30.11.2023

Translation of the Bible into Greek. Understanding the Greek of the New Testament. Where to find out more


    1 βίβλος

    λευκή (πρασίνη, κυανή, κίτρινη) βίβλος - watered white (green, blue, yellow) book;

    2) the Bible;

    3) bot. bast

    2 βίβλος

    ἡ βίβλος book ( Wedτὰ βιβλία Bible; library)

    3 2316

    {noun, 1343}

    4 θεός

    {noun, 1343}

    5 θεός

    {noun, 1343}

    6 Βίβλος

    [vivlos] ουσ θ Bible.

See also in other dictionaries:

    BIBLE- (Greek Biblia books), or Holy Scripture, a book that includes those written in other Hebrew. language, the books of the Jewish canon, called Christians (together with several so-called books of the second canon, which came down only in translation in Greek or written ... ... Philosophical Encyclopedia

    Bible- (Greek τα βιβλια books) the name of a collection of works of religious literature recognized as sacred in the Christian and Jewish religions (the name τα βιβλια is borrowed from the introduction to the book of the Wisdom of Jesus son of Sirach, where this name ... ... Literary encyclopedia

    BIBLE- (Greek biblion book). Sacred books of the Old and New Testaments. Dictionary of foreign words included in the Russian language. Chudinov A.N., 1910. BIBLE (Greek) means books that the Christian Church recognizes as written by the Spirit of God,... ... Dictionary of foreign words of the Russian language

    Bible- - an extensive collection of books of different origins and contents (the word “Bible” comes from the Greek βιβλία “books”). It is divided into two sections: the Old Testament and the New Testament. The Old Testament consists of 48 books written in the period from the 11th century. BC e. before the 1st century n.... ... Dictionary of scribes and bookishness of Ancient Rus'

    BIBLE- cannot be the work of the Almighty simply because He speaks too flatteringly about Himself and too badly about man. But maybe this just proves that He is its Author? Christian Friedrich Goebbel I read the criminal code and the Bible. Bible... ... Consolidated encyclopedia of aphorisms

Book of Matthew.

Chapter 1
1 This is the genealogy of Jesus Christ, Coming from the line of David, Born of the line of Abraham.
2 Abraham was the father of Isaac. Isaac was the father of Jacob, Jacob was the father of Judah and his brothers.
3 Judah was the father of Perez and Zehra, whose mother was Tamar. Perez was the father of Hezrom, Hezrom was the father of Aram.
4 Aram was the father of Abinadab. Amminadab was the father of Nahshon. Nahshon was the father of Salmon.
5 Salmon was the father of Boaz, whose mother was Rahab. Boaz was the father of Obed, whose mother was Ruth. Obed was the father of Jesse.
6 Jesse was the father of King David. David was the father of Solomon, whose mother was Uriah's wife.
7 Solomon was the father of Rehoboam. Rehoboam was the father of Abijah. Abijah was the father of Asa.
8 Asa was the father of Jehoshaphat. Jehoshaphat was the father of Jehoram. Jehoram was the father of Uzziah.
9 Uzziah was the father of Jotham. Jotham was the father of Ahaz. Ahaz was the father of Hezekiah.
10 Hezekiah was the father of Manasseh. Manasseh was the father of Amon. Amon was the father of Josiah.
11 Josiah was the father of Joachim. Joachim was the father of Jehoiachin and his brothers. (This was during the migration of the people of Israel to Babylon.)
12 After the exile to Babylon, Jeconiah was the father of Shealtiel, Shealtiel was the father of Zerubbabel.
13 Zerubbabel was the father of Abihu, Abihu was the father of Eliakim, Eliakim was the father of Azor.
14 Azor was the father of Zadok. Zadok was the father of Achim, Achim was the father of Elihu.
15 Eliud was the father of Eliazar. Eliazar was the father of Matthan, Matthan was the father of Jacob.
16 And Jacob was the father of Joseph, the husband of Mary, to whom was born Jesus, who is called Christ.
17 In all there were fourteen generations between Abraham and David, and fourteen generations between David and the exile in Babylon, and fourteen generations between the exile in Babylon and the birth of Christ.
18 This is how the birth of Jesus Christ happened: His mother Mary was engaged to Joseph. But before their marriage took place, it turned out that she was pregnant by the Holy Spirit.
19 But Joseph, her future husband, was a pious man and did not want to expose her to public humiliation, so he decided to end the engagement without publicity.
20 But while he was pondering this, an angel of the Lord appeared to him in a dream and said: “Joseph, son of David, do not be afraid to take Mary as your wife, for the child she has conceived is of the Holy Spirit.
21 And she will bear a son, and you will name Him Jesus, for He will save His people from their sins.”
22 All this happened in fulfillment of the prediction of the Lord, proclaimed by the mouth of the prophet:
23 “Listen! A virgin will become pregnant and give birth to a son. And they will call Him Emmanuel, which means “God is with us!”
24 When Joseph woke up, he did as the angel of the Lord commanded and took Mary into his house as his wife,
25 But he kept her virginity until she gave birth to a son. Joseph named Him Jesus.

