Quick Update: Interlinear’s ZIP File
July 26th, 2010
Just a quick update today: I’ve put all my current Greek-English Interlinear’s in an easy to download .ZIP file, so that you don’t have to download each one individually
July 26th, 2010
Just a quick update today: I’ve put all my current Greek-English Interlinear’s in an easy to download .ZIP file, so that you don’t have to download each one individually
July 24th, 2010
A bit of a break from translating this week. Well, I say break, but I’ve actually be extremely busy putting together a new Greek-English interlinear of the book known as 2 Peter!
As with all Greek-English interlinear’s on here, I don’t make them into web format due to the complicated nature of getting all the tables to work together properly, and so I provide a Downloadable PDF of the Interlinear that anyone can read as long as they’ve got a PDF reader programme on their PC, which most of you will have installed out of the box
Give it a download here!
August 30th, 2009
Although I am still powering on through the translation of the Book of Acts, I have also taken some time to update the PDF files of all the previously done translations. They all should now completely follow the text on the Website, and I have also added Bookmarks to all the Tanakh/Old Testament quotes that are contained within them. They are found at the bottom of the Bookmarks pane when you view the PDF file in Adobe Reader/Acrobat. Download the ZIP file containing all of them here.
Not only this, but I have also added two more of the Greek Basis of the English translation found on The Way to Yahuweh: these are 3 Yahuchanon, and Paul’s letter to the Colossians. I hope to be adding more of these soon, so please check back periodically to find any other updates that should be happening in the next few weeks
June 4th, 2009
Just a quick post to note that I noticed several spelling/other errors in the Translation of Lucus/Luke, and so have corrected it and added the update to the webpage, as well as to the separate PDF file and the ZIP file containing the translation of each book currently done.
As always, if anyone notices any errors in the translation, be it misspelled words or something else that is missing, please, do let me know, so I can correct the error and post an update as quickly as possible
May 9th, 2009
Seeing as though the Feast of Weeks/Pentecost is fast approaching (Saturday evening 30/5/09 – Sunday evening 31/5/09), I have decided to upload the First two chapters of the Acts of the Apostles. I have only done the webpage form at the moment though, without any notes on it, and no PDF at the moment. All of these will be added when the whole translation of the Acts of the Apostles has been completed
Please find the webpage version of the first two chapters of the Acts of the Apostles here.
April 20th, 2009
After finishing both the Lucus and 2 Thessalonians Translations, I have gone back and done a revision of my translation of Titus. It has now grown quite significantly, and I have also finally created a fully-functional PDF file to go with it
As it happens, I shall be starting both the Textual Criticism and translation of the Book of Acts (a.k.a The Acts of the Apostles) immediately, and judging from how long the translation of Lucus took (the same author of Acts), this may be the final update for a while, as Acts is even longer than Lucus!
Saying that, there was something that seriously annoyed me when I was doing my revision of Titus, so I shall probably post a few blogs between now and when I finish translating Acts
Please find the PDF file of Titus here, and the webpage here.
And as always, all the translations can be downloaded in Zip format from this link.
April 15th, 2009
Less than five days after I posted up a new translation, I have another new translation for all of you! This time it is the shortish book of 2 Thessalonians. Whilst it may only be four A4 pages long, the Apostle Paul leaves a wealth of information for us to read, ponder and acknowledge.
The PDF file can be found by clicking this link, and the webpage should be up on this link shortly
April 10th, 2009
It’s taken a little bit longer than I anticipated, but I have now finished making the PDF file for the Lucus translation, including the right-margin notes. These notes will also be added to the Lucus translation webpage as soon as possible
As always, find the PDF here, and the whole collection of translation PDF’s here
March 2nd, 2009
As I’ve been translating the eye-witness account of Lucus/Luke, I thought it’d be nice to just have a look at a blatant translational error in one of its chapters.
In Chapter 11:5-10, we read (ESV/English Standard Version):
And he said to them, “Which of you who has a friend will go to him at midnight and say to him, ‘Friend, lend me three loaves, for a friend of mine has arrived on a journey, and I have nothing to set before him’; and he will answer from within, ‘Do not bother me; the door is now shut, and my children are with me in bed. I cannot get up and give you anything’? I tell you, though he will not get up and give him anything because he is his friend, yet because of his impudence he will rise and give him whatever he needs. And I tell you, ask, and it will be given to you; seek, and you will find; knock, and it will be opened to you. For everyone who asks receives, and the one who seeks finds, and to the one who knocks it will be opened.’’
