THE HISTORICAL BOOKS OF THE NEW TESTAMENT.
THE EPISTLES OF PAUL.
THE CATHOLIC EPISTLES.
CHAPTER I. THE GENEALOGY AND BIRTH OF CHRIST.
CHAPTER II. THE INFANCY OF CHRIST.
CHAPTER III. CHRIST'S BAPTISM AND TEMPTATION.
CHAPTER IV. CHRIST COMMENCING HIS PUBLIC MINISTRY.
CHAPTER V. CHRIST'S SERMON ON THE MOUNT.
CHAPTER VI. CHRIST'S MIRACLES, PREVIOUS TO THE APPOINTMENT OF HIS TWELVE APOSTLES.
CHAPTER VII. THE APPOINTMENT OF THE TWELVE APOSTLES.
CHAPTER VIII. JOHN THE BAPTIST QUESTIONING CHRIST'S MESSIAHSHIP.
CHAPTER IX. CHRIST'S DOCTRINE OF THE SABBATH.
CHAPTER X. CHRIST'S MIRACLES ATTRIBUTED TO DEMONS. HIS RELATIONS.
CHAPTER XI. CHRIST'S PARABLES ON THE LAKE OF GALILEE.
CHAPTER XII. THE DEATH OF JOHN THE BAPTIST. CHRIST FEEDING FIVE THOUSAND, AND WALKING ON THE LAKE.
CHAPTER XIII. CHRIST'S DOCTRINE OF JEWISH TRADITIONS, ETC.
CHAPTER XIV. CHRIST REPLYING TO THE PHARISEES AND SADDUCEES, ETC.
CHAPTER XV. CHRIST TRANSFIGURED. CURING A DEMONIAC, AND PAYING THE SACRED TRIBUTE.
CHAPTER XVI. CHRIST'S DOCTRINE OF GREATNESS. OFFENSES AND THE FORGIVENESS OF SINS.
CHAPTER XVII. CHRIST'S DOCTRINE OF MARRIAGE, DIVORCE, ETC.
CHAPTER XVIII. CHRIST CURING TWO BLIND MEN. ENTERING JERUSALEM IN TRIUMPH, AND CURSING THE FIG TREE.
CHAPTER XIX. CHRIST QUESTIONED BY THE CHIEF PRIESTS AND ELDERS. THE PARABLE OF THE VINEYARD.
CHAPTER XX. THE PARABLE OF THE WEDDING, AND QUESTIONS OF THE PHARISEES AND SADDUCEES.
CHAPTER XXI. CHRIST DENOUNCING THE SCRIBES AND PHARISEES.
CHAPTER XXII. CHRIST PREDICTING THE DESTRUCTION OF JERUSALEM, AND THE ESTABLISHMENT OF HIS KINGDOM.
CHAPTER XXIII. CHRIST AT BETHANY, THE PASCHAL AND LORD'S SUPPER, ETC.
CHAPTER XXIV. CHRIST IN GETHSEMANE, AND BEFORE THE SANHEDRIM.
CHAPTER XXV. CHRIST BEFORE PONTIUS PILATE.
CHAPTER XXVI. CHRIST'S DEATH AND BURIAL.
CHAPTER XXVII. CHRIST AFTER HIS RESURRECTION.
CHAPTER I. THE MINISTRY OF JOHN THE BAPTIST, THE BAPTISM OF
CHAPTER II. CHRIST FORGIVING SINS, EATING WITH PUBLICANS AND
CHAPTER III. CHRIST CALLING THE TWELVE APOSTLES, THE CHARACTER
CHAPTER IV. CHRIST'S PARABLES BY THE LAKE, AND HIS STILLING A TEMPEST.
CHAPTER V. CHRIST CURING A DEMONIAC AND THE WOMAN WITH A HEMORRHAGE, AND RAISING A DEAD CHILD.
CHAPTER VI. CHRIST AT NAZARETH, SENDING OUT HIS TWELVE APOSTLES
CHAPTER VII. CHRIST'S DOCTRINE OF DEFILEMENT; CURING A GENTILE DEMONIAC, AND A DEAF AND DUMB PERSON.