Chapter 2
1 Jesus was born in Bethlehem, in Judea, during the time of King Herod. Some time later, wise men came to Jerusalem from the east.
2 They asked, “Where is the newborn King of the Jews? We saw His star shine in the sky and we came to worship Him.”
3 When King Herod heard this, he was greatly alarmed, and the inhabitants of Jerusalem were alarmed along with him.
4 Then Herod gathered all the chief priests and lawyers and asked them where Christ was to be born.
5 They said to him: “In Bethlehem, in Judea, for this is what is written by the prophet:
6 You, Bethlehem, in the land of Judah, are by no means the last among the rulers of the Jews, for from you will come a ruler who will become the shepherd of my people Israel."
7 And then Herod called the wise men and found out from them when the star appeared in the sky.
8 Then he sent them to Bethlehem and said, “Go and inquire in detail about the Child. And when you find Him, tell me so that I too can go and worship Him.”
9 They listened to the king and went away, and the star that they saw shining in the sky in the east moved ahead of them until it stopped over the place where the Child was.
10 When the wise men saw the star, they rejoiced.
11 They entered the house and saw the Child with Mary His Mother and, falling on their faces, they worshiped Him. Then they opened their treasure chests and began to offer Him gifts: gold, incense and myrrh.
12 But God appeared to them in a dream and warned them not to return to Herod, so the wise men went back to their country by another road.
13 After they had left, an angel of the Lord appeared to Joseph in a dream and said, “Get up, take the Child and His Mother and flee to Egypt. Stay there until I let you know, for Herod will look for the Child to kill Him.”
14 Joseph arose, took the Child and His Mother by night, and left for Egypt.
15 He remained there until the death of Herod. This happened to fulfill what the Lord said through the mouth of the prophet: “I called My Son out of Egypt.”
16 Then Herod, seeing that the wise men had deceived him, flew into a rage and ordered the death of all the male children in Bethlehem and the area from two years old and under (determining the age from what the wise men told him).
17 Then what was spoken by the mouth of the prophet Jeremiah was fulfilled:
18 “A cry was heard in Rama, the sounds of sobs and great sadness. It is Rachel crying for her children, not listening to consolations, for they are no longer alive.”
19 After the death of Herod, an angel of the Lord appeared to Joseph in Egypt in a dream.
20 He said, “Get up, take the Child and His Mother and go to the land of Israel, for those who tried to destroy the Child are dead.”
21 Joseph arose, took the child and his mother, and departed for the land of Israel.
22 Having heard that Archelaus ruled Judea instead of Herod his father, Joseph was afraid to return there, but, having received a warning from God in a dream, he went to the outskirts of Galilee.
23 When he arrived there, he settled in a city called Nazareth. Joseph made sure that the prophet’s predictions that they would call Him a Nazarene were fulfilled.

Chapter 3
1 In those days John the Baptist came, preaching in the wilderness of Judea.
2 He said, “Repent, for the kingdom of heaven is at hand.”

By the 3rd century BC. BC, after the conquests of Alexander the Great, the archaic world of the ancient Near East found itself face to face with the world of classical antiquity. After this collision, many of the most important images and themes of the Hebrew religion were rethought. At the center of this reinterpretation is the Greek translation of the Bible (Old Testament), the so-called Septuagint.

Candidate of Philological Sciences, Associate Professor at the Institute of Oriental Cultures and Antiquity of the Russian State University for the Humanities, Head of the Department of Biblical Studies of the Church Postgraduate and Doctoral Studies of the Russian Orthodox Church. In 1991–2010, he was the project manager for a new translation of the Old Testament into Russian, initiated by the Russian Bible Society.

Abstracts

The translation of the Hebrew Bible into Greek is the first transposition of a large literary corpus from one language into another in the history of Europe and the Middle East. This in itself is incredibly interesting - it’s as if we are present at the very first steps of literary translation, becoming witnesses and researchers of the birth of the translation craft. The categories in which we are accustomed to classify and evaluate translation techniques turn out to be inapplicable here. We are talking, for example, about literal and free translations. But the Septuagint is both very literal - just not in the same way as the modern literalistic translations - and very free - just not in the same way as the free modern translations. Its authors had a different understanding of the translator’s task, different from ours.

