Commissioned in 1975 by Thomas Nelson Publishers, 130 respected Bible scholars, church leaders, and lay Christians worked for seven years to create a completely modern edition of the King James Version that would continue the classic tradition of the original King James. With unyielding faithfulness to the original Greek, Hebrew, and Aramaic texts, the translators applied the most recent research in archaeology, linguistics, and textual studies. The resulting work provides today's Bible reader with an accurate and modern translation of the Scriptures with the stylistic beauty and memorable quality of the King James. Features: • Enhanced eBook Navigation NEW! • Verse Style Layout (All Bible verses left-justified) • 66 Bible Book Introductions • Parallel Passages • Full A-Z Concordance • New King James Translator's Notes • Explanatory Notes • Textual Notes • Cross-References Bible Section Introductions: • The Pentateuch • The Historical Books • Poetical and Wisdom Books • The Prophets • The Gospels • The Acts of the Apostles • The Letters of Paul • The General Epistles and Revelation. ![]() ![]() ![]() Trying to make sense of all the different versions and translations of the Bible? This free eBook guides you through 33 different Bible versions and addresses their content, text, style and religious orientation Featuring additional reviews of six Bible versions by Leonard J. Greenspoon Updated Fall 2013 Walk through the religion section of any major bookstore, and you’ll see an amazing array of Bibles. The broad selection of translations (also called versions)—and the seemingly endless ways in which they are packaged—is without historical precedent. But for many people, it is also bewildering, if not frustrating. Rather than the “blessing” it could and probably should be, it may be off-putting. When faced with a host of adjectives like “new” and “revised,” thoughtful buyers might well ask, “What was wrong with the ‘old’ or ‘traditional’ or the ‘original’?” In the free eBook The Holy Bible: A Buyer’s Guide, expert Bible scholars Leonard J. BibleTop is free bible study app for iPhone with christian e-books. Greenspoon and Harvey Minkoff answer these and other important questions about different Bible versions. How can a buyer tell when a Bible is a different translation (or version) or the same old text in a new coat? Some publishers put out several translations. Oxford, for example, prints copies of the New Revised Standard Version, the Jewish Publication Society Tanakh, the New American Bible, the New King James Version, the old King James Version and more. And several publishers put out the same translations: Eight different publishers have been given broad licenses to publish the New Revised Standard Version, for example. And sometimes publishers put out one translation under numerous different titles. Zondervan’s Devotional Bible for Dad, Revolution: The Bible for Teen Guys and True Images: The Bible for Teen Girls all contain the same translation (the New International Version—the most popular translation today) with distinctive covers on the outside and different annotations, devotional aids and interpretive materials on the inside. Some Bibles are aimed at specific religious groups, but this is not always clear from the title. How is a Bible buyer to know that the New American Bible is prepared by and for Roman Catholics, while the similarly named New American Standard Bible is aimed at conservative Protestants? Let expert Bible scholars Leonard J. Greenspoon and Harvey Minkoff guide you through the content, text, style and religious orientation of different Bible versions. We understand that your email address is private. We promise to never sell, rent or disclose your email address to any third parties.
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