CHAPTER VIII. CHRIST FEEDING THE FOUR THOUSAND, REFUSING TO
CHAPTER IX. CHRIST TRANSFIGURED, CURING A DEMONIAC, AGAIN
CHAPTER X. CHRIST'S DOCTRINE OF MARRIAGE, CHILDREN AND THE WAY
CHAPTER XI. CHRIST ENTERING JERUSALEM IN TRIUMPH, CURSING THE
CHAPTER XII. CHRIST PREDICTING THE DESTRUCTION OF JERUSALEM, AND OF THE JEWISH COMMONWEALTH.
CHAPTER XIII. CHRIST AT BETHANY, THE CONSPIRACY OF JUDAS, THE PASCHAL AND LORD'S SUPPER, ETC.
CHAPTER XIV. CHRIST AT THE MOUNT OF OLIVES, AND IN GETHSEMANE.
CHAPTER XV. CHRIST BEFORE THE SANHEDRIM, AND BEFORE PILATE.
CHAPTER XVI. CHRIST CRUCIFIED, HIS DEATH, BURIAL AND RESURRECTION.
CHAPTER XVII. AN ADDITION BY AN UNKNOWN WRITER.
CHAPTER I. INTRODUCTION, AND THE TWO ANNUNCIATIONS.
CHAPTER II. MARYS VISIT TO ELIZABETH, AND THE BIRTH OF JOHN.
CHAPTER III. THE BIRTH OF CHRIST, HIS INFANCY AND CHILDHOOD.
CHAPTER IV. THE MINISTRY OF JOHN THE BAPTIST, CHRIST'S BAPTISM AND GENEALOGY.
CHAPTER V. CHRIST'S FASTING, TEMPTATION, AND THE COMMENCEMENT OF HIS MINISTRY.
CHAPTER VI. CHRIST AT CAPERNAUM, AND HIS PREACHING AND MIRACLES IN GALILEE.
CHAPTER VII. CHRIST FORGIVING SINS, CALLING LEVI, EATING WITH
CHAPTER VIII. CHRIST CALLING THE TWELVE APOSTLES.
CHAPTER IX. CHRIST AT CAPERNAUM AND NAIN, HIS REPLY TO JOHN THE BAPTIST, ETC.
CHAPTER X. CHRIST ANOINTED BY THE WOMAN, HIS TRAVELS AND ATTENDANTS, THE PARABLE OF THE SOWER.
CHAPTER XI. CHRIST STILLING A TEMPEST, CURING A DEMONIAC, RAISING THE DAUGHTER OF JAIRUS.
CHAPTER XII. CHRIST ENDOWING THE TWELVE APOSTLES WITH
CHAPTER XIII. CHRIST TRANSFIGURED, CURING A DEMONIAC, AND REPROVING AMBITION.
CHAPTER XIV. CHRIST ON HIS LAST JOURNEY FROM GALILEE TO JERUSALEM.
CHAPTER XV. THE WAY OF SALVATION, MARY'S CHOICE, AND LESSONS ON PRAYER.
CHAPTER XVI. CHRIST DEFENDS THE DIVINE CHARACTER OF HIS MIRACLES, AND DENOUNCES THE PHARISEES.
CHAPTER XVII. CHRIST'S DOCTRINE OF HYPOCRISY, OF THE PROVIDENCE
CHAPTER XVIII. CHRIST COMMENTING ON THE SLAUGHTER OF CERTAIN
CHAPTER XIX. CHRIST DINING WITH A RULER ON THE SABBATH, THE
CHAPTER XX. PARABLES OF THE LOST SHEEP, THE LOST MONEY, AND THE PRODIGAL SON.
CHAPTER XXI. THE UNFAITHFUL STEWARD, AND THE RICH MAN AND LAZARUS.
CHAPTER XXII. CHRIST'S DOCTRINE RESPECTING OFFENSES, CURING TEN
CHAPTER XXIII. THE PARABLE OF THE UNJUST JUDGE, INFANTS, AND THE WAY OF SALVATION.
CHAPTER XXIV. CHRIST PREDICTING HIS DEATH, GIVING SIGHT TO A
CHAPTER XXV. CHRIST ENTERING JERUSALEM, AND PURIFYING THE TEMPLE.
CHAPTER XXVI. CHRIST IN THE TEMPLE REPLYING TO THE PHARISEES AND SADDUCEES.
CHAPTER XXVII. CHRIST PREDICTING THE DESTRUCTION OF JERUSALEM AND HIS OWN EXALTATION.
CHAPTER XXVIII. JUDAS AGREES TO BETRAY HIS MASTER, THE LAST
CHAPTER XXIX. CHRIST IN GETHSEMANE AND BEFORE THE SANHEDRIM.