There are many discrepancies between the canonical text of the Hebrew Bible and its Greek translation. Some of them are related to the fact that the Hebrew original that lay before the translators was different from the text that was subsequently canonized in the Jewish tradition. But in most cases, discrepancies appeared during the translation process. Any translation of a text from language to language is also a translation from one culture to another; The greater the distance between the two cultures, the more noticeable this is. The gap between the world of the Hebrew Bible and the ancient world was enormous, which led to reinterpretation of the biblical text and gave rise to new, sometimes unexpected, but very important meanings.

These differences between the Hebrew and Greek Bibles turn out to be much more relevant for Russian culture than for any Western European culture. The fact is that the Orthodox tradition, which permeates our entire cultural heritage - icon painting, prayers, liturgical reminiscences in fiction - is based on the texts of the Greek Bible. And the generally accepted Synodal translation of the Bible is based on the Hebrew text. As a result, for example, a simple person who comes to church is faced with such serious textological problems that, in theory, should only concern narrow specialists in the Septuagint. In Russian culture, exegetical Exegesis- interpretation of biblical texts. The decisions made by the Jews of Alexandria more than two thousand years ago became the subject of heated controversy - for example, disputes over the Synodal translation of the Bible.

Interview with lecturer

— Tell us why you began to study this particular topic?

— Since my youth, I have been very interested in the connection between our religious tradition and its cultural context, its historical dynamics. I became particularly interested in the relationship between the Greek and Hebrew Bibles when I was working on a new translation of the Old Testament into Russian (I supervised the translation of the Old Testament into Russian, which was initiated by the Russian Bible Society; in relation to some books, I acted as a translator - driver, to the rest - as an editor). Questions about choosing one textual option or another arose at every step, and each option had its own story, often unresolved.

— What place does the subject of your study occupy in the modern world?

— The differences between the Greek Bible and the Hebrew Bible have always been of interest to biblical scholars. But in the last quarter of a century, the study of the Septuagint has experienced a real boom - in English-speaking countries, in Germany, France, Spain, Finland, serious research centers are emerging, translations of the Greek Bible into English, French, German, and Spanish are being published. The fact is that the focus of biblical scholarship has long been on the search for the “original text” and the “original meaning”; in such a perspective, the later (even two thousand years ago, but still the latest!) adaptations and translations of the Hebrew text were marginal and uninteresting. And somewhere from the end of the last century, the scientific paradigm itself began to change: it became obvious that the history of the Bible is the history of its interpretation and re-interpretation, and every turn of this complex story has its own meaning and its own beauty.

— If you had to make a stranger fall in love with your topic very quickly, how would you do it?

— I would simply invite him to read the Old Testament together, through the eyes of a historian and philologist. It is incredibly interesting to trace how the biblical texts, which for centuries nourished and shaped our civilization, were understood in different eras. How discrepancies arose between the Hebrew and Greek texts of the Bible, how these discrepancies were reflected in subsequent translations and in the controversy surrounding them.

— What is the most interesting thing you learned while working with your material?

— The moment of meeting, the clash of different cultures is very interesting: you can clearly see how differently people perceive the world around them. You compare, for example, two texts and see an obvious error, misunderstanding. You look more closely and realize that it could not have been otherwise. The world of antiquity is so different from the world of the Ancient Near East that sometimes misunderstanding, or even “understanding exactly the opposite,” was inevitable and natural. I am going to give some examples of this kind - I think they are very beautiful, sometimes simply bewitching - in my lectures. But I won’t talk about it now so as not to ruin the intrigue.

— If you had the opportunity to study a completely different topic now, what would you choose and why?

— I studied many other topics related to the Bible in one way or another. For example, the history of the formation of Old Testament historical narratives - in which, in fact, historical memory is reinterpreted under the influence of motives of a theological, literary or religious-political nature. This is also incredibly interesting: the text turns out to be multi-layered, and its everyday, chronological or geographical details appear as a symbolic expression of the theological, for example, or political concepts of the ancient author. That is, biblical texts are not only reinterpreted in later traditions - they themselves arise as a reinterpretation of historical memory.

I devoted almost two decades to translating the Old Testament into Russian. I often want to return to this; I would now translate many things differently, but, most importantly, I would provide my translation with a much more detailed historical and philological commentary. I think I’ll come back and accompany you.

In general, by my first education I am a structural linguist, my teachers were Andrei Anatolyevich Zaliznyak and Alexander Evgenievich Kibrik, and sometimes I am a little sorry that I left linguistics. Of what is happening now in this area, I am perhaps especially interested in the cognitive theory of metaphor; By the way, it is also very important for the hermeneutics of religious texts - for understanding the very language of religion, its nature.

