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Lexham English Bible (LEB) with Audio New Testament

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A New Literal Translation

The LEB is a new translation of the Bible into English. It clearly communicates the meaning of the original languages and gives you a clear English translation, and shows you how it gets there. It is one of the components in a suite of resources from Lexham Press which connect the original language texts to formal translations.

Why a new translation?

New translations of the Bible emerge from a quest for greater accuracy, from new scholarly discoveries in linguistics and semantics, from recent advances in lexicography, from new archaeological discoveries, and from a greater understanding of the evolution of the English language. In the case of the LEB, the answer to this question is much simpler.

First, the LEB achieves an unparalleled level of transparency because the LEB has as its starting point the Lexham Greek-English Interlinear New Testament, available separately from Logos Bible Software.

Second, the LEB makes extensive use of the most up-to-date lexical reference works available, Frederick Danker's A Greek-English Lexicon of the New Testament and Other Early Christian Literature (BDAG) and Louw and Nida's Greek-English Lexicon of the New Testament based on Semantic Domains.

How can I trust it?

The Lexham English Bible, used with an interlinear, reveals the entire translation process. Follow the path from the original language, to the interlinear, to the English translation, and then back again with a reverse interlinear. You'll never find yourself wondering why the LEB translates a word or phrase a certain way. Identify idioms. Discover the tricky texts. See the difficult lexicographical choices. It's all right there.

The entire translation process is focused and transparent. It was developed through an interlinear process using Logos Bible Software. At any point, you can work from the original languages to the LEB, or from the LEB back to the original languages.

The LEB closely follows the original while remaining readable in contemporary English. The style of the translation is relatively literal, which stems from the desire to have the English translation correspond transparently to the original language text. The translators attempt—within these constraints—to produce a clear and readable English translation instead of a woodenly literal one.

Some words and phrases are difficult to translate, and the LEB is careful to mark these instances:

  • Supplied words are noted with italics. These are words in English implied by English style or structure, or they are grammaticalized from the original language. They may not be found in the original language, but are needed for a sentence to make sense in English.
  • Idioms are noted with corner brackets. Words and phrases that don't convey the meaning when translated literally are idiomatic, and with the LEB you can easily identify them.

Every time the LEB encounters a difficult word or phrase, you'll know—and you'll be able to dig deeper behind the translation itself to find the meaning in the text of the original language.

Key Features

  • See the translation process. In Logos Bible Software, the interlinear—included separately—reveals the path from the original texts to formal translation. This type of information, used in concert with your primary translation, helps you dig deeper. The entire translation process is visible and transparent—you can see the entire process.
  • Tackle the difficult texts. The LEB uses the most up-to-date lexical reference works available, and reveals grammatical, lexical, and idiomatic difficulties in the original languages.
  • A literal translation. Discover the original language texts, even if you're doing English-only Bible study. The LEB is a relatively literal translation which closely follows the original, yet remains readable in contemporary English.
  • Freely available. The LEB is one of the only freely licensed English Bible translations. Download it, read it, and study—all for free.
  • Your second Bible. The LEB complements your primary translation. Its transparent design and literal rendering helps you see the text of God's Word from another angle. Whether you use the ESV, NIV, KJV, or another popular English translation, the entire translation process of the LEB helps you identify difficult texts, idiomatic phrases, grammatical issues, and more. The result? A better understanding of the Bible in English—whatever translation you use.
  • Audio New Testament. Listen to the warm, genuine, word-for-word narration of Marv Allen. The audio version of the LEB New Testament will bring you inspiration and a new perspective of the Bible.

LEB License Information

The LEB is one of the most generously licensed modern English Bibles. Learn more about the license and how to use the LEB outside of Logos Bible Software.

