Editorial | From the Editor | Stephen Pattemore | |
Editorial | Biblical Canons in Church Traditions and Translations | Jean-Claude Loba Mkole | This issue of The Bible Translator is devoted to the subject of the biblical
ca...... View MoreThis issue of The Bible Translator is devoted to the subject of the biblical
canon, offering papers presented at UBS Global Bible Translation meetings.
The introduction to the issue highlights the following points: the purpose of
the papers, church perspectives on biblical canons, the contents of the papers,
and the findings and suggestions drawn from the authors’ conclusions. View Less |
Article | The Accretion of Canons in and around Qumran | Andy Warren-Rothlin | There is no evidence for a closed OT canon before A.D. 70. Our various
sources ...... View MoreThere is no evidence for a closed OT canon before A.D. 70. Our various
sources indicate a high degree of fluidity and gradual accretion, closely
related to politico-historical developments and the exigencies of new
religious communities. The text collection of one such community, near
Qumran, can be investigated for the comparative rating of biblical books,
including those in the Tanakh as we know it, others which may have had
ambiguous status, and a number of different types of Scripture-based
works. This picture may serve to relativize modern Christian conceptions
of canon where they have been based on accidents of history such as the
language in which texts have been available or the media in which they have
been transmitted. As a result, the Bible Societies may need to engage with
a wider range of concepts of canon. View Less |
Article | The Septuagint as Canon | Simon Crisp | The term “Septuagint” refers to a lengthy process by which individual
books...... View MoreThe term “Septuagint” refers to a lengthy process by which individual
books of the Hebrew Bible were translated into Greek, together with the
inclusion of a few books originally composed in Greek. It only took on
the form of a more or less fixed corpus much later. In the same way, this
collection of books in Greek acquired authoritative status for its users over
a period of time; notions of formal or institutional canonicity came only at a
considerably later date, and in a Christian rather than a Jewish context. This
article summarizes the processes by which the Greek translation was made
and traces the way in which this corpus gradually acquired authoritative
and then canonical status. Some practical implications for Bible Societies’
translation policies are also presented. View Less |
Article | The Canonization Process of the Masoretic Text | Seppo Sipilä | This article discusses the process that gave canonical status to the Masoretic
...... View MoreThis article discusses the process that gave canonical status to the Masoretic
Text. The discussion will start from the present reality and continue
backwards. Because the Masoretic Text is a creation of rabbinic Judaism
and because the rabbis did discuss the status of various books within the
Masoretic Text, this article will argue for a late dating both of the text as
a collection and of its canonization. However, within Christian canons, the
Masoretic Text acts as a canonical text in a limited way, in the sense that
it is only a part of those canons. Besides, there is no moment in history
where any authority declared the Masoretic Text canonical. Therefore, it
is nowadays widely accepted as a canonical text, but without authorization. View Less |
Article | The Canon in the Vulgate Translation of the Bible | Daniel Kerber | This paper focuses on the development of the Vulgate translation of the
Bible a...... View MoreThis paper focuses on the development of the Vulgate translation of the
Bible and the correlative discussion about the canon, particularly the Old
Testament canon, since there were no major disputes over the New
Testament books in the days of the Reformation. The New Testament
canon was fixed, for the most part, during the fourth to fifth centuries.
Special attention will be given to the fourth session of the Council of Trent,
where the two decrees regarding the Vulgate were issued. View Less |
Article | The Reformation Canon and the Development of Biblical Scholarship | Marijke H. de Lang | This paper argues that the well-intended attention of humanist and
Reformation ...... View MoreThis paper argues that the well-intended attention of humanist and
Reformation scholars to the original languages of the Bible also had its
downside, especially for study of the New Testament. Although the revival
of Greek and Hebrew studies in itself was a positive development, together
with the promotion of a Hebrew canon and the notion of sola scriptura, the
hermeneutical horizon of the New Testament was limited to a Hebrew
canon and a Semitic context. The New Testament was separated from its
original Hellenistic-Jewish Greek environment, and was explained from a
background to which it never really belonged. View Less |
Article | The Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church Canon of the Scriptures: Neither Open nor Closed | Bruk A. Asale | Traditionally, the Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church (EOTC) holds
that its can...... View MoreTraditionally, the Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church (EOTC) holds
that its canon of the Scriptures comprises eighty-one books of the Old
and New Testaments. However, which books comprise this list remains
obscure and the very little research executed so far on the topic is both
insufficient and misleading. This paper critically investigates if there has
ever been a closed canon in the EOTC. It further critically engages with
the notion and concept of the term “canon” and/or the Scripture(s). The
theoretical framework applicable to this study is a history of reception
approach as the study focuses on the history of reception, collection,
translation, and transmission of the Scriptures in the Ethiopian Church.
Methodologically, this study applies both library readings and fieldwork
and the main tool employed in collecting data is qualitative interviews. In
addition, insights from Ethiopian literature that have been neglected or
that were earlier inaccessible are used. Finally, the study tries to prove
that not only the canon of the EOTC, but also its concept in this church is
very loose; it is possible to conclude that the canon of the EOTC is neither
open nor closed. View Less |
Article | Canon and Biblical Text in the Slavonic Tradition in Russia | Lénart J. de Regt | In order to gain a better understanding of the situation in Russia with regard
...... View MoreIn order to gain a better understanding of the situation in Russia with regard
to biblical canon and biblical text, particularly in the Russian Orthodox
Church, this article reflects on the notion of non-canonical books, the
role of tradition and its roots in the development of the canon in early
Eastern Christianity, as well as the Russian Orthodox Church’s acceptance
of multiple authoritative versions of biblical books. This is followed by a
brief discussion of the Slavonic Bible and the Russian Synodal Translation,
particularly their sometimes hybrid textual base. The article closes with
some thoughts on what this complex situation might mean for Bible
translation projects in Orthodox contexts in Russia. View Less |
Article | Intercultural Construction of the New Testament Canons | Jean-Claude Loba Mkole | The aim of this paper is to discuss NT canons, using an intercultural method
in...... View MoreThe aim of this paper is to discuss NT canons, using an intercultural method
in dialogue with historical and canonical approaches. While focusing on
NT canons, this study presumes that a Christian Bible is made of two subcollections,
the Old or First Testament and the New or Second Testament.
It also assumes that each of the two sections may have canonical and noncanonical
books, but not deuterocanonical books, suggesting that the term
“deuterocanonical” is inappropriate for designating books that faith communities
regard as either canonical or non-canonical. View Less |