Where to find out more

Sergey Averintsev. “Greek “literature” and Middle Eastern “literature”” (collection “Rhetoric and the Origins of the European Literary Tradition”, 1996)

Averintsev's classic article can serve as an excellent introduction to the history of the meeting of the cultures of the Ancient East and Hellenism.

Arkady Kovelman. "Hellenism and Jewish Culture" (2007)

This collection was written by a leading expert on Judaism and the Hellenistic period and will allow you to find out how the clash of two cultures took place - Hebrew and Hellenistic.

Karen H. Jobes, Moises Silva. "Invitation to the Septuagint" (2000)

As for books that would introduce the reader to the problems of the Septuagint itself, the situation is worse. In English there is a whole range of different “introductions to the Septuagint” - from those designed for professional philologists to those intended for the widest audience. There are detailed and up-to-date “introductions to the Septuagint” in French, German, and Spanish. There is no such introduction in Russian yet, and I’m currently working on it.

Ilya Vevyurko. “The Septuagint: the ancient Greek text of the Old Testament in the history of religious thought” (2013)

This monograph was published recently. It is not easy to read: the point is not so much the need to know Hebrew and Ancient Greek well, but rather the fact that the text of the Septuagint is considered here from a philosophical, philosophical and theological perspective, which, in my opinion, is much more difficult to understand than a historical and philological one an approach.

Emanuel Tov. “Textology of the Old Testament” (3rd ed., 2015)

From this book you can glean brief information about the Septuagint, its textual history, and examples of its relationship with the Hebrew text. Tov is the most famous textual critic of the Hebrew Bible today; his works are always encyclopedically concise and informative. He has studies specifically devoted to the Septuagint, but, unfortunately, they have not been translated into Russian.

Exhibition for the lecture

For the lecture, employees of the Center for Oriental Literature of the Russian State Library and the research department of rare books of the Russian State Library prepared a mini-exhibition of three rare books from the library’s collections.

The exhibition presents a German edition of the Tanakh (Hebrew Bible in canonical Jewish configuration) from the 16th century; Psalter printed in Venice by the Italian printer Aldus Manutius; as well as the first complete edition of the text of the Bible in Greek, prepared in the 16th century, also in the printing house of Aldus Manutius.

On the fixed flyleaf is the name of the owner of the publication, Baron Gunzburg.

"The Sacred Way" is a complete vocalized text of the Tanakh (Hebrew Bible) edited by Elias Gutter. Hamburg, 1587

At the beginning of each book of the Bible, small parchment bookmarks protruding from the side edge are glued to the leaves.

Storage code TsVL RSL: Ginz 4/1839 (Gintsburg Collection)

"The Sacred Way" is a complete vocalized text of the Tanakh (Hebrew Bible) edited by Elias Gutter. Hamburg, 1587

The book comes with an extensive Latin preface by the editor, providing an overview of the basics of biblical language and grammatical tables.

Storage code TsVL RSL: Ginz 4/1839 (Gintsburg Collection)

"The Sacred Way" is a complete vocalized text of the Tanakh (Hebrew Bible) edited by Elias Gutter. Hamburg, 1587 Storage code TsVL RSL: Ginz 4/1839 (Gintsburg Collection)

"The Sacred Way" is a complete vocalized text of the Tanakh (Hebrew Bible) edited by Elias Gutter. Hamburg, 1587 Storage code TsVL RSL: Ginz 4/1839 (Gintsburg Collection)

"The Sacred Way" is a complete vocalized text of the Tanakh (Hebrew Bible) edited by Elias Gutter. Hamburg, 1587

A separate sheet contains examples of translations of the same verse from Psalm 117 into 30 languages ​​- Aramaic, Arabic, Syriac, Ethiopian, Greek, seven different translations into Latin, several Germanic languages ​​in various Gothic scripts (including such exotic ones as Vandal), Icelandic , Czech, Polish, Croatian and Russian, which is called Lingua Moscouitica and is depicted in a very archaic way.

Storage code TsVL RSL: Ginz 4/1839 (Gintsburg Collection)

"The Sacred Way" is a complete vocalized text of the Tanakh (Hebrew Bible) edited by Elias Gutter. Hamburg, 1587 Storage code TsVL RSL: Ginz 4/1839 (Gintsburg Collection)

"The Sacred Way" is a complete vocalized text of the Tanakh (Hebrew Bible) edited by Elias Gutter. Hamburg, 1587 Storage code TsVL RSL: Ginz 4/1839 (Gintsburg Collection)

Bible translations (modern, synodal, interlinear)

    QUESTION FROM OLESYA
    Have you read the New World Translation of Scripture? And if so, what is your opinion? What I mean is that, for example, I found a translation there that distorts the meaning of the Scriptures in the Synodal translation.

