Showing posts with label NASB. Show all posts
Showing posts with label NASB. Show all posts

Saturday, August 08, 2020

1000 Consecutive Days of Reading the Bible

Today, one thousand days ago I started using the YouVersion Bible app to read the Bible everyday. Although I used the app to read the Bible everyday, I only started using the app to actually read systematically through the Bible using their different Bible-in-a-year programs. 


Thursday, January 09, 2020

My Bible Reading Plan for 2020



I haven't been blogging like I would like to, and I am sorry for that. Life has been very hectic in the last 5 years, really.

I'm a bit late in the uptake of this series of blog posts this year. Others have already written blog posts about their Bible reading programs for this year.



Saturday, July 16, 2011

Jesus took on humanity, even though He was God: translation difficulties

GrPhil2_1-11

I listened to a sermon the other day, in which the preacher used Phil 2:5-11, that famous passage on the incarnation of Christ.

In his sermon he mentioned at one point that he wanted to disagree with the ESV in its translation of verse 6, which says:

“who, though he was in the form of God, did not count equality with God a thing to be grasped.”

He felt that the “though” in the ESV wasn’t a good translation and that many translations have “being” in the form of God, making it essentially that it was the very nature of God that made Him give as much as He did, which of course is not wrong theology.

Of course, there have been many debates on the translation of the Greek word here.



Monday, July 04, 2011

Which Bible translation should I use?

whichtranslationUPDATE NOTE: It was brought to my attention by commenter Alan in the comments below that the ESV and the HCSB had been updated since their first releases, which I knew. I just did not check whether Bible Gateway—which I used for the comparisons—had the updated text of these two translations. The thing is, I do have the ESV Study Bible with the updated text and the HCSB Study Bible with the updated text. I just assumed Bible Gateway had the updated texts. I should have checked more closely! Below, I will update the Bible text with the new text, and simply strike through the old. New comments will be in in bold-italic. However, after rechecking the texts, I only had to change one verse and comment, leaving me at my original conclusion. So, now you may start reading this post.

It definitely is not easy to choose which Bible translation to implement for personal use. Around 1980 I started using the KJV, and at about 1983 I changed to the NIV, while using the KJV as a backup. In 1985 I started Bible school. In my second year we started with Greek, and in that year we covered Greek I, II and III. My average for these 3 Greek modules was 96%. That is not to brag, just to state a fact. Since then I haven’t really kept it up, and so my knowledge of Greek isn’t like it was back then. (I have recently started working through Bill Mounce’s Basics of Biblical Greek.) During that year, one of our modules was 1 Corinthians, and the lecturer for that used the NASB. I bought myself a copy of the NASB and started studying through major New Testament parts, and by 1987 I switched over to the NASB as my main study translation. That remained the status quo until the ESV was released.

Like many in the Reformed camp, I jumped on the band wagon and switched to the ESV soon after its release in 2003, because of all the recommendations by great Bible scholars and teachers from the Reformed camp. John Piper, for instance, moved from the NASB to the ESV. Piper is a great Greek scholar and would know what to check for. Other scholars and teachers that recommend the ESV are Dr. Darrell Bock, Jerry Bridges, Francis Chan, Kevin DeYoung, Mark Driscoll, Dr. Albert Mohler Jr., Dr. Thomas Schreiner, Dr. R.C. Sproul, Daniel B. Wallace, Dr. John Walvoord, Dr. Ravi Zacharias, and many more. So, as you can see, the list is quite intimidating and formidable.

Recently, the HCSB was recommended to me by a blog writer and pastor. I decided to check it out against the ESV, NASB and NIV. I spent a whole weekend to compare and check, and my results are as follows:


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