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The First Epistle of John is the fourth of the catholic epistles in the New Testament, written by an unknown author in Ephesus between 95 and 110 AD. It teaches on love, fellowship, and how to discern true teachers and false prophets.
The Voice is a dynamic equivalent translation of the Bible published by Thomas Nelson and the Ecclesia Bible Society. It uses different words for God, Jesus, and the Holy Spirit than most other translations, which has drawn criticism from some fundamentalists.
Green's Literal Translation or the LITV is a formal equivalence translation of the Bible by Jay P. Green Sr., published in 1985. It uses the Masoretic Text for the Old Testament and the Textus Receptus for the New Testament, and renders the Tetragrammaton as Jehovah.
The New English Translation, like the New International Version, New Jerusalem Bible and the New American Bible, is a completely new translation of the Bible, not an update or revision of an older one (such as the New Revised Standard Version of 1989, which is a revision of the Revised Standard Version of 1946/71, itself a revision of the ...
The LSV is a modern English translation of the Bible that claims to be the most literal and word-for-word. It is based on the Masoretic Text, Septuagint, Dead Sea Scrolls, and Textus Receptus, and uses justified text blocks and caesura marks.
Return of Jesus to Galilee depicted in the Bowyer Bible, 19th century.. The Return of Jesus to Galilee is an episode in the life of Jesus which appears in three of the Canonical Gospels: Matthew 4:12, Mark 1:14 and John 4:1–3, 4:43–45.
A translation of the Bible into English, published by the American Bible Society, using dynamic equivalence and gender-neutral language. The CEV simplifies Biblical terminology and paraphrases for clarity, and is designed for a lower reading level than the Good News Bible.
Moffatt, New Translation is a 1922 English Bible translation by James Moffatt that departed from traditional versions in several ways. It arranged the New Testament in historical order, dated books later, and rearranged the biblical texts based on its judgments about authorship and historicity.