A few more points in favor of the Douay-Rheims is that it is an English translation of the Latin Vulgate, a translation of the Hebrew, Greek, and Aramaic texts produced by Saint Jerome in the late 3rd to early 4th centuries. St. Jerome is a canonized Orthodox Saint, was one of the great Church Fathers, a scripture scholar, and fluent in Latin, Greek, Hebrew, and Aramaic. The Vulgate was translated using ancient manuscripts, some of which no longer exist. The Vulgate also predates the Masoretic Text, the oldest Hebrew manuscript tradition produced and distributed by the Jewish Masoretes between the 6th to 10th centuries. The Masoretic Text is an excellent manuscript tradition, but there's no telling what alterations the Masoretes made in their process to edit Christ out of the Bible. The Protestans get their 66 book canon from the Masoretic Text, and the Masoretes very likely cut out the deuterocanon because of how much it pointed to the reality of Christ and the Church. Lastly, the Vulgate is a pre-East-West Schism text, making it a truly ecumenical translation. Remember that translation is an art, not a science, so no translation is perfect. Those who want the most authentic reading experience have no other recourse but to learn and become fluent in the original tongues.
I've been reading the Orthodox Study Bible every night now. There's just one thing I found that is a little discouraging and am wondering if you can give your thoughts. PROVERBS 30:4 in the Orthodox study bible translates "What is the name of his Son?" as "What is the name of his Children?" when KJK, NKJV and every other one of looked at says "Son" not "Children". and the note for that verse says that the children are christians. When I thought it was referring to Christ.
Whoa, how on earth did you get the Nelson re-release in brown leathersoft? They've been talking about that (and a black genuine leather) edition forever, and they have popped up for pre-order occasionally, but have never been filled. Can you do a review of the inside of that one and tell me how the paper is? I'm in the process of doing a rebind of the Ancient Faith Edition, but would wait and switch to this Nelson if the paper is way better.
How do I know which bible i have already? Is there a quick test, a verse somewhere to be used as an indicator/ proof? The one book is the only reference I have.
Where I am, they are not in stock. Copy and paste these numbers into Google and you may be able to find a copy God willing. 0310152097 Or 978-0310152095 For a similar leather version, you can search the web for the Ancient Faith leather edition of the Orthodox study Bible.
The KJV has already been mathematically proven to be God's perfect book. The total wordcount, (including verse numbers and titles in the count) comes out to exactly 823,543. That's significant because 7 x 7 x 7 x 7 x 7 x 7 x 7 = 823,543 Revelation 5:1 "And I saw in the right hand of him that sat on the throne a book written within and on the backside, sealed with **seven seals**." There's a video titled "The Elton Anomoly" that fully explains this.
thats not mathematical proof its just mathematical confidence through bayes theorem P(KJV is holy | word count 7^7 and seven seals verse) = P(7|holy)/P(7) * P(holy) supposing the KJV is holy, what is the probability its wordcount would be 7^7 anyways? maybe like 1 in 10 its certainly one way for God to leave a clue. whats the probability any arbitrary version also has wordcount 7^7? well let’s just assume any version has wordcount between 95% and 105% of the KJVs or so, a range of 8000 round that up to 10k probable wordcounts why not. 1 in 10k. and what is our prior probability the KJV is holy? say 1 in 10 among other options this puts us at round a 10000% chance the kjv is holy, not bad right?
Brother these kinds of videos are amazing!
Thank you so much. God willing more will come!
Check out the EOB (Eastern Orthodox Bible) there is the pocket addition
The Rodina thanks your aid! Slava Bogu!
@@RatsAreNice222 Slava Bogu brat!
Did you rebind yours? That’s a beautiful cover
The Confraternity Version, a reliable Catholic version based on the D-R is hard to find now.
Thank you, my brother.
Edited: Found the answer to that question, lol.
where did you get your necklace man it looks great
A few more points in favor of the Douay-Rheims is that it is an English translation of the Latin Vulgate, a translation of the Hebrew, Greek, and Aramaic texts produced by Saint Jerome in the late 3rd to early 4th centuries.