CHAPTER XXX. CHRIST BEFORE PILATE AND HEROD, HIS CONDEMNATION.
CHAPTER XXXI. CHRIST'S CRUCIFIXION, DEATH, AND BURIAL.
CHAPTER XXXII. CHRIST AFTER HIS RESURRECTION.
CHAPTER I. THE WORD.
CHAPTER II. CHRIST DECLARED TO BE THE MESSIAH, AND COMMENCING HIS MINISTRY.
CHAPTER III. CHRIST CHANGING WATER INTO WINE, RESIDING AT CAPERNAUM, AND PURIFYING THE TEMPLE.
CHAPTER IV. CHRIST'S DISCOURSE WITH NICODEMUS.
CHAPTER V. CHRIST BAPTIZING, AND PREACHING TO THE SAMARITANS.
CHAPTER VI. CHRIST IN GALILEE, CURING A NOBLEMAN'S SON.
CHAPTER VII. CHRIST CURING A SICK MAN ON THE SABBATH, AT JERUSALEM.
CHAPTER VIII. CHRIST FEEDING FIVE THOUSAND, AND WALKING ON THE LAKE.
CHAPTER IX. CHRIST AT CAPERNAUM PROCLAIMING HIMSELF THE SON OF GOD AND THE BREAD OF LIFE.
CHAPTER X. CHRIST AT THE FEAST OF TABERNACLES.
CHAPTER XI. CHRIST DECLARING HIMSELF THE SON OF GOD.
CHAPTER XII. CHRIST CURING A MAN BORN BLIND, AND HIS PARABLE OF THE GOOD SHEPHERD.
CHAPTER XIII. CHRIST AT THE FEAST OF THE DEDICATION, AND BEYOND THE JORDAN.
CHAPTER XIV. CHRIST RAISING LAZARUS FROM THE DEAD.
CHAPTER XV. CHRIST AT BETHANY, HIS TRIUMPHANT ENTRANCE INTO JERUSALEM, ETC.
CHAPTER XVI. CHRIST AT THE LAST SUPPER, AND HIS SERMON TO THE ELEVEN.
CHAPTER XVII. CHRIST'S SERMON AFTER THE LAST SUPPER.
CHAPTER XVIII. CHRIST'S PRAYER FOR HIS DISCIPLES.
CHAPTER XIX. THE APPREHENSION OF CHRIST, HIS EXAMINATION BY THE JEWS, PETER'S DENIAL OF HIM.
CHAPTER XX. CHRIST'S TRIAL AND CONDEMNATION BEFORE PILATE.
CHAPTER XXI. CHRIST'S CRUCIFIXION, DEATH, AND BURIAL.
CHAPTER XXII. CHRIST AFTER THE RESURRECTION.
CHAPTER I. CHRIST'S ASCENSION, AND THE ELECTION OF AN APOSTLE IN THE PLACE OF JUDAS.
CHAPTER II. THE DAY OF PENTECOST AND ITS BLESSINGS.
CHAPTER III. THE IMPRISONMENT OF PETER AND JOHN.
CHAPTER IV. THE LIBERALITY OF THE FIRST CHRISTIANS, ANANIAS AND SAPPHIRA, FURTHER PERSECUTION.
CHAPTER V. THE APPOINTMENT OF SEVEN DEACONS, THE SERMON AND
CHAPTER VI. THE EARLY MINISTRY OF PHILIP THE DEACON, THE
CHAPTER VII. THE CONVERSION OF SAUL, PETER CURING AENEAS, AND RAISING DORCAS FROM THE DEAD.
CHAPTER VIII. THE CONVERSION OF CORNELIUS, AND OTHER GENTILES.
CHAPTER IX. PETER CALLED TO ACCOUNT FOR ASSOCIATING WITH
CHAPTER X. PERSECUTION BY HEROD AGRIPPA, HIS DEATH. A.D. 44.
CHAPTER XI. THE FIRST MISSION OF PAUL AND BARNABAS TO CYPRUS AND ASIA MINOR. A.D. 46-49.
CHAPTER XII. THE COUNCIL AT JERUSALEM ON CIRCUMCISION. A.D. 50.
CHAPTER XIII. PAUL'S SECOND MISSION TO ASIA MINOR. A.D. 51-52.
