BIBLE

[Gr.,=the books], term used since the 4th cent. to denote the Christian Scriptures and later, by extension, those of various religious traditions. This article discusses the nature of religious scripture generally and the Christian Scriptures specifically, as well as the history of the translation of the Bible into English. For the composition and the canon of the Hebrew and Christian Bible, see Old Testament; New Testament; Apocrypha; Pseudepigrapha.

The Nature of Scripture

The sacred writings of the religions of the world exhibit a variety of genres—prayers, visions, ritual, moral codes, myths, historical narratives, legends, and revelatory discourses. Such works have tended to be transmitted orally at first and committed to writing at a later date. This is true of much of the content of the Christian Bible as well as of the Hindu Vedas and the Jewish Mishnah.

The sacred character of such writings is accorded them by communities that have come to value the traditions they embody. Scripture is also perceived in some sense as heavenly in origin—the Qur'an and the Book of Mormon are good examples of this. Religious communities value highly those who interpret their scriptures at both the scholarly and popular levels. Translation of scripture into the vernacular, though resisted in some religious traditions, is a common phenomenon. However, the original Arabic of the Qur'an is regarded as the actual words of God, and therefore as sacrosanct, and is printed alongside its translation. Translations can assume the status of inspired text, as did the Greek translation of the Jewish Scriptures (the Septuagint) in Hellenistic Jewish and Christian communities. The process of canonizing scripture has been an extended one in many religious traditions, e.g., the Jewish, Christian, and Buddhist faiths. Other traditions authorized their respective bodies of scripture early, e.g., the Sikhs, Muslims, and Manichaeans. Inspiration is an adjunct of the idea of the divine authority of scripture.

The role of scripture in the life of the community involves its public recitation or reading at worship, its veneration as a cult object, and its citation in public prayer and in prescribing appropriate rituals. In the private devotional life of the faithful, scripture is the focus of meditation. The use of scripture to function as a charm to ward off evil or to induce healing is also common. Scripture is also the inspiration for cultural expression in art, music, and literature.

The Bible as Christian Scripture

The traditional Christian view of the Bible is that it was written under the guidance of God and that it therefore conveys truth, either literally or figuratively. In recent times the view of many Christians has been influenced by the pronouncements of critics (see higher criticism); this has produced a counteraction in the form of fundamentalism, whose chief emphasis has been on the literal inerrancy of the Bible. The interpretation of the Bible is one of the traditional points of difference between Protestants, who believe that the Scriptures speak for themselves, and Roman Catholics, who hold that the church has ultimate authority in the interpretation of the Scriptures.

English Translations of the Christian Bible

John Wyclif was one of the first to project the publication and distribution of the Bible in the vernacular among the English people, and two translations go by his name. In the 15th cent. the Lollards did much to extend the use of the Wyclifite translation. The next name in the history of the English Bible is that of William Tyndale, whose translation was not from the Latin Vulgate, like Wyclif's, but from the Hebrew and Greek. Its quality is attested by its use as a basis of the Authorized Version. Tyndale's New Testament (1525–26) was the first English translation to be printed. Contemporary with Tyndale was Miles Coverdale. The second version of Coverdale and the translation of Thomas Matthew closely followed Tyndale. In 1539 the English crown issued its first official version, in the name of Henry VIII. This, the Great Bible, was done principally by Coverdale. The Geneva Bible, or Breeches Bible, was a revision of the Great Bible, financed and annotated by the Calvinists of Geneva. The Bishops' Bible (1568) was a recasting of Tyndale.

The greatest of all English translations was the Authorized Version (AV), or King James Version (KJV), of 1611, made by a committee of churchmen led by Lancelot Andrewes and composed of many of the finest scholars in England. The beautiful English of this version has had great influence and is generally ranked in English literature with the work of Shakespeare. The phraseology of much of it is that of Tyndale. The Douay, or Rheims-Douay, Version was published by Roman Catholic scholars at Reims (New Testament, 1582) and Douai, France (Old Testament, 1610); it was extensively revised by Richard Challoner. In the 19th cent. the project of revising the Authorized Version from the original tongues was undertaken by the Church of England with the cooperation of nonconformist churches. The results of this revision were the English Revised Version and the American Revised Version (pub. 1880–90).

Many scholars, either cooperatively or independently, have translated the Bible into English. In other literatures, also, the translation of the Bible has had a formative effect on the literary language, notably in the case of Martin Luther's German translation. Occasionally translation of the Bible has been the first or the only notable work in a language, e.g., the translation by Ulfilas into Gothic.

