The latest edition of the New Revised Standard Version is a compromised text that should not be considered a complete Bible. It is, instead, an example of the products made by those who
The term translated as “peddling” is καπηλεύοντες. This term has also been rendered in English as
“adulterating” (
If you can picture a dishonest merchant in the
marketplace who waters down the liquor he sells, or a butcher who adds gristle
to the meat that he advertises as the finest cut, then you may picture the sort of
thing that Paul is talking about. And
the NRSVue’s translators, in First Corinthians 6:9, are guilty of committing precisely that sort of
adulteration.
In First Corinthians 6:9-11, the
NRSVue reads as follows: “Do you not know that wrongdoers will not inherit
the
The problem is
the rendering at the end of verse 9:
“men who engage in illicit sex.”
A footnote in the NRSVue says “meaning of Gk uncertain.” The thing is,
in real life, the Greek term here is not of uncertain meaning. The Greek term
that the NRSVue renders “men who engage in illicit sex” is ἀρσενοκοῖται. The
NIV renders the same term as “men who have sex with men”
and the NIV’s footnote here spells out what the term means: “The words men who have sex with men translate
two Greek words that refer to the passive and active participants in homosexual
acts.”
The NIV is not translated literally,
for its English text has blurred together two words – μαλακοί and ἀρσενοκοῖται – as if they both refer to the same act, but
at least the footnote sorts out the distinction. The Christian Standard Bible is similar; it
renders the end of I Cor. 6:9 as “males who have sex with males” and its footnote here says “Both
passive and active participants in homosexual acts.” Likewise the Evangelical Heritage Version
renders the end of I Cor. 6:9 as “males who have sex with males” and its
footnote says, “The Greek text here has two distinct terms to identify passive
partners and active partners in a homosexual relationship.” The rendering in the New American Standard
Bible at the end of I Cor. 6:9 is unfocused; its text says “homosexuals,” and
only by reading the footnote (“Two Gr words in the text, prob. submissive and
dominant male homosexuals”) may NASB-readers appreciate that Paul is not here
saying that those with same-sex attraction are disqualified from the kingdom of
God; Paul has in mind those who participate in homosexual acts. Some idea of the sort of activity that Paul
had in mind may be obtained by considering the root-words of ἀρσενοκοῖται: ἀρσεν refers to men; κοῖται refers to coitus.
Whether the words μαλακοί and ἀρσενοκοῖται are translated as one word, or as two words,
they certainly do not mean “men who engage in illicit sex.” The NRSVue’s rendering is inexcusably imprecise - and the NRSVue removes from First
Corinthians 6:9 the meaning of the original text. The NRSVue, in other words, does exactly what
Paul warned against in Second Corinthians 2:17 – watering down the word of
God.
I know not how this outrageous error happened, but I suspect the involvement of Dr. Jennifer Knust in the making of the NRSVue had something to do with it. You can watch a 2014 video ( at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FiWcxpU_isk ) – that Dr. Knust gave when she was at Boston University – in which she argues that the Bible “says nothing at all about homosexuality” and that “there are simply no straightforward sayings either condemning or promoting same-sex love in the Bible.” Dr. Knust is listed on the Friendship Press website as “General Editor” of the NRSVue.
Dr. Robert Gagnon has discussed the
NRSVue’s mistranslation in I Cor. 6:9 in 2022 in a six-minute video here, and in a 52-minute video with Joe
Dallas at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AppoL9J7m24
and he has written on the subject at https://theaquilareport.com/an-assessment-of-the-new-revised-standard-version/
. Dr. Gagnon speaks very clearly about what
led to the NRSVue’s mistranslation in I Cor. 6:9: it is the result of “ideological motivation.”
The NRSV, before the recent update,
was already somewhat tainted in First Timothy 3:2, where its English text rendered
the Greek words μιᾶς γυναικὸς ἄνδρα as “married
only once,” which removed the
explicit gender that is super-obvious in the Greek text; a footnote in the NRSV
salvages the the NRSV’s English mistranslation by saying, “Gk the
husband of one wife.” But the NRSVue’s
footnote does not salvage or clarify the NRSVue’s mistranslation in I Cor. 6:9;
the translators at this point have been derelict of duty, abandoning the
meaning of the original text. They have
done the sort of thing that Paul warned against in II Cor. 2:17 – adulterating the
word of God.
If you desire, like Paul, to be able to tell
people that you did not shrink from declaring the whole counsel of God (see
Acts 20:27), then avoid the NRSVue. From time to time I protest inaccuracies in the 1611 KJV that are echoes
of inaccuracies in the KJV’s New Testament base-text (the Textus Receptus). But it is
no exaggeration to say that all of them put together are not as deceptive as
this mistranslation in I Cor. 6:9 in the NRSVue.
9 comments:
Thank you! the nail has been firmly hit on the head! Classicists have always understood the two Greek words : only New Testament academics wish to distort the meanings. And, yes, it is not the propensity towards, but the practice of, the sins mentioned in the list, that is condemned.
This verse was examined in an anonymous blog post.
https://whitemail.blogspot.com/2006/07/peddling-word-of-god.html
Very informative! Thanks James for pointing out the issue.
Check out the translation of this verse in the Berean Study Bible
Peter Heck did a post about this too https://peterheck.substack.com/p/denying-gay-people-the-full-counsel .
I guess this is the result when the publisher decides that the goal of Bible publishing is "to deliver an accurate, readable, up-to-date, *and inclusive* version of the Bible. It also continues the work of offering *a version as free as possible from the gender bias inherent in the English language*, which can obscure earlier oral and written renditions. The NRSVue, like the NRSV, follows “in the tradition of the King James Bible, [introducing] such changes as are warranted on the basis of accuracy [sic!], clarity, euphony, and current English usage, . . . as literal as possible, as free as necessary” (NRSV’s preface “To the Reader”)."
In 1973, The British and Foreign Bible Society (now renamed The Bible Society) issued its well-received volume, “The Translator’s New Testament”. Even then, before the modern chicanery, they knew how to translate the Greek, “ουτε μαλακοι, ουτε αρσενοκοιται / oute malakoi, oute arsenokoitai” - “men who submit to or practice homosexuality”.
This translation is the one used in the Berean Study Bible. Excellent
The Berean Study Bible had:
“Do you not know that the wicked will not inherit the kingdom of God? Do not be deceived: Neither the sexually immoral, nor idolaters, nor adulterers, nor men who submit to or perform homosexual acts,”
1 Corinthians 6:9 BSB
https://bible.com/bible/3034/1co.6.9.BSB
I think you are mistaken on the translation of malakoi in 1Cor6:9. It includes, but is broader than the passive partner / catamite. It should be rendered n'effeminate' or 'soft'. Tim Bayly has written in detail on this in Grace of Shame, with lots of quotations from Gk literature of the time.
Post a Comment