Geneva Bible
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Recent papers in Geneva Bible
1. Considers alleged deficiencies of William Tyndale and Myles Coverdale’s Scripture translations. 2. The Geneva Bible claim (in the preface) that William Tyndale neglected Hebraisms is proven false. 3. The Matthew Bible treatment of... more
In this paper I expand on my work in The Dog in the Dickensian Imagination to argue that the empathetic depiction of dogs that established itself in literature and painting in the late eighteenth century, and continued to develop,... more
Literary translation is a love affair. Depending on the context, it could be love at first sight or hot pursuits of a lover’s elusive nodding approval. In other instances it could be unrequited love, and still others a test of devotion... more
The Matthew Bible, like any good Anglican, found itself caught between the Roman Catholics and the Puritans. Neither group liked it. Find out why, and why its spirit is more consistent with early Anglicanism than anything else.
>Brief background of the puritan dispute with the Reformation CofE, Thomas Cranmer, and William Tyndale over ceremonies and song. >Compares translations and notes from the Psalms in the1537 Matthew Bible and the Geneva Bible. >Shows... more
Martin Luther and John Calvin contradicted each other on the fundamentals of the New Covenant. The teaching of the 1537 Matthew Bible agreed with Luther, but the Geneva Bible followed Calvin. Quotations from the two men and the two Bibles... more
This book examines John Calvin’s sense of vocation. 1) It begins with an analysis of thinking on prophecy in early, medieval, and Reformation theology. 2) It finds Calvin within a non-mystical, non-apocalyptic prophetic tradition... more
Looks at The Tyndale/Matthew Bible translation of Exodus 21:1-11, especially 7-11 on female servants, how the Geneva Bible changed it, and what the Hebrew says. Considers the rabbinical and modern treatment of the passage as dealing with... more
A comparison of English Bibles from 1537 to today, and how they chose between the Masoretic Text and the Septuagint to translate key passages in the Old Testament. Also considers the Orthodox Study Bible, which is translated from the... more
In discussing the Advent of Christ, Calvin emphasized the term “manifest.” This led to changes in the Scripture translation of William Tyndale, whose work was used as the base for the Geneva Bible. E.g., 1 John 3:5 was changed from “he... more
This is a hard-to-find document: the full dedication to Queen Elizabeth as set forth in the 1560 Geneva Bible. The spelling has been modernized and there are brief commentaries by Ruth Magnusson Davis to put some of the more puzzling... more
The Geneva Bible, the product of British Reformed exiles in Geneva, was the first popular printed bible in English. With its explanatory notes, it was the first study bible. Yet these same notes were regarded as a threat by those in... more
The early translation history of 1 Corinthians 13:12, famous for the phrase "through a glass darkly" from the Geneva Bible (by way of the King James Version), shows not only what is lost in that translation, but how it is symptomatic of... more
Cet article reprend l’argument developpe dans mon livre The Dog in the Dickensian Imagination dans lequel il est demontre que le regard empathique porte sur les chiens tel qu’il apparait dans la litterature et la peinture a partir de la... more
Early modern English Bibles are among the most significant texts in western Christianity. They contained the translation of the Bible into English and its authorisation, they facilitated the Protestant Reformation, and their effects on... more
Hugh Broughton was a controversial biblical scholar who spent much of his life campaigning for a new English Bible. He was one of the sixteenth century’s most profound English critics of vernacular biblical translations, though his most... more
Link to the article (open access): https://doi.org/10.1093/res/hgx019 Note: Posting a copy of this paper would infringe the copyright. Please access the paper via the link above, which requires no subscription or log-in. If you still... more