There are many translations of the Bible. I treat them with caution for the same reasons that you treat the “new world” translation, that is, I am afraid of distorting the meaning of Scripture. I know the Synodal text quite well and some of the few errors it contains related to translation. These errors are not fatal, that is, they do not change the essence of the Gospel. Therefore, I continue to use the Synodal text. And for a better understanding of the “controversial” passages, I read the original with the possible meanings of the words of the text that interests me and only sometimes others Bible translations. To study the Holy Scriptures, I use Strong's interlinear translation (Free program "Bible Quote - Quote from the Bible". In it you need to select the Russian Synodal text with Strong's numbers and click in the top menu of the S# program), watch online and Alexey Vinokurov. Based on experience, after studying a number of verses in the original, I realized that the original source helps to delve deeper into the thought laid down by God in His Word, and that the inaccuracies of the Synodal translation did not prevent me from knowing the Will of God. An example of the importance of knowing the translation of the Bible from the original can be seen, for example, in the chapter “Hell, Sheol. Death is a Dream”

I sometimes wondered: “Why did God allow incorrect translations of the Bible and, in particular, not entirely correct translations of some verses of the Synodal text?” Then I realized that all common Bible translations convey to readers the main message of the Gospel. And questions regarding the nuances of the teachings of the Holy Scriptures and “controversial” texts arise in a person at a time when he is already delving into the study of the Bible and its individual doctrines. So everything happens in a timely manner: questions come when the person is ready to seek the true will of God in various aspects of his life and worship and can find it. The choice is up to the individual. Anyone who wants to delve into the teachings of the Creator will find answers to their questions. The Bible says:

"Ask, and it shall be given you; seek and you will find; knock, and it will be opened to you. For everyone who asks receives, and the seeker finds and to him who knocks it will be opened” (Matt. 7:7).

“Do not pervert the law, ... the truth, seek the truth so that you may live” (Deut. 4.19)

"My son! if you accept my words and keep my commandments with you, so that your ear is attentive to wisdom and your heart is inclined to meditation; if you call on knowledge and appeal to reason; if you look for him, like silver, and look for it like treasure, then... you will find the knowledge of God. For the Lord gives wisdom; from His mouth come knowledge and understanding” (Proverbs 2.1-6).

In these biblical texts we see man's freedom of choice and the need to make efforts to know the will of God.


Valery Tatarkin


Other

This book is dedicated to brothers and sisters in Christ who believe in my abilities and have fellowship with me in teaching God's truth.

It is impossible to overstate the blessing that the Creator of the universe has bestowed upon mankind—the written communication of His will in the Holy Scriptures.

One of the amazing things about the Bible is its ability to convey the meaning of God's sacred message in any language into which it is translated. No book is so well adapted to the hundreds of languages ​​spoken by people living in this world. However, no translation can fully convey the richness of the original language. It is not always possible to reproduce subtle nuances of meaning and thought when conveying them through another language. For this reason, there are countless “nuggets” hidden from the surface that yearn to be revealed to the attentive reader of the Book of Books.

The Greek text of the New Testament has quite accurately been called the greatest treasure in the collection of all world literature. The New Testament was originally written in Koine Greek, which was spoken by common people in the first century. Koine Greek represents the most precise instrument for the expression of human thought that has ever existed in our world. It is therefore not surprising that the providence of God chose this very means for transmitting heavenly revelation to mankind.

Some people believe that studying Greek is only of interest to researchers. There are such “spiritual” persons who would like to maintain this opinion in order to have some kind of mysterious power over non-specialists. The sad thing is that many people are put off by Greek for no other reason than that it is an ancient foreign language. Such fear deprives a person of all the riches that the Greek text of the New Testament contains.

Noted scholar A. T. Robertson encouraged non-specialists to learn methods of research into the Greek text of the New Testament. He said that “knowledge of the Greek language is accessible to everyone to one degree or another.” I agree with this statement. Today there are so many means and methods of study that even an ordinary person who wants to explore the treasures of God's word can have the opportunity. I wrote this book for precisely this purpose. Its purpose is to show you how you can delve into the richness of the original text of the New Testament for yourself. New horizons will open up before you if you start studying it.

Special thanks to Betty, Jared and Jason Jackson, John Hanson, and Harry Brantley for reading the manuscript and providing helpful suggestions.

Wayne Jackson


2023
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