In the 20th cent., American biblical scholars combined to produce the Revised Standard Version (RSV), published in 1952 and immediately adopted by many churches. A completely new translation, the work of a joint committee of representatives of all Protestant denominations in Great Britain, aided by Roman Catholic consultants, was begun in 1946. The New Testament was first published in 1961, and the entire Bible, called The New English Bible, appeared in 1970. New Roman Catholic translations were also undertaken, the Westminster Version in England, and a complete revision of the Rheims-Douay edition sponsored by the Confraternity of Christian Doctrine in the United States. The latter, after undergoing several major revisions and retranslations, was finally published as the New American Bible (1970). In addition, an English translation of the French Catholic Bible de Jerusalem (1961) appeared as the Jerusalem Bible (1966). A revision of the RSV was published in 1989 as the New Revised Standard Version.

Bibliography

See The Cambridge History of the Bible (3 vol., 1963–70); F. F. Bruce and E. G. Rupp, ed., Holy Scripture and Holy Tradition (1968); F. M. Denny and R. L. Taylor, The Holy Bible in Comparative Perspective (1985); H. M. Orlinsky and R. M. Bratcher, A History of Bible Translation and the North American Contribution (1991); J. Miles, God: A Biography (1995); J. L. Kugel, The Bible as It Was (1997); R. E. Friedman, The Hidden Book of the Bible (1998); C. Murphy, The Word According to Eve (1998); D. H. Akensen, Surpassing Wonder: The Invention of the Bible and the Talmuds (1999); A. Nicolson, God's Secretaries: The Making of the King James Bible (2003).

____________________

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

-5531-

Search the Library
Books
Journals
Magazines
Newspapers
Encyclopedia
Advanced Search
About Questia
Questia is the world's largest online academic library offering full-text books, journals, and articles on thousands of topics.

Join Now...
Questia Books and Articles on: Bible
We found: 77337 results
By media type:
 

Books:

 

33682  

 

Journal articles:

 

12839  

 

Magazine articles:

 

9539  

 

Newspaper articles:

 

19318  

 

Encyclopedia articles:

 

1959  

Research Topics on: Bible

List All Topics    
Abraham (Biblical Figure) Ancient Africa Apostle Paul Bible
Bible as Literature Biblical Geography Biblical Interpretation (Biblical Hermeneutics) Biblical Prophets
Book of Daniel Book of Deuteronomy Book of Exodus Book of Ezekiel
Book of Genesis Book of Isaiah Book of Ruth Christianity
Feminist Theology Martin Luther New Testament Pentateuch
Poetic Books of the Bible Rhetoric in the Bible Torah Women in the Bible
 

books on: Bible  - 33682 results

       More book Results: 1-10 11-20 21-30 31-40 41-50 >>  
 
THE BIBLE SOCIETY REPORTS After a Hundred Years: A Popular Illustrated Report of the British and Foreign Bible Society for the Centenary Year 1903 1904 London, The Bible House, 1904 . Behold a Sower: A Popular Illustrated...
in 1855 by F. A. Packard, The Union Bible Dictiortor_v Jor the U.se of Schools, Bible Classes and Families was a new edition of the...Tract Society published A Dictionary of the Holy Bible by W. W. Rand (1816-1909), based upon...
...Many other German Bibles were published in...translations of the German Bible. In 1534, John...published, in 1537, a Bible in German, using...represented by the Augsburg Bibles of 1477 and 1507...parts, 50 the whole Bible printed first in...several "combined Bibles" that appeared at...
...monk and nun lived in the world of the Bible. Their whole life was connected with Scripture...contemporary culture and the age of the Bible. The monastics could not disassociate...us to imagine that because we have the Bible in a black book, we can take it off the...
Chapter 3 The Making of the Bible The many names of the Bible So far I have been speaking fairly freely about the Bible, without asking what might be meant by that expression. The word itself is derived from the Greek biblia , which is simply...
More book Results: 1-10 11-20 21-30 31-40 41-50 >>

 

journal articles on: Bible  - 12839 results

       More journal Results: 1-10 11-20 21-30 31-40 41-50 >>  
 
...Ultimately, then, the Bibles ability to nurture spiritual...is at stake. Is the Bible really needed? If the...become secondary to the Bibles religious-spiritual...tried to disentangle the Bible from religious claims...authorities. By endorsing the Bibles spiritual potential...
Understanding Bible Study Curricula: Theology, Hermeneutics...Pamela Mitchell Legg We want more serious Bible study." "The problem we face is that...biblically illiterate."Whats the best Bible study curriculum?" "My cousins church...
...as Suitable. The Bibles ethical norms for...Assault upon the Bible as a normative ethical...authority in the Bibles Power to create and...authorized by the Bible, and the criterion...kept alive that the Bible might have compelling...the context of the Bibles basic theological...
...Prayer from Protestant Bibles, but fails to include...American versions of the Bible used by Roman Catholics...educated) to understand the Bible on his own; the church...church refused to make Bibles available to the common...their translations of the Bible. The author also includes...
...we cannot read the Bible without two or three...either the result of the Bibles influence or the gateway...which we approach the Bible. I should point out...especially in the way the Bible shapes the law, art...in discussions of the Bibles influence, 4 but it...
More journal Results: 1-10 11-20 21-30 31-40 41-50 >>

