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I am taking a New Testament class at a local college. He says I must pick a 20th century edition of the bible to use for study. He will not allow me to use the version that I want to. Does this go against my religious freedom?

2007-08-25 15:31:58 · 29 answers · asked by Robin D 2 in Society & Culture Religion & Spirituality

29 answers

Probably, yes..

Talk to the dean of that department
if it is him then go a little higher.

I personally from my own studies believe that
The King James Version Bible is the most complete.

Even The New King James version has omissions compared to the King James Version.

Here is an option to your problem:
If you absolutely have to use the professors preferred translation; there is nothing stopping you from also looking those verses up in your preferred translation of the Bible.
Use both translations.
In this way you are making the professor happy and you are still seeing exactly what your preferred translation says.

Sincerely in Christ,
internet Pastor Bill

2007-08-26 07:19:05 · answer #1 · answered by Pastor Bill 3 · 0 0

Don't be silly! He can't tell you what version of the Bible to read or not read for your own personal growth in your faith, and he can't tell you what to believe or think about anything you read. Your religious freedoms are not being threatened.

He's the professor. Of course he can tell you which version is acceptable in this particular class. At the Bible college I attended, we had three choices of versions from which quotations, study, and memorization were allowed. Some profs only allowed the use one of those three in their classes, so most of us had a copy of each version. That's their prerogative as a professor, choosing the texts on and from which their class will be taught.

2007-08-25 15:45:08 · answer #2 · answered by thejanith 7 · 0 0

God's ideal call is YHWH. This became then replaced w/ a synthetic observe, Adonai, which ability God. Later they took Adonai and YHWH and with extremely German it grew to become Jehovah. YHWH's call became removed from the bible in 1929 (must be 1919, could could seem back) through a combat between the Baptists and the Jehovah Witness's. greater or much less boils right down to... the Baptists did it to seek for revenge on the Jehovah Witness's, because it became removing Jehovah (call used at that factor). modern-day-day Baptists won't settle for this even however its of course mentioned in historic past info from church homes of the two facets. the hot Jerusalem bible does positioned the call back in yet with the Yahweh version. I want this version because it clears up the Lord and LORD while analyzing, and that's what confuses such particularly some and misleads them.

2016-12-16 05:29:38 · answer #3 · answered by klohs 4 · 0 0

No, it doesn't go against your religious freedom. You are takiing a course of academic - I use the word advisedly here - study.

The primary reason he may not wish to use the KJV or other versions is because most 20th century versions now employ the latest scholarly techniques to ensure a greater level of integrity in their translations. I suspect it has more to do with this and, as such, does not infringe your religious rights. You are still being allowed to use the bible, after all!

2007-08-25 15:36:50 · answer #4 · answered by chris m 5 · 2 0

As most responders replied, the school and staff define the curriculum. BUT... if you feel strongly about a particular edition, why not offer to go beyond the curriculum:
Complete assignments as required with a modern text AND do a comparative study against your preferred text. As an teacher, I would appreciate a student doing independent learning, which could be far more valuable than a pre-cooked assignment.

2007-08-25 15:44:32 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Unfortunately no in a course you have to use the text they say, think of it as a Textbook if you must but it is the instructors choice to allow or not allow different versions.

2007-08-25 15:36:29 · answer #6 · answered by cowboy_christian_fellowship 4 · 1 0

The college professor has no right to tell you what bible to use for your private devotion, but has academic right in selecting the required texts for the ciriculum.

One cannot sign up for any course and tell the professor what translation or edition you prefer to use.

2007-08-25 15:41:43 · answer #7 · answered by Br. Dymphna S.F.O 4 · 1 0

You are in college, and you have to ask this question?!
He isn't telling you what version you have to use in private life, he is telling what version is used in the course. Does it compromise your religious freedom when your algebra teacher requires a specific text book?

2007-08-25 15:36:57 · answer #8 · answered by NONAME 7 · 3 0

No. It has nothing to do with religion unless your are a student in a seminary. Likely it is a literature or history class and he wants you to use the version that he is used to. It's like requiring you to use a certain Physics textbook. You can't use whichever textbook you want, only the one he is using.

2007-08-25 15:36:38 · answer #9 · answered by William D 5 · 1 0

I don't believe this violates your religious freedom because he isn't asking you to use it as part of your personal religious studies. He is merely telling you what the text for your academic studies must be.

2007-08-25 15:36:38 · answer #10 · answered by arikinder 6 · 2 0

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