The New Oxford Annotated Bible, New Revised Standard Version with the Apocrypha, Third Edition
Where to buy The New Oxford Annotated Bible, New Revised Standard Version with the Apocrypha, Third Edition books online?
Product Description
Students, professors and all-purpose readers alike have relied upon The Oxford Annotated Bible for essential erudition and guidance to the world of the Bible for nearly four decades. Now a new editorial board and team of contributors have completely updated this classic work. The result is a volume which maintains and extends the excellence the Annotated’s users have come to expect, bringing new insights, information, and approaches to bear upon the understanding of the text of the Bible.
The new edition includes a full pointer to all of the study material (not just to the annotations), and one that is keyed to page numbers, not to citations. And, to make certain points in the text clearer for the reader, there are approximately 40 in-text, line drawing maps and diagrams.
With the best of the Annotated’s traditional strengths, and the augmentation of new information and new approaches represented in current erudition, the Third Edition will serve as the reader’s and student’s constant resource for a new century.
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This is a fantastic work of fiction, but it goes on and on in 5th century righting boredom. It is also reasonably disturbing that people find this fiction to be right.
Reader’s Rating: 2 / 5
reviewer with sarcastic comments understands…sounds like satan himself
Reader’s Rating: 5 / 5
Where to start!?! Okay the beginning was cool. The wrath of god and what-not. But when/if you get to the book of laws… SOOOOZE!!!
Oh and Duglord Jebus was a trip. Revalation was amusing.
But it place you unfullfilled and wanting to cause destruction.
Reader’s Rating: 1 / 5
Times are changing, & religious beliefs are being constantly modified, but here is something that you see about once or twice in a decade.
The judeo-xian babble has permanently been curtialed, translated, & modernized, despite the final passage in the book of Revelations of not changing or excising any part of the fictional text. But as usual, this was an incremental process. In time, revised editions were published, as public attitudes changed, became more permissive, & more plotted.
The Apocrypha, or, the deleted chapters in the babble, became so, when first the Dewey, then the King James versions were publicised. The Dewy version was conveniently modified to suit the dogma of the catholic religion. Even studious priests knew onlt vague references of these “forbidden books”, which tell the nazarene’s childhood, & travels abroad, both of which resulted in rather unchristianly behaviour. The church could not risk any blemishes on their “saviour’s” precious reputation! To have them unrestricted would promore congregation fall-out & free-thinking—–they couldn’t have that!
The King James babble became sanctioned by the royal seal of praise, but it was really the (…) of the clergy who controlled the government. And more was modified by translators & scribes under his majesty’s orders. As snip here, a clip there, an inference installed, a tiny semi-noticable addition made, whatever suited the rulers at the time. The babble, & religion, was as influential then, as the letharginator {TV} is now.
The latest version come is The Oxford Annotated Bible. Sounds impressive. The name of a prestegious educational institution on the take in…..”gee, they MUST be right!” What makes this version particularly notable, is its placating of “political correctness”. This is The Politically Right Bible. Granted, all have been so, as they were invented to regulate man’s behaviour, but never has there been such a blatantly conformist version such as this.
For instance, the xian wimps’ treasured ‘lord’s prayer’ itself, has been changed to suit the femasculists. Now, it’s “our father-mother, who art in heaven”! It sounds like a weakan scheme to intigrate their blindlight idiotology, with xian foolosophy! A possible new-age take-over? Not likely.
References to “darkness” have been changed, as to not offend the “fine sensibilities” of racists who reflect that everything is a pigmentation issue. Inferences to the tale about jews killing jesus are carefully dissected & excised. They are re-writing mythistory here. The additional babbles will become obsolete, & future generations will be brainwashed with this version as a replacement for.
Consider this…..A xoid who still preaches & reads out of the older babbles being called ‘a nut’ by his own kind. Being accused of fabricating translations, & trying to bring an incorrect, arcane text into a mytheological discussion. “That’s the OLD bible, WE only read out of the NEW one now…it’s got a better translation.” What they are REALLY thinking, if they had a shred of honesty to admit it, is “…this new translation is a lot better, I don’t have to work at being so ‘excellent’ so hard”.
This is not a “better translation”, but a modified agenda disguised as such. Somebody chose to push some issues & gain credibility. What better way than through the holey scriptures to justify a cause? Such as the wider acceptance of women into the blindlight priesthood? And in the reverandship?
By & large, The Oxford Annotated Bible is a fell-excellent, please-everybody book of ubiquitus fairy-tales. The babble is now even MORE of a joke, as it now, more than ever, reads like a federal document, a liberal bill, rather than a stupornatural arcanum. Will it get passed? Probably. The braying nincompoops will follow. They care more for what everynone ELSE is doing, & copy it, rather than investigating The Torah, the New Tribute, The Dead Sea Scrolls, & additional blindlight babbles for that matter.
Reader’s Rating: 2 / 5
The erudition in this book was laughable. If you’d like to read a bible, at least get one that isn’t so full of unprovable junk. Some of the notes were valuable, but one should not have to resort to taking salt by the cup full just to make it through. This book (I can’t reasonably bring myself to call it a Bible) was a classic example of revisionist approach to a Holy topic.
Reader’s Rating: 1 / 5