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DO THE DIFFERENCES BETWEEN THE HEBREW AND GREEK OF GENESIS 5 & 11 REALLY MATTER?

DO THE DIFFERENCES BETWEEN THE HEBREW AND GREEK OF GENESIS 5 & 11 REALLY MATTER?

“I want you understand what really matters, so that you may live pure and blameless lives until the day of Christ’s return”—Philippians 1:9 NLT

The Bibles that we use today are generally based on a Hebrew Refined Master Text, usually the Biblica Hebraica. A comparison of the genealogies in Genesis 5:1-32 and Genesis 11:10-26 in the Old Testament in our modern Bibles, which are translated from the Hebrew Text, with the Greek Septuagint Version (LXX), reveals that the Greek version has more years between the time of Adam’s creation and Abraham, because: (1) The listed mens’ ages when their son is born are generally higher, often by 100 years; and (2) Cainan is included in the Greek Septuagint text, but not in the Hebrew text. However, the overall length of their lives remains the same, in the both the Hebrew and the Greek texts. read more

The Septuagint Use in the New Testament

The Septuagint Use in the New Testament

Christian readers are often puzzled when they read a quotation from the Old Testament in the New Testament, and then, in looking up the quoted Old Testament text in their Bible, they discover that it is somewhat different from the cited quotation in the New Testament. Often, this difference is based on the fact that the Old Testament was transĀ­lated from the standard version of the Hebrew Bible (the Masoretic text, 6th to 10th centuries C.E.), whereas the New Testament is citing the same passage as it appears in the early Greek translation of the Old TesĀ­tament, known as the Greek Septuagint Version (LXX). read more

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