CHAPTER XIV. PAUL AND HIS COMPANY AT PHILIPPI ON THEIR FIRST MISSION TO EUROPE. A.D. 52-53.
CHAPTER XV. PAUL AND HIS COMPANY AT THESSALONICA, BEREA, AND ATHENS. A.D. 53.
CHAPTER XVI. PAUL AND HIS COMPANY AT CORINTH, HIS VISIT TO SYRIA AND ASIA MINOR. A.D. 53-55.
CHAPTER XVII. PAUL AT EPHESUS. A.D. 55-58.
CHAPTER XVIII. PAUL'S VISIT TO GREECE AND MACEDONIA AND HIS RETURN TO MILETUS. A.D. 58, 59.
CHAPTER XIX. PAUL AND HIS COMPANY PURSUING THEIR JOURNEY TO CAESAREA AND JERUSALEM, ETC. A.D. 59.
CHAPTER XX. PAUL'S APPREHENSION BY THE JEWS, HIS RESCUE BY THE ROMANS, HIS ADDRESS, ETC. A.D. 59.
CHAPTER XXI. PAUL BEFORE THE SANHEDRIM, AND SENT TO CAESAREA FOR SAFE KEEPING. A.D. 59.
CHAPTER XXII. PAUL'S TRIAL BEFORE FELIX THE PROCURATOR. A.D. 59, 60.
CHAPTER XXIII. PAUL'S TRIAL BEFORE FESTUS, HIS APPEAL TO
CHAPTER XXIV. PAUL'S VOYAGE TO ROME. A.D. 61, 62.
CHAPTER XXV. PAUL AT ROME. A.D. 62, 64.
CHAPTER I. THE INTRODUCTION OF THE GOSPEL TO THE THESSALONIANS, TIMOTHY'S VISIT AND REPORT, ETC.
CHAPTER II. CHASTITY, BROTHERLY LOVE, THE STATE OF THE DEAD, THE COMING OF CHRIST, ETC.
CHAPTER I. PAUL'S LOVE AND PRAYERS FOR THE THESSALONIAN CHRISTIANS, THE COMING OF CHRIST, ETC.
CHAPTER I. PAUL'S ACCOUNT OF HIMSELF AND OF THE GOSPEL.
CHAPTER II. RIGHTEOUSNESS EXPLAINED.
CHAPTER III. MORAL DUTIES.
CHAPTER I. SALUTATION, EXHORTATION TO UNITY, THE MYSTERY OF THE GOSPEL, ETC.
CHAPTER II. INCEST, LITIGATION, EXPEDIENCY, AND CHASTITY.
CHAPTER III. MARRIAGE, CELIBACY, ETC., AND THINGS OFFERED TO IDOLS.
CHAPTER IV. THE CHRISTIAN MINISTRY ENTITLED TO A SUPPORT, PAUL'S LABORS WITHOUT CHARGE.
CHAPTER V. PUBLIC WORSHIP, THE LORD'S SUPPER.
CHAPTER VI. SPIRITUAL GIFTS.
CHAPTER VII. THE RESURRECTION OF THE DEAD.
CHAPTER VIII. CHARITABLE COLLECTIONS, TIMOTHY, APOLLOS, FAMILY OF STEPHANAS, SALUTATIONS.
CHAPTER I. THE APOSTLE'S LOVE OF THE CORINTHIANS, HIS TRIALS,
CHAPTER II. A CONTRIBUTION SOLICITED FOR THE SAINTS AT JERUSALEM.
CHAPTER III. PAUL'S REPLY TO HIS DETRACTORS.
CHAPTER IV. PROPOSED VISIT, ETC.
CHAPTER I. HIMSELF, JESUS CHRIST, AND THE GOSPEL.
CHAPTER II. WICKEDNESS DESTROYS GENTILES AND JEWS.
CHAPTER III. GOD'S RIGHTEOUSNESS BY FAITH SAVES BOTH JEWS AND GENTILES.
CHAPTER IV. SIN IS ON NO ACCOUNT TO BE ALLOWED.
CHAPTER V. THOSE IN CHRIST DEAD TO THE LAW, THE FLESH THE
CHAPTER VI. THOSE IN CHRIST NOT SUBJECT TO CONDEMNATION, NOR TO
CHAPTER VII. THE REJECTION OF THE UNBELIEVING JEWS.
CHAPTER VIII. THE SALVATION OF BELIEVING JEWS AND THE CALLING OF THE GENTILES.
