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Yes.Wow now I am really confused.
This is the Ignoratio Elenchi Fallacy. My cat avatar has nothing to do with who my mother wasYour avatar is a cat and now you claim to have been born from a:
Mum (mic drop)
“Will mums kill cats?Yes.
This is the Ignoratio Elenchi Fallacy. My cat avatar has nothing to do with who my mother was
You win“Will mums kill cats?
Yes, Mums or Chrysanthemums are toxic to cats causing everything from diarrhea to lethargy if ingested.Jun 25, 2020”
https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.wf...erify-are-mums-poisonous-to-pets/83-599661386
I'm not too familiar with it, but I'm confident that it was the AV rather than the ASV.Banner has reprinted the Child's Story Bible by Catherine Vos. However they have changed the Bible version used to the ESV. Can someone tell me what the original version was? It would be either the AV or ASV I assume.
I believe this would be the older version (published by Eerdmans in this case.) https://www.christianbook.com/the-childs-story-bible/catherine-vos/9780802850119/pd/5011If Alexander is wanting the older version for his kids I’m sure it probably can be found reasonably priced on eBay.
Quite likely, though I was reading some of Geerhardus Vos's sermons (with much profit) and was intrigued to notice that he was using the ASV.I'm not too familiar with it, but I'm confident that it was the AV rather than the ASV.
We have the older BoT edition and really enjoy it but this question of "translation" is odd.
It is told in simple, down-to-earth English, for the most part, EXCEPT when people speak. So you might have something like "Adam and Eve were happy and content before. But now they were afraid of God. When God questioned questioned Adam, he tried to put the blame on Eve by saying "the woman whom thou gavest me..."
So by "changed to ESV" I guess it just makes it more uniform in language rather than slipping into archaic language whenever someone speaks? I would hardly call the "old version" a "KJV translation", it's definitely a re-telling (a well-done one, but by no means KJV in 95% of the text).
I believe this would be the older version (published by Eerdmans in this case.) https://www.christianbook.com/the-childs-story-bible/catherine-vos/9780802850119/pd/5011
The cover notwithstanding, this may be as well. As far as I know, RHB would not sell an ESV. But you'd best contact them to make sure. I'm pretty sure I've seen this work with a different cover on the site in the past. https://www.heritagebooks.org/products/the-childs-story-bible-vos.html
This appears to be another copy of the older one. (They also stock the newer Banner edition.) https://www.cvbbs.com/products/childs-story-bible-vos-catherine?_pos=2&_sid=a57e6ef2c&_ss=r
Yes there would seem to be a whole other problem with the Eerdmans edition
From time-to-time RHB does have non-TR based Bibles for sale on their site. Currently I see a used ESV copy of Acts for sale and I've seen other ESV Bibles there in the past. https://www.heritagebooks.org/products/acts-esv-illuminated-scripture-journal-used.htmlAs far as I know, RHB would not sell an ESV.
From time-to-time RHB does have non-TR based Bibles for sale on their site. Currently I see a used ESV copy of Acts for sale and I've seen other ESV Bibles there in the past. https://www.heritagebooks.org/products/acts-esv-illuminated-scripture-journal-used.html
So besides the ESV copy of Acts for sale now, I poked around in Internet Archive and found this:Before the Reformation Heritage KJV Study Bible was published, they were so committed to the KJV that the study Bible that they stocked was the Nelson King James Study Bible, which is Baptist, moderately dispensational, and is at best moderately Calvinist (there are some contradictory notes, to my recollection.) They have occasionally stocked some other material that isn’t confessionally Reformed, such as Culver’s Systematic Theology. But I can’t recall seeing the ESV Study Bible, for example. (I don’t know how long they stocked the Nelson KJV Study Bible, but I think it was on there for a while.)
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Evidently their stance is not as absolute as I had thought. I had understood that they were a stickler for the KJV and maybe the NKJV and were not open to any critical text translations.So besides the ESV copy of Acts for sale now, I poked around in Internet Archive and found this:
In 2015 they had ESV Literary Study Bible and ESV Single Column Legacy Bible for sale: https://web.archive.org/w
So besides the ESV copy of Acts for sale now, I poked around in Internet Archive and found this:
In 2015 they had ESV Literary Study Bible and ESV Single Column Legacy Bible for sale: https://web.archive.org/web/20150328205025/http://www.heritagebooks.org/categories/Bibles
I can't find that they've sold the ESV Study Bible though.
I did find some weird editions they've sold, like the Geneva Bible Patriot's Edition (complete with the US Constitution!) and as you mentioned the KJV Nelson Study Bible.
eb/20150328205025/http://www.heritagebooks.org/categories/Bibles
I can't find that they've sold the ESV Study Bible though.
I did find some weird editions they've sold, like the Geneva Bible Patriot's Edition (complete with the US Constitution!) and as you mentioned the KJV Nelson Study Bible.
Sometimes she provides a bit of commentary or editorializing I’m unsure about. With grandchildren I’ve used it mostly for making a sweep through sections of the Bible and it’s very good for that, to provide a framework and broad knowledge of Biblical history.
Well as I said above I have never read it myself so I am ignorant as to how frequently Scripture is directly quoted. However having looked at the first few pages given as a sample on the Banner website, at least in the chapter provided, Scripture is directly quoted quite often.
Oh wow. I guess I was taken in by the use of thee's and thou's... I didn't think about the ASV retaining that.Okay, so now that I have returned from travel and can actually consult my copy...
It's quite curious actually. The "quotes" (where someone is speaking) are actually usually re-told paraphrases as well. Then there are italicized quotes that are actual scripture quotes, but those are particularly sparse. You might easily go 20 pages without finding one (I spotted them mostly in the sections covering the first six chapters of Genesis, thereafter I only saw a couple for the rest of Genesis).
Where there are actual Scripture quotes, it is definitely ASV in the several passages I checked, not KJV.