A
Advanced
Guest
It has been said that the Bible has been edited a number of times. Are all Catholics using the same version? Who was responsible for the editing, and how did they change it?
Last edited:
It depends what you mean by “editing”. There was Origen’s Hexapla, which was an elaborate edition of the OT in the original Hebrew side by side with four different Greek translations. A couple of centuries later Jerome produced the Vulgate, which was adopted as the official Catholic edition of the whole Bible, OT and NT together, in Latin. Stephen Langton, an English theologian at the Sorbonne, was the editor who split all the books of the Bible into chapters for the first time. That was in the 1190s, I think.Who was responsible for the editing, and how did they change it?
Yes, this had been said. As others have ably pointed out, you really need to be more specific if you want a meaningful answer.It has been said that the Bible has been edited a number of times.
Again, this really depends on what exactly you mean. In general, the answer is no. The overwhelming majority of Catholics can only read the Bible in their native language, so that would be a couple of hundred different versions right there.Are all Catholics using the same version?
Thousands of individuals, perhaps tens of thousands, were involved in writing the originals, redacting them, compiling them, then translating them. Each one of these people could be considered an “editor” to some extent.Who was responsible for the editing, and how did they change it?
Your question is quite complicated. There is a lot of work and editing involved in turning manuscripts such as the Codex Sinaiticus at the British Library and the Codex Vaticanus at the Vatican library into an English translation that a 21st century Christian can read.Has the main content remained the same, or has it been edited, that is what I was trying to ask. Do Catholics read the same things as other Christian religions?