St. Jerome is a canonized Orthodox Saint, was one of the great Church Fathers, a scripture scholar, and fluent in Latin, Greek, Hebrew, and Aramaic.
The Vulgate was translated using ancient manuscripts, some of which no longer exist. The Vulgate also predates the Masoretic Text, the oldest Hebrew manuscript tradition produced and distributed by the Jewish Masoretes between the 6th to 10th centuries. The Masoretic Text is an excellent manuscript tradition, but there's no telling what alterations the Masoretes made in their process to edit Christ out of the Bible. The Protestans get their 66 book canon from the Masoretic Text, and the Masoretes very likely cut out the deuterocanon because of how much it pointed to the reality of Christ and the Church.
Lastly, the Vulgate is a pre-East-West Schism text, making it a truly ecumenical translation.
Remember that translation is an art, not a science, so no translation is perfect. Those who want the most authentic reading experience have no other recourse but to learn and become fluent in the original tongues.
I've been reading the Orthodox Study Bible every night now. There's just one thing I found that is a little discouraging and am wondering if you can give your thoughts. PROVERBS 30:4 in the Orthodox study bible translates "What is the name of his Son?" as "What is the name of his Children?" when KJK, NKJV and every other one of looked at says "Son" not "Children". and the note for that verse says that the children are christians. When I thought it was referring to Christ.
Whoa, how on earth did you get the Nelson re-release in brown leathersoft? They've been talking about that (and a black genuine leather) edition forever, and they have popped up for pre-order occasionally, but have never been filled.
Can you do a review of the inside of that one and tell me how the paper is? I'm in the process of doing a rebind of the Ancient Faith Edition, but would wait and switch to this Nelson if the paper is way better.
How do I know which bible i have already? Is there a quick test, a verse somewhere to be used as an indicator/ proof? The one book is the only reference I have.
When is Rusnak Orthodox going to upload again . . . 😢
Where did you get this version with that cover?
Where I am, they are not in stock.
Copy and paste these numbers into Google and you may be able to find a copy God willing.
0310152097
Or
978-0310152095
For a similar leather version, you can search the web for the Ancient Faith leather edition of the Orthodox study Bible.
Published by Nelson.
The KJV has already been mathematically proven to be God's perfect book. The total wordcount, (including verse numbers and titles in the count) comes out to exactly 823,543. That's significant because 7 x 7 x 7 x 7 x 7 x 7 x 7 = 823,543
Revelation 5:1 "And I saw in the right hand of him that sat on the throne a book written within and on the backside, sealed with **seven seals**."
There's a video titled "The Elton Anomoly" that fully explains this.
thats not mathematical proof its just mathematical confidence through bayes theorem
P(KJV is holy | word count 7^7 and seven seals verse) = P(7|holy)/P(7) * P(holy)
supposing the KJV is holy, what is the probability its wordcount would be 7^7 anyways? maybe like 1 in 10 its certainly one way for God to leave a clue. whats the probability any arbitrary version also has wordcount 7^7? well let’s just assume any version has wordcount between 95% and 105% of the KJVs or so, a range of 8000 round that up to 10k probable wordcounts why not. 1 in 10k. and what is our prior probability the KJV is holy? say 1 in 10 among other options
this puts us at round a 10000% chance the kjv is holy, not bad right?
The Orthodox Study Bible is really Protestant even though it includes the Apocrypha and Psalm 151.
It’s based on the NKJV. But other than that, what exactly makes it Protestant?
@@LNR65 Put it this way it is not an acceptable Catholic translation. Perhaps you should compare it with the RSV 2 CE and decide for yourself. 😊
@@peter.marshall roman yapping.
@@RatsAreNice222 Your comment says it all. The Orthodox church is more closely aligned to Roman Catholicism than Protestantism ever has been.
@@RatsAreNice222 Further. The notes in the publication being discussed reflect the RC view but the NKJ text does not.