CHAPTER IX. MORAL AND POLITICAL DUTIES.
CHAPTER X. DUTIES TO THE WEAK, ETC.
CHAPTER XI. COMMENDATION OF PHOEBE, SALUTATIONS, ETC.
CHAPTER I. PAUL'S PRAYERS FOR THE COLOSSIANS, THE DIGNITY OF
CHAPTER II. MORAL DUTIES, ETC.
CHAPTER I. THE BENEFICENCE OF GOD TO THE ELECT, CHRIST THE SAVIOUR, THE SALVATION OF THE GENTILES, ETC.
CHAPTER II. PERSONAL AND SOCIAL DUTIES.
CHAPTER I. PAUL'S LOVE FOR THE PHILIPPIANS, AFFAIRS AT ROME, MORAL DUTIES, ETC.
CHAPTER II. JUDAIZING TEACHERS, EXHORTATIONS, ACKNOWLEDGMENTS, ETC.
CHAPTER I. A CHARGE TO TITUS IN RESPECT TO HIS MINISTRY.
CHAPTER I. A CHARGE TO TIMOTHY CONCERNING THE GOSPEL, PUBLIC PRAYER, AND THE DUTIES OF WOMEN.
CHAPTER II. THE APPOINTMENT OF MINISTERS, THE DOCTRINES OF THE GOSPEL, WIDOWS, ELDERS, SERVANTS, ETC.
CHAPTER I. INFORMATION, ADMONITION, ETC.
CHAPTER II. THE LAST TIME, HIS APPROACHING MARTYRDOM, ETC.
CHAPTER I. TRIALS, PRAYER, FAITH AND WORKS.
CHAPTER II. ON CENSORIOUSNESS, WISDOM, CONTENTION, ETC.
CHAPTER I. A FIRM ADHERENCE TO CHRIST, ETC.
CHAPTER II. PERSONAL, POLITICAL, AND SOCIAL DUTIES, ETC.
CHAPTER III. TRIALS, ADMONITIONS TO PRESBYTERS, ETC.
PREFACE
TABLE OF CONTENTS
THE
NEW TESTAMENT,
TRANSLATED FROM THE ORIGINAL GREEK, WITH CHRONOLOGICAL
ARRANGEMENT OF THE SACRED BOOKS, AND IMPROVED
DIVISIONS OF CHAPTERS AND VERSES
BY
LEICESTER AMBROSE SAWYER.
BOSTON:
JOHN P. JEWETT AND COMPANY.
CLEVELAND, OHIO:
HENRY P. B. JEWETT.
LONDON: SAMPSON LOW, SON AND COMPANY.
1858.
Entered according to Act of Congress in the year 1858, by
JOHN P. JEWETT AND COMPANY,
In the Clerk's Office of the District Court for the District of Massachusetts.
LITHOTYPED BY COWLES AND COMPANY,
17 WASHINGTON ST., BOSTON.
Press of Allen and Farnham.
THIS is not a work of compromises, or of conjectural interpretations of the sacred Scriptures, neither is it a paraphrase, but a strict literal rendering. It neither adds nor takes away; but aims to express the original with the utmost clearness, and force, and with the utmost precision. It adopts, however, except in the prayers, a thoroughly modern style, and makes freely whatever changes are necessary for this purpose.
Besides being a contribution to Biblical science, it is designed to be a still more important contribution to practical religion, for which the Bible in its original languages and in all its translations is chiefly valuable. The translation depends mainly on its superior adaptation to this end, under the blessing of God, for its success and usefulness. If it shall be found on trial to be a superior instrument of piety and virtue, it will doubtless meet with favor and do good. The ascendency of practical religion is not so general or complete, that any additional help for its promotion can be deemed unnecessary.
New translations of the Scriptures are generally introduced with apologies and received with caution and distrust. In many cases men have resisted them as dangerous innovations, and attempted to exterminate them with fire and sword. This was the case with the translations of Wickliffe and of Tindal. But truth and the kind providence of God were too mighty for their enemies, and these translations lived to see their persecutors in the dust, and to laugh them to scorn. Wickliffe's translation was published in 1380, in a dark age. Many good men anticipated from it the greatest calamities, and resisted it with the most intemperate zeal, and every species of denunciation was used against it. It was made from the Vulgate, and not from the Greek and Hebrew, and was imperfect; but it was a great improvement on what existed before, and it proved a great blessing.
