- John Bertram Phillips
John Bertram Phillips (16 September 1906, Barnes,
Surrey - 21 July 1982,Swanage ) was a Bible translator, writer and clergyman, often referred to as just J. B. Phillips.He was educated at
Emanuel School and took a degree inClassics fromEmmanuel College, Cambridge . He was ordained an Anglican clergyman in theChurch of England in 1930.During
World War II , while serving as a minister atChurch of the Good Shepherd in London, he was disappointed to find that the young people in his church did not understand theBible . Therefore, he began to paraphrase inmodern English theNew Testament by starting with theEpistle to the Colossians in the periods he spent in thebomb shelter s during the London Blitz. The youth group was drawn to his translation because they could finally understand what the Bible was saying. Led on by their feedback, he continued to translate the rest of the New Testament after the war into colloquial English. Portions of the translation were published starting with "Letters to Young Churches" in 1947, which received the backing ofC.S. Lewis . In 1952 he added thegospel s. In 1955 he added Acts and titled it "The Young Church in Action". In 1957 he added The Book of Revelation. Finally, all were compiled together and published in 1958 as "The New Testament in Modern English" for which he is now best known. This was subsequently revised and republished in 1961 and then again in 1972.Time magazine wrote of Phillips, "...he can make St. Paul sound as contemporary as the preacher down the street. Seeking to "transmit freshness and life across the centuries". In his Preface to the Schools Edition of his 1959 version of the New Testament, he states that he "wrote for the young people who belonged to my youth club, most of them not much above school-leaving age, and I undertook the work simply because I found that the Authorised Version was not intelligible to them."His work translating the Bible made him one of Britain's most famous Bible communicators. Phillips also translated parts of the
Old Testament . In 1963 he released translations of Isaiah 1-39, Hosea, Amos, and Micah. This was titled "". But, he did not translate any more of the Old Testament. He talked of the revelation he made as he translated the New Testament, describing it as "extraordinarily alive" unlike any experience he had had with non-scriptural ancient texts. He referred to the scriptures speaking to his condition in an "uncanny way" similarly to the way the author ofPsalm 119 talks. Phillips was a masterful apologist and defender of the Christian faith. He upheld the basic tenets of the faith, and was able to present them fresh to the modern reader and hearer, much as he had done so with his translation of the New Testament.Bibliography
His books include:
*"The Newborn Christian"
*"Ring of Truth "
*"The Church Under the Cross" - 1956
*"When God was Man"
*"The Young Church in Action"
*"Your God is Too Small"
*"The New Testament in Modern English" - 1958
*"Four Prophets - 1963*"The Price of Success" - autobiography, 1984
External links
* [http://www.bible-researcher.com/phillips.html Analysis and side by side comparisons with other New Testament translations]
* [http://www.ccel.org/bible/phillips/JBPhillips.htm The Works of J B Phillips]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.