One of the U.S. Catholic bishops’ substitution in a new translation of the Bible may provoke an outcry from traditionalists if they interpret it as a dilution of a cornerstone of Catholic theology.
The U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops ordered the new translation, which turned out to be a 17-year-project, in the interests of accuracy, user-friendliness, and poetic tone. The translation team included 50 scholars, linguistic experts, and theologians, and five bishops. The fruits of their labors are scheduled to be out on Ash Wednesday, March 9.
The potentially controversial change involves an Old Testament passage foretelling Jesus Christ’s birth to a virgin. The 1970 version of the New American Bible chronicles Isaiah 7:14 as noting that "the virgin shall be with child, and bear a son, and shall name him Immanuel." The new version refers to “the young woman” rather than a virgin.
The translation notes that “the original Hebrew word, ‘almah,’ may, or may not, signify a virgin.
The switch-out doesn’t signify a change in Catholic theology, Bishop Richard Sklba.
Mary Elizabeth Sperry of the bishops conference acknowledges that dropping the virgin may rankle some: "Some people will be gravely distressed, and others will be absolutely ecstatic and some will just say, 'I liked it the old way.' "
Proverbs 31:10, which riled many women because it detailed the image of "The Ideal Wife" from a man’s worldview, now is called a "Poem on the Woman of Worth."
"Women will like this: being measured by their own accomplishments, not in terms of a husband's perspective," Sperry says.
These Bishops soles are in trouble, the last paragraph in the Bible says "Anyone who takes away any wording of this Bible or adds to this Bible will suffer the plagues described in this book seven times fold" After centuries of Bible teaching, these Bishops feel that the Bible should be changed? We need to pry for them. Stay with your old Bible and DO NOT purchase this new version.
ReplyDeleteFor the time will come when men will not put up with sound doctrine. Instead, to suit their own desires, they will gather around them a great number of teachers to say what their itching ears want to hear.
ReplyDelete2 Tim 4:3