[Faith-talk] Bible Translations

karin karinjhar at att.net
Tue Nov 29 19:00:11 UTC 2011


I have also read the NIV but now I have the NKJV version in braille and like it very well.  I wish I had the message Bible, New Living translation or the amplified versions.  But I am happy with what I got.  
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Jeanette 
  To: Faith-talk,for the discussion of faith and religion 
  Sent: Monday, November 28, 2011 6:45 PM
  Subject: Re: [Faith-talk] Bible Translations


  i learned many scriptures and did many a bible study with the NIV it was the 
  only version i could get in braille for many years, i now have a nkjv and 
  enjoy it but have also used the nasv and the rsv for study, many folks, good 
  Christian folks as far as i know like all kinds of versions, i thinkit again 
  is a personal preference and we should not judge others for the version they 
  use, i find the idea that one version is the only one to use part of the 
  legalism that some folks love and push, thanks for the information in this 
  email
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: "Ryan Kwaak" <kwaakproductions at gmail.com>
  To: "Faith-talk,for the discussion of faith and religion" 
  <faith-talk at nfbnet.org>
  Sent: Monday, November 28, 2011 5:39 PM
  Subject: [Faith-talk] Bible Translations


  > Well the topic of good and bad Bible versions has come up, and I
  > believe it merits a new thread. As some of you might have guessed by
  > my Baptist roots, I hold to the Authorized King James version and
  > continue to use it exclusively. However, I used to believe that it was
  > the ONLY Word of God for the English-speaking population because that
  > was what my church teaches. Not only that, but to my knowledge the KJV
  > wasn't copyrighted by a nonprofit corporation with a vested economic
  > interest in its usage like the more modern versions. That was until I
  > did the research. Turns out, The KJV is public domain worldwide except
  > in Great Britain. The laws in force at that time pre-date any modern
  > copyright legislation, but the right to disseminate the KJV is
  > bestowed upon whomever the Sovereign wishes to grant it to, and today
  > that right is held by Cambridge University Press. Not only that, but
  > the KJV was written by Anglicans with an ulterior political agenda,
  > and nothing could go into the KJV that the king, as the
  > self-proclaimed spiritual authority in England, did not first approve.
  > However, I still hold to the KJV because it sparked a myriad of
  > old-time revivals and turned many a gambling drunkard into a
  > Christian. Although the newer versions may be easier to understand,
  > some of the corporations producing these newer Bibles tend to water
  > the message down and compromise the Word of God to be more politically
  > correct. A good new version that claims not to compromise the truth is
  > the New American Standard Bible, but old habits are hard to break, and
  > I for one will keep my KJV.
  >
  > -- 
  > KWAAK PRODUCTIONS
  >
  > PROFESSIONAL-QUALITY VOICE IMAGING AND AUDIO SERVICES.
  >
  > Call (815) 315-9492) for a price quote.
  >
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