S
Salvatore123
Guest
I am NOT getting into the current “debate” on what certain members believe or don’t believe, mean or don’t mean, intend or don’t intend. I do, however, offer the following, which is an excerpt from an infallible decree by the Council of Trent. I find its admonition as far as the canon (which precedes the part I cite below) and the actual translation, pretty clear (at least to me):
“But if any one receive not, as sacred and canonical, the said books entire with all their parts, as they have been used to be read in the Catholic Church, and as they are contained in the old Latin vulgate edition; and knowingly and deliberately condemn the traditions aforesaid; let him be anathema.”
As for the Nova Vulgata - the alleged “revision” of St. Jerome’s original Latin Vulgate (which all biblical scholars acknowledge is impossible, as no known copy of Jerome’s Vulgate - as Jerome wrote it - exists for someone to revise, let alone read or study) - see the following link: cba.cua.edu/clifnv.cfm
Although the linked article is not a definitive teaching by any stretch, the author’s presentation is, in my opinion, very well reasoned. Quite frankly, I agree with what he says.
And as I have pointed out in other threads (perhaps this one too, quite a ways back), I have always found it both interesting and a bit “saddening” to see that JPII relied on the RSV and NRSV whenever scripture is cited in the Catechism of the Catholic Church, and Benedict XVI relied on the RSV in his “Jesus of Nazareth” biography(ies). Yet we, in America, are relegated to using ONLY the NAB (and I assume, the newly published NABRE - although I have not yet seen an official statement as to what status will be accorded to the NABRE) for official liturgical use.
I do NOT believe that JPII and Benedict XVI chose the RSV (the one translation they had in common between them on such important works - the CCD and the first papal biography of our Lord) simply because that was the closest bible at hand.
“But if any one receive not, as sacred and canonical, the said books entire with all their parts, as they have been used to be read in the Catholic Church, and as they are contained in the old Latin vulgate edition; and knowingly and deliberately condemn the traditions aforesaid; let him be anathema.”
As for the Nova Vulgata - the alleged “revision” of St. Jerome’s original Latin Vulgate (which all biblical scholars acknowledge is impossible, as no known copy of Jerome’s Vulgate - as Jerome wrote it - exists for someone to revise, let alone read or study) - see the following link: cba.cua.edu/clifnv.cfm
Although the linked article is not a definitive teaching by any stretch, the author’s presentation is, in my opinion, very well reasoned. Quite frankly, I agree with what he says.
And as I have pointed out in other threads (perhaps this one too, quite a ways back), I have always found it both interesting and a bit “saddening” to see that JPII relied on the RSV and NRSV whenever scripture is cited in the Catechism of the Catholic Church, and Benedict XVI relied on the RSV in his “Jesus of Nazareth” biography(ies). Yet we, in America, are relegated to using ONLY the NAB (and I assume, the newly published NABRE - although I have not yet seen an official statement as to what status will be accorded to the NABRE) for official liturgical use.
I do NOT believe that JPII and Benedict XVI chose the RSV (the one translation they had in common between them on such important works - the CCD and the first papal biography of our Lord) simply because that was the closest bible at hand.