Orthodox Study Bible

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Orthodox Study Bible
OrthodoxStudyBible.jpg
Full nameOrthodox Study Bible
AbbreviationOSB
Complete Bible
published
2008
Textual basisNT: New King James Version OT: St. Athanasius Academy Septuagint
Translation typeFormal Equivalence
Version revisionNew King James Version
PublisherThomas Nelson, Inc.
CopyrightCopyright 2008 Thomas Nelson, Inc.
Religious affiliationEastern Orthodox Church (nonofficial)

The Orthodox Study Bible (OSB) is an Eastern Orthodox study Bible published by Thomas Nelson. It features an English translation of the St. Athanasius Academy Septuagint for the Old Testament and utilizes the New King James Version for the New Testament. This publication is not an official text of the Eastern Orthodox Church.

Translation[]

The OSB's Old Testament (2008 edition) is an eclectic text combining elements of the Greek Septuagint and the Hebrew Masoretic Text. One important feature of the OSB is that all New Testament quotations of the Old Testament are identical in wording between the Old and New Testaments (e.g. Genesis 1:27; Matthew 19:5; Mark 10:7-8; 1 Cor 6:16; Eph 5:31). Although the Orthodox Church does respect the Hebrew Old Testament,[citation needed] it also believes the Septuagint tradition should be studied by the church, out of respect for both the New Testament writers and the Eastern Church tradition.[citation needed]

The Old Testament was prepared under the auspices of the academic community of St. Athanasius Academy of Orthodox Theology, using clergy and lay scholars. The overview committee included fourteen archbishops, metropolitans, and bishops from various Orthodox jurisdictions, as well as eight priests and seven lay scholars. The Old Testament includes a new translation of the Psalms by Donald Sheehan of Dartmouth College.[citation needed]

The New Testament is the New King James Version (NKJV), which uses the Textus Receptus.

The original edition of the OSB, released in 1993, included only the New Testament and Psalms, both NKJV. The NKJV text of the Psalms were replaced in the 2008 edition by the Psalms of the new OSB translation of the Old Testament.[citation needed]

Study materials[]

The translations of the Old Testament and New Testament are accompanied by commentary from the Orthodox viewpoint. Articles provide guidance and support for many facets of the Orthodox faith which can be confusing or unknown to those who did not grow up in the Church. There is a comparative of list of contents, side-by-side with the Roman Catholic canon and the generally accepted Protestant canon. The OSB addresses such questions as: Why is the Mother of God essential to the Faith? Who were the Seventy Disciples? How is an Orthodox understanding of the Bible different from a Roman Catholic or Protestant understanding? In addition, the OSB provides basic daily prayers, a lectionary for personal use, and reproductions of icons in its pages.

Response[]

The work has never had a special approval, nor the blessing of the Ecumenical Patriarchate. It was not produced on the advice of any of the old orthodox Patriarchates. For this reason, the present publication cannot be seen as an official text of the Eastern Orthodox Church as a whole.

The work has received positive endorsements from such prominent bishops as Metropolitan Maximos of Pittsburgh (Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America), Metropolitan Phillip (Antiochian Orthodox Church) and Metropolitan Theodosius (Orthodox Church in America).[1]

Among the work's critics, Archimandrite Ephrem, writing in the Orthodox Christian journal Sourozh, has stated that the commentary "feels far too much like a piece of evangelical propaganda decked out in the trappings of Orthodoxy."[2] Priest Seraphim Johnson has written in The Orthodox Christian Witness that "the Study Bible reproduces the whole textual apparatus of the NKJV, including many of the doubtful decisions of modern non-Orthodox biblical scholarship."[3] (Both of these reviews review the 1993 edition of the Orthodox Study Bible, which included only the NT and Psalms.) Some of the issues raised in these reviews have been addressed in the 2008 edition.[citation needed]

See also[]

  • Septuagint § English translations

References[]

  1. ^ Endorsements of the OSB by Orthodox hierarchs
  2. ^ Archimandrite Ephrem. "Book Review: The Orthodox Study Bible". Orthodox Christian Information Center.
  3. ^ Priest Seraphim Johnson. "Review in The Orthodox Christian Witness, Vol. XXVII, No. 18(1273)". Orthodox Christian Information Center.

External links[]

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