021.

  1. RipponRedeaux

    RipponRedeaux Well-Known Member

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    Have any of you switched over to another translation as your primary Bible version in the last year or so?

    Obviously, those who regard the KJV as the only trustworthy translation are not likely to move on until there's an awakening. However, I would say that the second most resistant group to change over would be the ESVers.

    I think that I use more of a variety of translations than the average Joe. I have a bunch of physical copies and I go to BibleGateway as well. No one version does the job for me. I plan on getting the 2020 NASB in a while. I have the 1977 and the 1995 editions. The latter one was a gift from someone. It's a study Bible version. I would not willingly go out an purchase a study Bible. Oops, I have the NET Bible. Does that count as a Study Bible? That's hard to determine. It doesn't conform to the layout of a typical Study Bible.

    Do any of you own physical copies of any Roman Catholic Bibles? I have the NJB. I was paging through the updated version of the NJB --- the RNJB recently at a bookstore. It didn't appeal to me. There wasn't much of a change to warrant buying it. Some might consider the REB to be a Roman Catholic translation, but of the 15 churches and Christian groups that were represented by the translators only three were RC's.

    I don't expect any to have switched from the NKJV to the CEB. That would be a major shakeup. But perhaps some have gone from the NLT to the CSB for example. I had the MLB which was the updated Berkeley version for years until a South Korean pastor gifted me with the NIV in 1998. I had never owned an NIV before. I spend the better part of a year transferring my notes to the NIV. That's a practice I have dropped with successive Bible translations. I insert my new observations/insights into new Bible purchases.

    So, getting back to my main point, who has switched over? Present your story.
     
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  2. SovereignGrace

    SovereignGrace Well-Known Member
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    I switched to the NASB as my go to version when studying, but that’s been 2-3, maybe 4 years ago? I still love the NIV, yes, even the wrongfully accused 2011. That’s the only NIV I own, though I have 3-4 of them. :)

    And no, I don’t have any RCC bibles.
     
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  3. RipponRedeaux

    RipponRedeaux Well-Known Member

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    Are you planning to get the 2020 NASB?

    Regarding the NJB, there is nothing distinctively RC in the text or the notes. Footnotes are rare, and usually are biblical references. The Forward, written by a Roman Catholic, now 86 year old Henry Wansbrough, surprisingly makes no mention of anything RC. The only RC aspect to this translation is the inclusion of seven apocrypha books. Well, the dust cover is more overt about its RC connection.

    I can assure you that this is a faithful, trustworthy Bible translation. You should, time permitting, go to your local library and check it out. Or, if need be, get an interlibrary loan.
     
  4. Yeshua1

    Yeshua1 Well-Known Member
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    I am awaiting the full Lsb bible version!
     
  5. Yeshua1

    Yeshua1 Well-Known Member
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    I went from the Living Bible to the Nasb after getting saved!
     
  6. SovereignGrace

    SovereignGrace Well-Known Member
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    No on the 2020. I have the perfect version in the 1995. ;)


    Can the NJB be purchased at all?
     
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  7. RipponRedeaux

    RipponRedeaux Well-Known Member

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    I'm sure you can do it on Amazon, a company that I will no longer deal with because of their evil ways.

    But you are able to buy the RNJB from bookstores.
     
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  8. SovereignGrace

    SovereignGrace Well-Known Member
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    I didn’t know anything evil about Amazon.
     
  9. RipponRedeaux

    RipponRedeaux Well-Known Member

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    Your sentence can be interpreted as when you were saved you were reading from the LB and then switched to the NASB.
    But I suppose you thought that you were expressing the idea that when you were unsaved you were reading the LB, and upon being saved you opted for the NASB.
     
  10. 37818

    37818 Well-Known Member

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    In the last two years I switched back from using a NKJV to a KJV.
     
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  11. RipponRedeaux

    RipponRedeaux Well-Known Member

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    You went backwards from a modern revision to an antiquated one. Interesting.
     
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  12. tyndale1946

    tyndale1946 Well-Known Member
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    Switch???... I haven't finish with the KJV yet!... What has it been now, over 60 years... If the LORD gives me another 60, I guess I start where I leave off... You unsatisfied brethren keep looking, I'm satisfied!... Brother Glen:)

    Btw... Don't bother telling me all the unsavory KJV catch phrases either, this old timer has heard them all!
     
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  13. Earth Wind and Fire

    Earth Wind and Fire Well-Known Member
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    Maybe I’m still a heathen, but being raised Catholic we only had the big RC family Bible. Nobody ever read it but me and I was fascinated by it. It had pictures also and mom wrote birth dates and death dates in it.

    when my family was young I bought a NIV that I used and still sometimes use but it’s fallen apart. For the life of me though I have a hard time with the KJV preferring the NKJO, just an easier translation but honestly I still like NIV.
     
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  14. RipponRedeaux

    RipponRedeaux Well-Known Member

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    What was the version? Because there is no translation called "The Big RC Family Bible." :)
     
  15. RipponRedeaux

    RipponRedeaux Well-Known Member

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    Do you ever compare the KJV with other translations? Do you have other versions in your 'abode' Glen?
     
  16. Salty

    Salty 20,000 Posts Club
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    I did recently acquire a RCC bible.
    I normally preach out of my NKJ
    For study I do have a couple of 4 parallel translations
    I also use my HCSB, NASB, Gods Word, and ect.
     
  17. RipponRedeaux

    RipponRedeaux Well-Known Member

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    You guys! There is no translation called the "RCC Bible." (What does the extra "C" stand for, anyway?) Just tell us the name of the translation.
     
  18. 37818

    37818 Well-Known Member

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    There are two issues. The underlying texts the translation uses and the style or way of translation the translaters use. How important is the chosen underlying text being the actual give word of God or not?
     
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  19. Baptist4life

    Baptist4life Well-Known Member
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    I own several NKJVs, an NIV, a copy of the HCSB, but I always find myself going back to an old KJV that I've owned and used for almost thirty years. It's marked up, written in, and duct taped together, but I still like it best. At 70 years of age, I've used the KJV since I was about six years old, so it's just been the Bible version I'm most familiar with, and like the best. No other version sounds as beautiful as the Christmas story from Luke chapter two in the KJV. I'm sure younger people who started with an NIV, or ESV, or something else, and have used that version most of their Christian life, feel the same way about their particular version. I think your preference has a lot to do with what you used when you were growing up, what version your church uses, or the version you used when you first got saved.
     
    #19 Baptist4life, Aug 26, 2021
    Last edited: Aug 26, 2021
  20. RipponRedeaux

    RipponRedeaux Well-Known Member

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    The CT is closer to the original than the TR. But, it's a matter of about 5-10% difference, from what I have read.

    The style, for the reading public should be in the language of the people --their vernacular. That was William Tyndale's aim. But it wasn't the aim and intention of the KJV revisers. The common people in 1611 did not speak or write in the high Anglican style.

    The text should be dignified, but in the common language of the people. And by that I do not mean "street talk."
     
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