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The Geneva Bible is a critical, yet almost completely forgotten
part of the Protestant Reformation. Driven out of England by
the persecutions of Bloody Mary, several future leaders of the
Reformation came to Geneva to create a pure and accurate translation
of the Holy Writ. Concerned about the influence that the Catholic
Church had on the existing translations of the Bible from the
Latin, these men turned to the original Hebrew and Greek texts
to produce the Geneva Bible. This made the Geneva Bible the first
complete Bible to be translated into English from the original
Hebrew and Greek texts.
The creation of the Geneva Bible was a substantial undertaking.
Its authors spent over two years, working diligently day and
night by candlelight, to finish the translation and the commentaries.
The entire project was funded by the exiled English congregation
in Geneva, making the translation a work supported by the people
and not by an authoritarian church or monarch.
All the marginal commentaries were finished by 1599, making the
1599 edition of the Geneva Bible the most complete study aide
for Biblical scholars and students. This edition does not contain
the Apocrypha. The Apocryphas notes are minimal or absent
in other editions. Additional highlights of this edition include
maps of the Exodus route and Joshuas distribution of land,
a name and subject index, and Psalms sung by the English congregation
in Geneva.
Owing to the marginal notes and the superior quality of the translation,
the Geneva Bible became the most widely read and influential
English Bible of the 16th and 17th centuries. It was continually
printed from 1560 to 1644 in over 200 different editions. It
was the Bible of choice for many of the greatest writers, thinkers,
and historical figures of the Reformation era.
The marginal notes of the Geneva Bible enraged the Catholic Church,
since the notes deemed the act of confession to men the
Catholic Bishops as unjustified by Holy Script. Man should
confess to God only; mans private life was mans private
life. The notes also infuriated King James, since they allowed
disobedience to tyrannical kings. King James went so far as to
make ownership of the Geneva Bible a felony. He then proceeded
to make his own version of the Bible, but without the marginal
notes that had so disturbed him. Consequently, during King Jamess
reign, and into the reign of Charles I, the Geneva Bible was
gradually replaced by the King James Bible.
http://www.reformedreader.org/gbn/en.htm
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