Liberal Bibles?
#1
Posted 12 July 2004 - 12:20 PM
Do any of the more liberal denominations put out their own study Bibles, or are there any generic non-denominational liberal study Bibles in existence?
Thanks!
#2
Posted 15 July 2004 - 02:32 AM
#3
Posted 15 July 2004 - 11:46 AM
Amazon.com review
The New Interpreter's Study Bible: New Revised Standard Version With the Apocrapha
by Walter J. Harrelson
#4
Posted 16 July 2004 - 01:37 AM
The Jefferson Bible
by Thomas Jefferson
Amazon.com review
#5
Posted 16 July 2004 - 01:38 AM
#7
Posted 31 August 2004 - 07:34 AM
http://www.quixote.org/pfe/index.html
#8
Posted 09 September 2004 - 07:08 PM
The NIV and KJV!
For crying out loud, if your looking for a bible that's liberal or conservitive, your really missing the point.
Jason
Minusmay.com
#9 Guest_admin_*
Posted 04 October 2004 - 11:17 AM
The request was not for a "liberal" bible (though one could argue that translators supply their own interpretive lens, as evidenced by the fact that you seem to prefer the KJV and NIV versions), but for a liberal *study* bible, which, clearly, would have an interpretative bias.
Hope that clarifies...
#10
Posted 26 December 2004 - 10:29 PM
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I have this study Bible and highly recommend it. It is the NRSV with Apocrypha. It includes study notes, excursuses, some topical essays having to do with interpretation. Scholars that contribute are those leading in their field. Before each book there is an introduction with structure of the book concerned.
If anyone is interested in OT, I recommend "Sources of the Pentateuch: Texts, Introductions, Annnotations" by A. F. Campbell and M. A. Obrien. It is the first five books Genesis to Deuteronomy, though the later book contains only 4 verses. It's divided into J, E, P source (that's why Deut has only a handful of verses, Leviticus and Numbers also only include verses that pertain to J, E, P). In this text you can read J as one whole, E as a whole, likewise with P. It's a different way to read the Pentateuch, giving one a feel in the way that Historical critics are thinking.
#11
Posted 27 December 2004 - 11:02 PM
I really enjoy the Life Application Study Bible. I have one in the NIV and one in the New Living Translation. When you read the commentary at the beginning and you see how many different denominations and scholars were involved, and when you read how exacting their research was, it gives you a confidence in it that, at least for myself, is lacking with some of the other versions. I grew up with the KJV, and my Pastor still uses it in his sermons, but when I study in private, the Life Application Study Bible helps give a clearer understanding of the scriptures.
God Bless,
TammyJo58
#12
Posted 30 December 2004 - 10:24 PM
I find it easy to read. The annotations seem thorough. It is scholarly and balanced; not too far to the right, not to far to the left.
The text is evenly spaced and easy on the eyes. The paper is of superior quality, which can be a problem with some Bibles.
I figure my next bible will be The Access Bible, which also uses the NRSV. Or:
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This study bible looks awesome! I looked it up on Amazon and found the following review from someone who DOESN'T LIKE the NRSV for this reason:
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Can you believe it? How dare the editors of the NRSV call the Hebrew scriptures, well, the Hebrew scriptures?!
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And now, thanks to Socius, I will be obtaining this as well.
Aletheia
This post has been edited by AletheiaRivers: 30 December 2004 - 10:52 PM
#14
Posted 21 May 2005 - 03:45 PM
#15
Posted 21 May 2005 - 04:20 PM
killermode, on Sep 9 2004, 05:08 PM, said:
The NIV and KJV!
For crying out loud, if your looking for a bible that's liberal or conservitive, your really missing the point.
Jason
Minusmay.com
I doubt you'll find many here who agree with you. The NIV is a conservative translation that actually manipulates the text of the Holy Scriptures to say what they want. For example, you know all those parts of the NT where Paul talks about sexual practices and it says Homosexual or gay in the NIV? Turns out there's no word that is anything close to gay or homosexual in the origianl languages the NT was written in, so how did they pull that off? As for the KJV, I read it primarily for the Psalms, most of the Psalms I memorize are the KJV version simply because they sound more beautiful to me than any other translation. However I can't make heads nor tales of most of it, so it is not my primary Bible. Not to mention the fact that it has similar problems to the NIV, except in the case of the KJV, verses appear in the english that don't exist anywhere in the original texts.
#16
Posted 15 August 2005 - 05:05 PM
#18
Posted 01 July 2006 - 10:03 PM
GreenPartyVoter, on Jul 18 2004, 01:22 PM, said:
The Access Bible is an excellent beginning study Bible. You made an excellent choice.
“When questioning is banned, we are in the presence of idolatry.”
—Clark Williamson and Ronald Allen
#19
Posted 06 July 2006 - 11:34 AM
For example, If I am inspired by the mercy of God I may choose to be liberal. If I am inspired by the holiness of God I may choose to be conservative.
I am free to change my mind on each inspiration. Conservatively for example I may choose to eat health food. Liberally, I may choose to eat frozen custard.
Conservatively I may choose to pray for universal healthcare in the USA. Liberally, I may choose to politely greet people on the street.
The point is: the bible is both conservative and liberal. I am free to respond either way. Both are valid responses.
It does not have to be either / or, it can be both / and!
Dave
#20
Posted 16 July 2006 - 12:47 AM
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This post has been edited by Ted Michael Morgan: 16 July 2006 - 01:00 AM
“When questioning is banned, we are in the presence of idolatry.”
—Clark Williamson and Ronald Allen

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