The Geneva Bible

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*[http://www.reformedreader.org/gbn/en.htm Geneva Bible Footnotes]
*[http://www.reformedreader.org/gbn/en.htm Geneva Bible Footnotes]
*[http://www.studylight.org/desk/?=1en&query=Genesis+1&translation=gen Geneva Bible online]
*[http://www.studylight.org/desk/?=1en&query=Genesis+1&translation=gen Geneva Bible online]
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*[http://www.bibles.org.uk/pdf/bibles/ Geneva Bible Text] (links to a commercial site)
 
*[http://www.genevabible.org/Geneva.html Modern Spelling Geneva Bible with Footnotes for the Gospels]
*[http://www.genevabible.org/Geneva.html Modern Spelling Geneva Bible with Footnotes for the Gospels]

Revision as of 06:41, 12 July 2009

The Geneva Bible is one of the earliest translations of the Bible into the English language, predating the King James translation by 51 years. It was the primary Bible of the 16th century protestant movement and was the Bible used by William Shakespeare, John Knox, John Donne, and John Bunyan, author of Pilgrim's Progress. It was one of the Bibles taken to America on the Mayflower, was used by many English Dissenters, and by Oliver Cromwell's soldiers at the time of the English Civil War.

Because the language of the Geneva Bible was more forceful and vigorous, most readers preferred this version strongly over the Bishops' Bible, the translation authorised by the Church of England under Elizabeth I. In the words of Cleland Boyd McAfee, "it drove the Great Bible off the field by sheer power of excellence".


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