Tindal was contemporary with Luther, and undertook to give a new translation of the Bible to England, as Luther did to Germany. He completed his New Testament against the greatest opposition, and published it in 1526, and was engaged on the Old Testament, when he was arrested, imprisoned a year, and then brought to the stake and strangled and burnt, at the age of fifty-nine, A.D. 1536. He was the morning star of the Reformation in England, and became by his translation of the New Testament and a part of the Old, and by the interest he excited in the subject of improved translations in England, one of the great benefactors of his race. He was a man of great gentleness, kindness, simplicity of character, and benevolence, and his life is without a stain. Coverdale translated the whole Bible, and published it in 1535 while Tindal was in prison waiting for his crown of martyrdom. Several other translations followed, and that of King James last of all, in 1611.
King James's translation was made by forty-seven translators, divided into six companies, and laboring on their work three years. The Douay Bible was first translated and published complete in 1609, almost simultaneously with the Bible of King James. It has the disadvantage of having been made from the Latin Vulgate, and not directly from the original Greek and Hebrew, but is a valuable version, and like the Bible of King James, is one of the great monuments of the times which produced it, as well as of the church which has adhered to it. It is good but not perfect; and it is hoped that its friends will not be unwilling to accept an improvement.
From the publication of Wickliffe's Bible in 1380, to that of Tindal's New Testament in 1526, was one hundred and forty-six years. From the publication of Tindal's New Testament in 1526, to that of King James's Bible in 1611, was eighty-five years. There was considerable progress made in knowledge, and the English language was considerably changed, in the interval of one hundred and forty-six years between the publication of Wickliffe's Bible and Tindal's New Testament. There was also considerable progress in knowledge, and some changes were made in the English language, in the interval of eighty-five years between the publication of Tindal's New Testament and King James's Bible.
The period that has elapsed between the publication of King James's Bible in 1611 and the present time (1858) is two hundred and forty-seven years, sixteen years more than the entire period from the publication of Wickliffe's Bible in 1380 to that of King James's in 1611. Besides, this has been a period of unparalleled activity in the investigation of Biblical subjects, and the prosecution of Biblical studies. Two hundred and forty-seven years, reckoning, thirty-three years to a generation, are seven generations and a half; and these seven generations and a half have been engaged in Biblical studies with unprecedented diligence and success, making great improvements in the text, detecting numerous interpolations and errors, making great improvements in the rendering, and detecting numerous errors in it; but the almost exclusive Bible of common life, of the family, the school, the church, and of private and devotional reading and study, with English Protestants, is still the Bible of King James, with its errors uncorrected, its interpolations unremoved, and its defects unsupplied.
Several new translations have been made since King James's time, but none of them have as yet been received with any considerable favor. King James's Bible, though extravagantly eulogized, was an excellent version for the times that produced it; yet it made much less improvement on the Bishop's Bible, the Geneva Bible, and Tindal's, Coverdale's, and others which it superseded, than Tindal's and Coverdale's did on Wickliffe's. Tindal, in the face of constant persecution, and cut off from many of the advantages and facilities which in more auspicious times he might have enjoyed, did more for the English Bible than all King James's translators. So did Luther for the Bible in Germany.
It is an unfortunate result of King James's translation of the Bible by an imposing council of learned men, that it has tended to discourage individual effort in respect to a labor of this kind, and to create a prejudice against it as necessarily incompetent and untrustworthy. Societies and councils have their spheres in which they are useful; yet they often transcend them and intrude on those of individuals. But there are great works which individuals can perform better than multitudes or councils. Councils did not make the Bible at first. It was made by individuals, each man acting for himself, and giving utterance to the mighty thoughts that God had given him. A council did not make Paradise Lost, and could not; nor has a council ever produced any immortal work of genius or learning, unless it is the English Bible of King James. With this exception, these are all the works of individuals. As individuals, therefore, have generally been the prosecutors of literary enterprises, in the department of Bible translation no less than in other departments, and as individuals have been eminently successful and useful in this department of labor heretofore, both in England and other countries, let it be hoped that they may be again.
