• Welcome to Baptist Board, a friendly forum to discuss the Baptist Faith in a friendly surrounding.

    Your voice is missing! You will need to register to get access to all the features that our community has to offer.

    We hope to see you as a part of our community soon and God Bless!

New NASB Update

McCree79

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
There is a a New NASB update coming ....and not the NASB 2020...or 2021.

The Legacy Standard Bible. MacArthur begins talking about it at the 7:30 mark.


Sent from my SM-G965U using Tapatalk
 

Ziggy

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
Sounds problematic to me: replacing LORD with Yahweh/Jehovah was a hallmark of the original ASV (cf also the original HCSB) that simply was *not* well received by readers, and therefore changed back in later editions (NASV, CSB, RSV). Similarly, rendering δουλος throughout as "slave" parallels the HCSB — another less popular rendering now removed in the CSB.

So rather than seeing Mac's Legacy Bible as an improvement, it looks to me more like a regression.
 

Rippon2

Well-Known Member
I listened to my former pastor's talk all the way through. It's fascinating that the Lockman Foundation gave permission for MacArthur's six scholars to undertake this revision of the NASB while proceeding with the 2021 edition. I wonder which one will be more popular.
 

Deacon

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
Problematic is exactly the right word.
The original NASB used “bond slave” for a reason; particularly in the United States the word “slave” carries a meaning not present in the Greek use of the word.

Yahweh is a guess at what YHWH would sound like, more of a transliteration than a translation.
If anyone called out the name “Jesus” in the early first century, Jesus might not have recognized he was being spoken to.
Will they correct the mis-pronunciation?

Lastly, I’m not familiar with the very few people involved in the project but there are no big names among the translators that I recognize.

Rob
 

Jerome

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
LOL, déjà vu?

J-Mac: "There are a couple of major changes that I think are remarkable in this Bible...the word Yahweh...is not used in any English translation of the Old Testament...one of the changes in the 'Legacy Standard' Bible is going to be: God's name is gonna be there!...One other significant change is the word Doulos...That always means slaves, but it's not translated that way! It will be in this 'Legacy Standard' Bible."

Remember the ad campaign for the SBC's Holman Christian Standard Bible?

ad copy: "God gave us his personal name, which is why you’ll see it in the Holman Christian Standard Bible."
hcsb01 - Copy - Copy.jpg

ad copy: "readers see Christians called to be Christ’s slaves in the Holman Christian Standard Bible"
hcsb02 - Copy - Copy.jpg
 

Rippon2

Well-Known Member
A thing to note about the Legacy Standard Bible. It will be called LSB. At first hearing it sounds like LSD.
 

Yeshua1

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
There is a a New NASB update coming ....and not the NASB 2020...or 2021.

The Legacy Standard Bible. MacArthur begins talking about it at the 7:30 mark.


Sent from my SM-G965U using Tapatalk
Just keep making the 1977 and 1995 Nas!
 

Yeshua1

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
I listened to my former pastor's talk all the way through. It's fascinating that the Lockman Foundation gave permission for MacArthur's six scholars to undertake this revision of the NASB while proceeding with the 2021 edition. I wonder which one will be more popular.
I cannot see both of them prospering, so Dr Macs might be the winner, as Nas 2020 seems to heading to Gender inclusiveness!
 

Reformed1689

Well-Known Member
There is a a New NASB update coming ....and not the NASB 2020...or 2021.

The Legacy Standard Bible. MacArthur begins talking about it at the 7:30 mark.


Sent from my SM-G965U using Tapatalk
I can't see the video, but is this April Fool's?
 

Reformed1689

Well-Known Member
Because it is conservative, but has better English than the clunky ESV.
Subjective of course. I don't have issues with the ESV. But the idea that an updated NASB will be more popular, when the last update is already less popular than ESV and they are going Gender inclusive? I doubt it.
 

Rippon2

Well-Known Member
Subjective of course. I don't have issues with the ESV. But the idea that an updated NASB will be more popular, when the last update is already less popular than ESV and they are going Gender inclusive? I doubt it.
The 1995 update was much better than the 1977 edition. But it used even less inclusive language than the ESV. The 77 was years behind in that respect. However if the ESV retains their same level of IL (or GA --gender-accurate) the 2021 NASB will gain ground. I think the rankings will be :
1) NIV
2) NLT
3) 2021 NASB
4) ESV
5) NIrV
6) CEB
 

Yeshua1

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
The 1995 update was much better than the 1977 edition. But it used even less inclusive language than the ESV. The 77 was years behind in that respect. However if the ESV retains their same level of IL (or GA --gender-accurate) the 2021 NASB will gain ground. I think the rankings will be :
1) NIV
2) NLT
3) 2021 NASB
4) ESV
5) NIrV
6) CEB
The reason why the 1977 has much less gender inclusiveness would be due to it being more literal then the 1995 revision!
 
Top