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Archive for March, 2006

Philippians 4:5-6: “It’s Just a (Semi-)Colon”

Matt at seventy times seven muses on how a single punctuation mark affects interpretation of Philippians 4:5-6:

if you read the Word, you’ll see that paul’s sentence begins in verse 5 and carries into verse 6, unlike the way we memorise and read it. the end of verse 5 says “the Lord is at hand;” and verse 6 begins: “do not be anxious about anything…” our bibles divide that sentence into two parts, but it’s a semicolon, not a period at the end of verse 5. it doesn’t make sense to memorise half of his thought, he made it a thought on purpose. it’s like quoting john 3:16: “for God so loved the world.” well, fantastic, but what did He do about it? similarly, without the first half of that sentence: “the Lord is at hand,” we’re left wondering why we should be anxious for nothing. His continual presence assures and enables us to rely on Him.

because of the verse divisions in the bibles we read, and the verse-by-verse format in the kjv, it’s easy to miss things like that. my esv is in paragraph form, so the only thing interrupting the thought was a superscript 6 for the verse. it read right thru, and it stood out to me. i thought, “hey, that’s a sentence, and i only know half of it.” even the leader, when he read it, stopped at the ‘end’ of verse 5 for the verse division, like the singing congregation that breathes in the middle of a word or sentence just because. paul wrote a letter, not a string of little verses.

The ESV alone among recent translations separates Philippians 4:5 and 6 with a semicolon; other translations make “The Lord is at hand” into a separate sentence.

Here’s Philippians 4:5b-6 in the ESV:

The Lord is at hand; do not be anxious about anything, but in everything by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your requests be made known to God.

March 6, 2006 | Posted in: ESV,Translation | Author: Crossway Staff @ 10:00 am | (3) Comments »

Faith and Thought: “Why I Switched to the ESV”

Shane at Faith and Thought talks about why he switched to the ESV:

In 2001, Crossway published a new translation, the English Standard Version, an essentially literal translation in the tradition of the King James Version and Revised Standard Version. A year ago I decided to make the switch to the ESV, and I have been very pleased. In this post I want to explain why I made the switch, and why I think you should as well.

He goes on to give 32 examples where he feels the ESV fits the framework for evaluation that he describes in the post. He borrows the framework from The English Bible: From the KJV to the NIV by Jack Lewis. The ESV comes in for a few criticisms, too.

March 3, 2006 | Posted in: ESV,General | Author: Crossway Staff @ 10:52 am | 1 Comment »

ESV Now Available for PocketLight on PocketPC

Screenshot of the search mechanism in PocketLightThe ESV is now available for PocketLight on PocketPC for $19.95 from AcroDesign Technologies.

Here’s their description of PocketLight’s features:

More than just a Bible reader: Read, Search, Browse, Memorize, and Track the Scriptures with this collection of Bible tools for your Pocket PC PDA or Phone. Includes the complete Bible text. PocketLight will enhance your personal knowledge and reading of the Bible, and help you minister to others through the Scriptures.

PocketLight Features

  • Integrated Bible reader
  • Supports multiple translations
  • Supports memory cards
  • Small Bible database
  • Integrated note taking
  • Integrated concordance
  • Fast verse search
  • Integrated verse memorization tool
  • Integrated topical index

Read Scripture

Quickly jump to any chapter of the Bible, and start reading! Every chapter you visit can be optionally added to your reading record.

Search Scripture

A very fast search tool lists verses that contain one or a combination of multiple words.

Memorize Scripture

The PocketLight memory game is a fun an easy way to memorize Scripture. The game displays a verse with the words scrambled and you must unscramble the verse by clicking on the words in correct order. PocketLight is preloaded with over 80 easily memorized verses.

Quickly Locate Scripture

Can’t remember the exact location or text of particular verse? The topical index provides fast access to popular verses to help you minister to others and yourself through the Word.

Track Scripture Reading

PocketLight’s tracking feature keeps a record of each chapter you read. Monitor your progress and meet your reading goals by manually or automatically recording chapters as you read them on your handheld.

Take Notes

Add notes to any chapter of the Bible, access notes by category or chapter.

Multiple translations available

Carry up to 4 Bibles on a single Pocket PC device.

March 1, 2006 | Posted in: ESV,Editions | Author: Crossway Staff @ 9:51 am | Comments Off »