NRSVue Holy Bible: New Revised Standard Version Updated Edition, 9780281090143
Hardcover
The gold standard Bible, updated for today’s reader and scholarship.

NRSVue Holy Bible: New Revised Standard Version Updated Edition

British Text in Durable Hardback Binding

$38.39

  • Hardcover

    1258 pages

  • Release Date

    22 May 2024

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Summary

‘I have long regarded the NRSV as the gold standard of English Bible translation… This edition’s care over word choices and language makes it very appropriate for reading aloud and for personal Bible reading or use in Bible study groups.’

Steve Walton, Professor of New Testament, Trinity College, Bristol

Acclaimed by both biblical scholars and general readers as the most reliable English Bible available, the New Revised Standard Version follow…

Book Details

ISBN-13:9780281090143
ISBN-10:0281090149
Author:National Council of Churches
Publisher:SPCK Publishing
Imprint:SPCK Publishing
Format:Hardcover
Number of Pages:1258
Release Date:22 May 2024
Weight:664g
Dimensions:35mm x 257mm x 198mm
What They're Saying

Critics Review

The NRSV has long been my first choice among modern versions of the Bible, and as a linguist by training I was eager to see how this updated edition compares with previous versions. I was not disappointed! Thiry years of advances in textual analysis make it more accurate than any other translation, and now its sensitive rendering into elegant and inclusive British English ensures a smoother and more rewarding reading experience for millions of English speakers, both in the UK and around the world. All of which means the NRSVue now stands at the pinnacle of English Bible translations. – Emma Ineson, Bishop of Kensington, LondonI warmly welcome this new edition of the New Revised Standard Version in British English. I have long regarded the NRSV as the gold standard of English Bible translation, and this new edition brings the fine work of the NRSV translators into the twenty-first century. It is highly suitable for students in universities and theological colleges in giving a careful rendering of the original languages which is both clear and readable, and which avoids the extremes of free paraphrase and over-wooden translation. This edition’s care over word choices and language makes it very appropriate for reading aloud in church or synagogue, and for personal Bible reading or use in Bible study groups. I trust it will bring Bible reading to a wider audience, and enrich those who read it. – Steve Walton, Professor of New Testament, Trinity College, Bristol, UKBritish readers of the scriptures, whether in church, study or prayer, can rejoice to find here a version which retains the accuracy and dignity of the great tradition of biblical translations, which is updated to reflect the rapidly evolving patterns of the contemporary language, and which speaks in the nuanced tones of English as it is used in these islands. Those who are looking for a Bible that combines reliability, cadence and immediacy will find it here. – Michael Ipgrave, Bishop of Lichfield and Chair of the Church of England’s Liturgical CommissionThe new British version of the NRSVue Bible is likely to become the norm for Bible reading in churches and private study. It reflects the latest scholarship while being sensitive to cultural changes on issues such as gender, race and disability. It also echoes a more distinctly English tradition which will be welcome to many who are the cultural descendants of those who still treasure the King James Version. – Angela Tilby, Canon Emeritus of Christ Church Cathedral, OxfordThe NRSV has long been the Bible translation I go to for teaching purposes because of its careful attention to meaning and nuance. This new edition is much more user-friendly for English readers. Where it makes changes that are more than just Anglicisations, as, for example, in Matthew 2.23 (the virgin becomes pregnant, rather than conceives), the intention is clearly to use everyday language rather than archaisms. When it does the opposite (the Wise Men become Magi, for example), it alerts us to a bigger point: these were not just clever people, but professionals in an arcane field. It is important for readers of the Bible to notice the loving, attentive decisions made by translators of the text, seeking to draw us into a more than surface engagement with the words on the page. Translators help us, too, to translate the Bible in our lives. – Jane Williams, McDonald Professor in Christian Theology, St Mellitus College, LondonI view the NRSV translation to be the finest English Bible we have today. Its scholarship is impeccable. The English is accurate, approachable, and readable. I recommend it highly. – Richard J. Foster, writer and theologianThe NRSV is my first choice, both for my college classes and for my own study and devotion. The careful scholarship of the translation, the generosity of the pronouns, and the invaluable textual notations make this translation my most trusted friend in preaching, teaching, worship and prayer. – Barbara Brown Taylor, writer and preacher

About The Author

National Council of Churches

The National Council of the Churches of Christ in the USA, usually identified as the National Council of Churches (NCC), is the largest ecumenical body in the United States, comprising members from 38 Christian faith groups. The NCC sponsored the multi-denominational research effort that produced the Revised Standard Version (1952) and the New Revised Standard Version (1989), and holds the copyrights to both translations. In 2017 the NCC commissioned the Society of Biblical Literature (SBL), the world’s leading international association of biblical scholars, to review and update the NRSV. The SBL review panel included seven general editors and fifty-six book editors.

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