Many scholars consider the New World Translation to be the most accurate, it utilizes the oldest and most reliable Greek manuscripts.
There are no original versions of the Bible in the world today, but the closest we have now to the is the Received version of the New Testament in Greek and the Septuagint Greek translation of the Hebrew Old Testament.Answer:The book known as the Bible has been reworked and revisited many times during its existence from the first Jewish texts to the choice of the "official" Bible books during the middle ages. As a consequence there is no original version, just the present version.
The Bible view is true and the Greek view is false. There is always some mixed truth in a lie, but why go to a lie when you have the truth before you?
No, the Bible was not translated into Greek. The original texts of the Old Testament were primarily written in Hebrew, while the New Testament was written in Greek. However, there have been translations of the Bible from its original languages into modern Greek for the benefit of Greek-speaking readers.
The King James Version (KJV) is the 'correct' version if it is the version mandated or recommended by your denomination. It is not a particularly accurate version. Not only does it inherit many of the mistranslations historically taken from the Septuagint (an ancient Greek translation of the Hebrew Bible), it adds some inadvertent translation errors of its own. The authorised version of the KJV contains many passages that include italicised words. These are intended to show where the translators intentionally did not follow the original, or where the original was not sufficently clear for them to be certain of the meaning.
People wrote the Bible using Hebrew and Greek languages mainly to write the original Bible
The Bible translation considered to be closest to the original Hebrew and Greek texts is the New American Standard Bible (NASB).
There are no original versions of the Bible in the world today, but the closest we have now to the is the Received version of the New Testament in Greek and the Septuagint Greek translation of the Hebrew Old Testament.Answer:The book known as the Bible has been reworked and revisited many times during its existence from the first Jewish texts to the choice of the "official" Bible books during the middle ages. As a consequence there is no original version, just the present version.
No, the King James Version of the Bible is not the original version. The original texts of the Bible were written in Hebrew, Aramaic, and Greek, and the King James Version is a translation of those texts into English that was completed in 1611.
depends on which version. In the original Greek it did not appear at all since thou is not a greek word.
The Greek Vulgate is the standard version of the Bible in Greek. The text is from the Septuagint for most of the Old Testament. The version of Theodotion is used for the Book of Daniel and the Greek New Testament, is typically Byzantine text. The Greek Vulgate is the standard text used in the Divine Liturgy and is used throughout the Eastern Orthodox Church.
The changes made in the King James Version of the Bible include updates in language, grammar, and translation from the original Hebrew and Greek texts. The translators aimed to create a more accurate and readable version of the Bible for English-speaking audiences.
It is called the Septuagint.
Word Of God in the original Bible in language?? * Hebrew * Greek It's true!
The first printed Bible was the Gutenberg Bible. (It wasn't printed in English.) I personally use the King James Version. If you want to get extremely technical, the original text for all Bibles comes from mainly the original Greek and Hebrew writings.
The "official" Catholic version of the Bible is the New Vulgate Bible, which is the official Latin translation of the Sacred Scriptures based on the Septuagint, which was the Greek translation that Our Blessed Lord, Jesus Christ, used when He was quoting from the Old Testament, and from the original Latin translation made by St. Jerome, of the Greek New Testament books.
I hate to rain on your parade, but there is not such thing as the rapture. It is unbiblical, and is as recent as the 19th century. Perpetuated by the Roman Catholic Church, there is no biblical basis for this fallacy. Please, read your King James Version Bible, it is the purest translation and the closest we will get to the original Greek and Hebrew text.
"Ye" is from Middle to Modern English, the type of English spoken by the people of England when King James published his Version of the the Bible. The original Bible was written in Hebrew, Greek and Aramaic. Then it was translated into Latin, into German and then later, in 1611, into the English version known as "The King James Bible".