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If you could publish a parallel Bible ...

alexander284

Well-Known Member
If you could publish a parallel Bible (using only two translations) which two Bible translations would you choose?
 

Deacon

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
Only two? My first side by side parallel had 4.
I would pick two translations with different translating goals.

ESV - literal
NLT - understandable

Rob
 

RipponRedeaux

Well-Known Member
I would pick two translations with different translating goals.

ESV - literal
NLT - understandable

Rob
I agree that the two should have differing translation goals. In any pairing the NLT would or should be the other choice.

Currently I'd choose the 2020 NASB with the NLT. Once the NRSV-UE is published I'd opt for it and the NLT.
 

Dr. Bob

Administrator
Administrator
I would use two that have the soundest manuscript support so that rules out the Byzantine-based translations.

Then have two OPPOSITE philosophies of translation so the contrasts would be clear but also the text could be fully grasped.
 

Dr. Bob

Administrator
Administrator
I'd go with two widely used popular translations side by side - the NIV and the ESV.
 

Dr. Bob

Administrator
Administrator
But I would have those columns on the left page and on the right have a strong interlinear Greek/literal word-for-word on the right-hand page.
 

Conan

Well-Known Member
Parallel New Testament? I would perhaps like William Tyndale's first 1526 edition with his last 1535 GH edition.
 

RipponRedeaux

Well-Known Member
I'd go with two widely used popular translations side by side - the NIV and the ESV.
Rod Decker, who passed away a few years ago wrote an excellent article called The English Standard Version: A Review Article. Here is a snip from page 53.

"Although the NIV explicitly acknowledges that it is not always word-for-word, the ESV claims to strive for word-for-word consistency; the result is not much different in many instances...The difference is only one of degree and is relatively small. Both contain much more functional equivalence than does the NASB and much, much less than CEV."
 

alexander284

Well-Known Member
Rod Decker, who passed away a few years ago wrote an excellent article called The English Standard Version: A Review Article. Here is a snip from page 53.

"Although the NIV explicitly acknowledges that it is not always word-for-word, the ESV claims to strive for word-for-word consistency; the result is not much different in many instances...The difference is only one of degree and is relatively small. Both contain much more functional equivalence than does the NASB and much, much less than CEV."

And this is why I'd want a parallel Bible of the NASB95 and the ESV.
 

Jerome

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
1977 Nas and the Esv
Back to "JesusFan", eh?
Seems your fourth personality here ("Servant of Lord Jesus") has suddenly been merged with your first personality here ("JesusFan")? How does that happen?
 

RipponRedeaux

Well-Known Member
Not sure if there are enough changes to warrant it? There may be. It may be an excellent idea. What do you think?
There may indeed by very little difference. So it wouldn't make sense to publish a parallel of those two.

I will come back to my original thought that any two versions must differ from one another to some degree.
 

alexander284

Well-Known Member
Another parallel Bible I'd like to see is the ESV, alongside the CSB.

Primarily because these are (currently) my two favorite Bible translations.
 
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