Showing 10 results for “new edition”
A New Version Since the publication of the new “Revised Standard Version”, I had intended to make a few comments in Beacon Lights about it. This is an interesting subject and warrants a more lengthy consideration than can be given in these few lines. The version is authorized by the National Counci
by Theodore P. Letis Ph.D. Institute for Renaissance and Reformation Biblical Studies (1978), new edit. 1997. Pages 34. by Dr. Stephen Westcott Reformation Christian Ministries, BRISTOL The appearance of a scholarly and yet readable defence of the Authorised Version, in a handy sized but neatly prod
Added to this general approval by the clerics and scholars is the approval accorded this newest version by the purchasing public. This version was put on sale from England to New Zealand during the middle of March and a print order of 1,275,000 copies was not going to be enough to fill the demand. I
THE NEW ENGLISH BIBLE The year 1961 marks the 350th anniversary of the King James Bible. It is this anniversary year which has been marked as the year for publication of the New English Bible. This is a new translation prepared by scholars of the non- Roman Catholic Churches in England, Scotland an
This Bible proved rather popular, also in Reformed circles, until quite recently. Today, however, it is gradually making way for the version about which so much was written a few years ago, the Revised Standard Version. There are other versions not mentioned in this article, but we shall not concern
This 1,001-page volume will be presented in September to the Church’s 1976 General Convention. If this Convention authorizes the revision, it will replace a modest 1928 revision of the 1662 edition of the Book of Common Prayer. Time reports that “the biggest change is the draft’s provision for alter
These are: Becks Translation (BT), New International Version (NIV), New American Standard Bible (NASB), Revised Standard Version (RSV). Todays English Version (TEV), Living Bible (LB), New English Bible (NEB), Jerusalem Bible (JB), Amplified Bible (AB), Common Bible (CB) and Phillipss NT (Ph). In mo
Recently there has come from the Oxford and Cambridge University presses the Old Testament section of the New English Bible. The New Testament was published already in 1961, and 7 million copies of it have already been sold. This allegedly completely new translation is now complete, therefore; and i