| New Evangelical Translation |
| New Covenant |
The goal of this translation is missionary activity. The language is designed for Christians who have read the Scriptures for many years and for people who may never have read the Bible.
In 1934, Dr. William F. Beck began The Holy Bible: An American Translation. The New Evangelical Translation is the successor of that work. The goal of both works was to produce a Bible which is both faithful to the original languages of the Scriptures and understandable to anyone who can use simple, modern American English. It is a closest natural equivalent translation, meaning the choosing of English expressions which are as close as possible to the meaning of the original languages. Thus, it translates meaning-for-meaning. It strives to be readable by both adults and children. Greek manuscripts, Greek quotations, and translations in various languages were consulted.
Each new book begins on the right-hand page, permitting an edition in notebook form, which allows for individual books to be removed for study. There are large, freestanding numbers at the beginning of chapters, resulting in the only translation able to number the first verse of a chapter with "1." Prose selections are set in larger type than poetic sections. The Book of Revelation is entirely set in poetic form. The emblem of the Greek letters chi and rho superimposed on each other form an abbreviation for Christ. This symbol stands in columns of this version to indicate quotations from the Old Testament that are fulfilled in relation to or through the work of Christ.
The Old Testament translating was in progress at the time of this writing.
NET Publishing (1992)
[Tyndale House, Cambridge, United Kingdom]
In the beginning was the Word, |
Comparisons which include this version:
Bishops, Overseers, Presbyters, and Elders
Commandments or Clean Robes?
The Epistle of James
The Gifts of the Spirit
God So Loved the World
Hebrew Poetry in the Bible
The Hebrew Synoptic Gospels
Let No Man Judge You
The Letters of Paul
The Miracle at Cana
Passover and the Days of Unleavened Bread
A Reference to the Trinity
Sabbaths and Sundown
Scripture Inspired by God
Some Variations in the Book of Acts
The Story of the Adultress
Those Who Work Iniquity
Who Will Mourn?
Words with Heathen Origins in the Scriptures