I’d like to focus on the words “ask”, “seek”, and “knock”. In the Greek, they are the words αιτεω/aiteo, ζητεω/zeteo, and κρουω/krouo, and each of them, each and every time they are mentioned in this passage, are in the present, active tense.
Now, anyone who’s at least read a book on Koine Greek will know that the Greek present tense indicates “a processing” or an “undefined” aspect – context will aid you with deciding which one. And what does the context of this passage indicate? That you ask, seek or knock once, and then you receive, find, or have something opened for you? Not what I can see, and certainly what isn’t implied at all by the word impudence.
The man in the example wasn’t “rude” by asking his friend once to give him what he needed and then going away; the point of the passage is that the man was continuously pestering his friend until he got what he needed, to which Yahushua actually says, “Keep asking, and it shall be given to you; keep seeking, and you shall find; keep knocking, and it shall be opened to you.” Anyone who’s studied Greek learns about the processing aspect of the Greek present tense as soon as he learns the Greek Alphabet! How is it that Ph.D Scholars can’t even get such a simple, basic thing into their translation?!
The ESV and its scholar’s pride themselves on their “translation” being, and I quote, “a new, essentially literal Bible translation that combines word-for-word precision and accuracy with literary excellence, beauty, and depth of meaning(italics mine).” (source) “Precision”, “accuracy” and “depth of meaning”? Really?! And yet they can’t even get the actual meaning of three damn words across properly!? One thinks that the ESV translators need to go back and do a first-year koine Greek course again before they make such claims of being “precise” or “accurate”.
But enough about the ESV. Let’s have a look at some other popular English Bible Translations, and see how they fair.
Lucus 11:9
These 17 Bible translations all miss the point, and are inaccurate translations of the processing aspect of the Greek Present tense. And most of these (ESV, NRSV, The Message, KJV, NKJV, NIV) are some of the most popular English Bible Translations – and none of them are able to do their job properly. They also (apparently) follow the “Formal Equivalence” or “Essentially Literal” translational philosophy – bar the NIV and the Message of course – One’s a Dynamic Equivalence (NIV (“Thought for thought” translation)), and the other’s a piece of crap that isn’t worth mentioning (The Message).
There are a few, though, that actually translate the words correctly and get the processing aspect of the Greek present tense across:
Six compared to seventeen, only one of which (NLT) is actually considered “popular” compared to the rest. It’s shocking to say the least.
A translation that deserves a special mention is the NASB (New American Standard Bible). In its main text, it translates the passage as So I say to you, ask, and it will be given to you; seek, and you will find; knock, and it will be opened to you, but it has little notes next to ask, seek, and knock, and states that Or Keep asking/seeking/knocking. The NASB managed to to put the wrong meaning in the main text, but the right meaning in the margin! Why bother doing that, when you could’ve just put the correct meaning in the main text itself, and not have anything in the margin!
Problem is, people are far too familiar with the KJV, and none of the “major” translations have the balls to break away from it.
Just compare the KJV to the ESV, for example: KJV:And I say unto you, Ask, and it shall be given you; seek, and ye shall find; knock, and it shall be opened unto you.; ESV:And I tell you, ask, and it will be given to you; seek, and you will find; knock, and it will be opened to you. Apart from updating the KJV’s English, what exactly makes the ESV different to the KJV?
Not very much, I can assure you of that. And trust me, this isn’t the only place where the ESV and other “Bible Translations” can’t get simple meanings of Greek words across. But pointing them all out requires several volumes of books; not a mere blog.
December 22nd, 2008
Whilst translating from the Greek, I am also compiling the Textual Critical Text Greek basis from which the translations are from. I am then planning on putting all of them up on here so people can, if they want, check what it is that I’m actually translating. Each Greek page is going to be expanded in the future, so that more information regarding the Greek word will appear whenever you hover over it.
But that’s for the future. For now, I have just uploaded the base Greek Text that I used to translate 2 Yahuchanon (2 John).
Please find the Webpage and PDF uploaded for your viewing pleasure