 

magazine articles on: Bible  - 9539 results

       More magazine Results: 1-10 11-20 21-30 31-40 41-50 >>  
 
The United Bible Societies and World Mission by Samuel Escobar In 2004 the Bible society movement became 200...believers and the concern that Bibles should be available to every...Not long after the first Bible society was founded, its...
...the truth of the Bible is to be found in...alien culture, the Bibles texts must be understood...keep in mind the Bibles literary, perspectival...point, whether the Bible imagines a true world...do we read the Bible truly? Those who...truthfulness assume that the Bibles meaning is familiar...
Floridas Bible battle by Rob Boston In Lee County, Religious...Court declared school-sponsored prayer and Bible reading in public schools unconstitutional...elective in the countys high schools: a "Bible as history" class that many Lee County...
...2. The only possible explanation of the Bibles many true prophecies is that God inspired the Bible. 3. If the only possible explanation of the Bibles many true prophecies is that God inspired the Bible, then God inspired the Bible. 4. Therefore...
...years to describe how the Bible was compiled. This outline...interpretation of a belief in the Bibles divine origin extends...first five books of the Bible, the so-called Five...the rest of the Hebrew Bibles content was fashioned...corpus of the Hebrew Bible, was reached late in...
More magazine Results: 1-10 11-20 21-30 31-40 41-50 >>

 

newspaper articles on: Bible  - 19318 results

       More newspaper Results: 1-10 11-20 21-30 31-40 41-50 >>  
 
Translating the Bible Translators; David Edgar...So the English language Bible is not just a side benefit...before then I was lugging Bibles up and down the M1 because...admits that he comes to the Bible and its story in terms of...
...Yet the furor over Bible translations continues...consumers and the rise of Bibles that neutralize many...than 2 percent of the Bible market. "Its a mystery...bookstores push the simpler Bibles. The biggest recent...what some have called "Bible rage" was the plan to...
The Bible Bashers. Byline: David Sexton THE King James Bible was first published in 1611 and now heres Melvyn Bragg...The Book of Books: The Radical Impact of the King James Bible, Bragg, our most trusted intellectual interpreter, argues...
How Our Bible Colleges Help People Develop Their Faith...PEOPLE, from all walks of life, end up at Bible College. Some sign up with the sole intention...some go specifically to get deeper into the Bible while others simply want the chance to take...
...with Rome produced the Geneva Bible, whose translation and margin...asking for a new translation of the Bible, since the previous Bibles were corrupt and not answerable...delighted: He didnt like the Geneva Bible, and the earlier versions werent...
More newspaper Results: 1-10 11-20 21-30 31-40 41-50 >>

 

encyclopedia articles on: Bible  - 1959 results

       More encyclopedia Results: 1-10 11-20 21-30 31-40 41-50 >>  
 
BIBLE Gr.,=the books, term used since the 4th cent...as well as the history of the translation of the Bible into English. For the composition and the canon of the Hebrew and Christian Bible, see Old Testament ; New Testament ; Apocrypha...
...organization. In 1780 the Bible Society was formed...England to distribute Bibles among soldiers and...British and Foreign Bible Society founded...its work with Welsh Bibles for Thomas Charles...it has distributed Bibles in hundreds of languages...the formation of Bible societies began early...
MAZARIN BIBLE maz rin, considered to be the first important...earliest book printed from movable types. The Bible, printed at Mainz, probably required several...edition of about 180 copies. The text of the Bible is Latin. The type is a Gothic style related...
BETHEL , in the Bible beth l Heb.,=house of God. 1 Ancient...Bank, N of Jerusalem. According to the Bible, where it is frequently mentioned, it...Palestine, mentioned several times in the Bible; instances of Chesil, Bethul, and Bethuel...
SHEBA , in the Bible she b . 1 In the Bible, rebel against David. 2 Queen of Sheba , who according the the Bible visited Solomon after hearing about the fame of his wisdom. In Arabic legend, Solomon and the queen, called Bilqis or Balkis...
More encyclopedia Results: 1-10 11-20 21-30 31-40 41-50 >>

 About Questia   ::   Privacy   ::   Contact