There is a vast accumulation of knowledge to be made available by some one, or in some way, for the production of an improved English Bible, that shall bear the same relation to the advanced knowledge of these times, which Tindal's, Coverdale's, and that of King James did to theirs. More study has been expended on the sacred text and its interpretation, and more progress made in Biblical knowledge in the last seven generations, than in all time before. This knowledge is treasured up in critical editions of the original Scriptures, critical commentaries on them in Latin and other languages, in Greek and Hebrew Lexicons, and in other works in the various departments of Biblical learning, embracing commentaries on the English Scriptures, several of which are extensive and valuable. No man can gainsay them, no man can disparage them. They are monuments of the most precious and valuable learning of their times. Scholars with ample means and ample time for critical research, and those whose tastes and professions and convictions of duty incline them in that direction, may in a long series of years become masters of much of this learning, and receive the benefit of it. A few are masters of it, but how few! But how are the people to obtain it? When are they to find the time to obtain it? Where are they to find the means? The clergy are the instructors of the people on sacred subjects. Biblical learning is a part of their profession. They study it by day and by night, from youth to old age; but how are the great mass of clergymen even, amidst their parish cares and homiletical labors, and with their limited means and restricted libraries, to obtain much of this knowledge? Some of it they may obtain, but much of it they will not, and cannot.
The only way in which the vast stores of Biblical learning accumulated during the last two hundred and forty-seven years, by the labors of seven and a half generations toiling in succession, each generation beginning where that which preceded it left off, and each adding something to the stock which it received, can become available for the general benefit of the people, is by an improved text and translation of the Bible, into which, as far as possible, they shall all be brought, and to the perfection of which they shall contribute. This is the task which has been undertaken in the present work, and with what degree of success, the public will judge. The text which has been followed in this translation, is that of Tischendorf, published at Leipsic in 1850. It is not only a great improvement on the received text, but on the critical texts that are in general use in this country. Tischendorf follows Griesbach, Lachman and others, and availing himself of their labors, together with his own accurate collations of manuscripts extending to nearly all the most ancient manuscripts in the world, and following in the steps of Lachman by editing solely from ancient authority, has brought the text of the New Testament to a degree of perfection not anticipated or even hoped for in past ages. It is a high recommendation of this translation, and will command for it an additional respect from all competent judges, that it follows this highly improved text. Readers will be able by this to see what is the Bible and what is not. It is not claimed for the text of Tischendorf that it is perfect; no text can be; but it is claimed for it, that it retains no known interpolation in the sacred books, and omits nothing known to belong to them. Future laborers will doubtless make some improvements on the text of Tischendorf, as he has done on that of Lachman; but they cannot be expected to change it essentially.
I have deviated from Tischendorf in omitting Jesus as the proper name of Barabbas in two instances in Matt. xxv. 4, and occasionally in punctuation, and have retained two important interpolations in the text, duly noted as such, Mark, xvii. and John, x. 8.
The recent work of Trench on the English Bible came to hand after considerable progress had been made in stereotyping this volume. The translator was highly gratified to find that nearly all the improvements and corrections suggested by that eminent scholar were already made in this work, together with many others.
The arrangement of the books and divisions of the chapters and verses in this Translation are believed to be great improvements on those in common use. As such they are commended to the attention of translators and editors in different languages, and it is hoped will be found satisfactory.
The chronology of the New Testament is involved in great obscurity. The Christian Era was first proposed by Dionysius Exiguus, about A.D. 550, and was gradually adopted in the seventh and eighth centuries. By a mistake of Dionysius it was made to commence from four to six years too late. The birth of Christ was from 4 to 6 B.C.; his baptism, in the fifteenth year of Tiberius, A.D. 24; his death, probably, A.D. 28; and the events recorded in the first part of Acts prior to the death of Herod, A.D. 44, occurred considerably earlier than the dates usually assigned to them.
Matthew and Luke probably wrote their gospels A.D. 62 or 63; Mark and John, theirs A.D. 65-68. Acts was written A.D. 63. All the books of the New Testament were probably written before the destruction of Jerusalem, in the interval of seventeen years from A.D. 53 to 70.
The author of Revelation bears the same name as one of the Evangelists. But this does not prove that he was the same person, neither is the church tradition on the subject entitled to undoubted confidence. The author of Revelation does not claim to be an apostle; and by not making that claim in a book so extraordinary, virtually teaches that he is not such. His style also presents points of diversity from that of the Evangelist, that seem to be incompatible with the supposition that the same author wrote both works.
With these few explanations I commend this volume to the acceptance and blessing of our kind Father in heaven, and send it forth, accompanied with many prayers, to call men from sin to holiness, and from death and sorrow to the only true life and joy.
BOSTON, Mass., October, 1858.