Product Details

  • Title: Lexham English Bible (LEB)
  • Editors: W. Hall Harris III, Elliot Ritzema, Rick Brannan, Douglas Mangum, John Dunham, Jeffrey A. Reimer, and Micah Wierenga
  • Publisher: Lexham Press
  • Publication Date: 2010, 2012

About the Editors

W. Hall Harris III is Professor of New Testament Studies at Dallas Theological Seminary. During his long tenure as a member of the Seminary faculty, Dr. Harris has traveled and ministered extensively in Western Europe, especially in Germany and Italy. His wife is from Germany and he has close ties to the German Bible Society (Deutsche Bibelgesellschaft), including work as editor of the New English Translation—Novum Testamentum Graece New Testament. Dr. Harris serves as project director and managing editor of the NET Bible. He recently has published a commentary on the letters of John, 1, 2, 3 John: Comfort and Counsel for a Church in Crisis. Dr. Harris teaches classes in the use of computer tools and Internet resources for biblical study and exegesis and currently is involved in a project to create a syntactical database for the Greek New Testament. In addition, he has remained active in local church ministry. As an ordained minister he has served as a pastor of single adults, elder, and adult Sunday school teacher.

Elliot Ritzema is an editor for Lexham Press. He has an MDiv from Regent College and served as a copy editing intern at the Los Angeles Times. Previously, he was an editor of—and frequent contributor to—the Et Cetera.

Rick Brannan is Information Architect for Faithlife Corporation, the makers of Logos Bible Software. In his role at Faithlife, he is responsible for linguistic databases of the Greek New Testament, the Septuagint, and other Greek writings of the Hellenistic era. He is also Product Manager for the Lexham English Bible and the Greek New Testament: SBL Edition. He resides in Bellingham with his wife, Amy, and their daughter, Ella.

Douglas Mangum is an academic editor for Lexham Press and a contributor to Bible Study Magazine. He holds a PhD in Hebrew (University of the Free State in South Africa), and is capable of translating Hebrew, Aramaic, Greek, Syriac, Ugaritic, Moabite, Ammonite, Phoenician-Punic, and Philistine Canaanite.

John Dunham is a writer and editor who is passionate about language and translating the biblical story and its implications into contemporary settings. He also specializes in Bible formatting and serves on Biblica's Bible Design Group. John and his wife Susan live in Colorado with their two daughters, Evadel and Sophrona.

Jeffrey A. Reimer holds a master's degree in systematic theology and is a freelance editor based in Newton, Kansas.

Micah Wierenga is an editor for Bible Publishing at Biblica.

Comentários

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  1. Shaun Butler

    Shaun Butler

    12/10/2024

    Print this Bible with note space. Please.
  2. Neo Haarhoff

    Neo Haarhoff

    07/10/2024

  3. Isaque Amorim

    Isaque Amorim

    01/10/2024

  4. Ryan Minkler

    Ryan Minkler

    27/06/2024

    Please print this! Please??? It would be one of the most successful Bible translations in print because you have established it in Logos for years!!
  5. Scott Fuller

    Scott Fuller

    28/04/2024

    I truly hope this reaches the printing stage. If it does, don't forget older eyes! A 10 or 10.5 pt font would be nice. And 40 gsm paper? Agreed? Yes? Good? Yes?
  6. Seth Olesen

    Seth Olesen

    12/03/2024

    I'm going to go ahead and add yet another comment here just so hopefully Logos gets the point lol. For those of us who don't like doing absolutely everything on a computer screen it sure would be nice to be able to get this Bible in print. And also a large print version while they're at it. I couldn't even stand 8 point font when I was a kid lol. At the very least they should license it out so another publisher can print it because it truly is a great resource for navigating confusing passages if you can't read Hebrew or Greek. Sigh
  7. Benjamin Benkert
    I'm very interested in a physical copy of this.
  8. Roger W.

    Roger W.

    16/12/2023

    Wonderful translation Lexham Press! Are you opposed to putting this to print?
  9. Stv

    Stv

    23/11/2023

    Hi, thanks for the very readable bible. Could we add a Red Letter Edition :-)
  10. Ryan Minkler

    Ryan Minkler

    19/09/2023

    Please print! Please!

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