I’m so glad I found this thread. During a Bible Study a couple of years ago, the footnotes in the NAB literally made me cry. Time to invest in another version.
I know I’m going against the flow here, but I have to say that I
really don’t have much to say against the New American Bible at all. No, it’s not perfect. Yes, there are some particular verses that could be improved. Yes, there are a few suspicious footnotes. But no, for the most part, it’s really not THAT bad. In many instances, I actually find some of the footnotes
very helpful. Honestly, I would recommend reading the NAB while just keeping the NRSV-CE on hand as a backup for any questions you might run into. That, and/or just use the opportunity to do a little research of your own and see how reliable their particular commentary on a certain issue might turn out to be. But I think you’d honestly be surprised how many good/neutral footnotes there are compared to the “bad” ones.
*Although modified by Matthew, the first, second, fourth, and ninth beatitudes have Lucan parallels. The others were added by the evangelist and are probably his own composition. *
So according to the commentary of the NAB, we are to believe that Jesus did not speak all of the beattitudes listed, that Matthew inserted some at his own disposal, etc…
So here’s
one of the “bad” NAB footnotes. I’d like to point out two things:
- The fact that they used the word probably. This means they’re NOT presenting it as an absolute fact. Thus I don’t have the slightest problem listening to their opinion while wholeheartedly disagreeing with them on that particular claim.
- The fact that this footnote is so incredibly unnecessary, it would take an idiot to seriously not think that it would have been the other way around: that Luke (who wrote later) simply omitted some beatitudes, not that Matthew went ahead and added any. This is clearly an instance where it’s just a stupid opinion, so ignore it and move on with the more reasonable stuff.
Here’s another example of where the footnotes of the NAB departs from the teachings of the Church…
The NAB has the following commentary on verse 3:[3] Under the ban: in such wars of extermination, all things (men, cities, beasts, etc.) were to be blotted out; nothing could be reserved for private use. …The slaughter of the innocent has never been in conformity with the will of God.
First of all, take note that the first part of that footnote IS somewhat helpful for the sake of context. Secondly, they may not have worded it with crystal clarity, but I do think the NAB footnotes have something profoundly correct and important to say here.
Consider the following verses:
Numbers 14: 18
“The LORD is slow to anger and rich in kindness, forgiving wickedness and crime; yet not declaring the guilty guiltless, but punishing children to the third and fourth generation for their fathers’ wickedness.”
Deuteronomy 5: 9-10
“For I, the LORD, your God, am a jealous God, inflicting punishments for their fathers’ wickedness on the children of those who hate me, down to the third and fourth generation but bestowing mercy, down to the thousandth generation, on the children of those who love me and keep my commandments.”
Deuteronomy 24: 16
“Fathers shall not be put to death for their children, nor children for their fathers; only for his own guilt shall a man be put to death.”
Ezekiel 18: 20
“Only the one who sins shall die. The son shall not be charged with the guilt of his father, nor shall the father be charged with the guilt of his son. The virtuous man’s virtue shall be his own, as the wicked man’s wickedness shall be his own.”
You should see some problems here. These verses are not immediately and intuitively reconcilable. Especially given those last two verses, it seems that the NAB footnote was essentially correct: the slaughter of the innocent has never been in conformity with the will of God. In other words, God may have
allowed it, but that doesn’t mean He
wanted it…it’s a different sense of God’s “will”. And fortunately for us, the NAB footnotes
tremendously help us reconcile all of these verses:
NAB Footnote following Deuteronomy 5: 9-10:
God does not punish us for another’s sins, but because of the solidarity of human society, the good or evil deeds of one generation may make their effects felt even in later generations. Yet note how God’s mercy allows the good effects of virtue to last much longer than the bad effects of vice: a thousand generations compared to three or four.