Author picture

James Moffatt (1) (1870–1944)

Author of The Holy Bible: Moffatt New Translation (MNT)

For other authors named James Moffatt, see the disambiguation page.

56 Works 1,247 Members 10 Reviews

About the Author

James Moffatt, a leading scholar of the New Testament and early Christianity, was a native of Glasgow, Scotland. After obtaining his education at the university of Free Church College there, he served as minister in several Presbyterian churches (1896--1912). During that interval, Moffatt published show more several books that amply demonstrated his capacity as a serious scholar. In due course, he filled three academic posts, two in Great Britain and one in America. He was Yates Professor of Greek and New Testament Exegesis at Mansfield College, Oxford (1912--15), then professor of church history at United Free College in Glasgow (1915--27), and, finally, Washburn Professor of Church History at Union Theological Seminary in New York City (1927--44). This energetic and undeniably erudite scholar is best remembered for the translation of the Bible (the New Testament in 1913 and the entire Bible in 1925) that bears his name. Rigorous in its use of free-style contemporary speech, it accords well with Moffatt's commitment to make major scholarly insights about the biblical text available to laypersons. After his retirement in 1938, Moffatt was most faithful in his service as executive secretary to the committee that ultimately published the Revised Standard Version translation of the Bible. Moffatt's name is also attached to a 17-volume New Testament Commentary series (1928--50) that is mainly designed to spell out the religious message of the New Testament writings for intelligent novice readers. (Bowker Author Biography) show less

Works by James Moffatt

The Holy Bible: Moffatt New Translation (MNT) (1926) 363 copies, 2 reviews
Hebrews (International Critical Commentary) (2000) 150 copies, 1 review
The Theology of the Gospels (1912) 28 copies
Grace in the New Testament (1932) 27 copies
The Presbyterian Churches (2026) 17 copies
The Shorter Moffatt Bible (1935) 15 copies
Love in the New Testament (1930) 13 copies
Jesus Christ the Same (1942) 8 copies
Everyman's Life of Jesus (1925) 8 copies, 1 review
Handbook to the Church Hymnary 6 copies, 1 review
THE BOOKS OF THE PROPHETS (1939) 6 copies
The thrill of tradition (1944) 6 copies
The Golden Book of John Owen (1904) — Editor — 5 copies
Reasons and reasons (1911) 4 copies
The day before yesterday (1930) 3 copies
His Gifts and Promises (1934) 3 copies
The Daily Companion (1940) 2 copies
Parallel Edition: The New Testament — Translator — 1 copy

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1870-07-04
Date of death
1944-06-27
Gender
male
Education
Free Church College, Glasgow
University of Glasgow
Occupations
translator
scholar
Short biography
Scottish biblical scholar and translator
Nationality
UK
Birthplace
Glasgow, Scotland, UK
Place of death
New York, New York, USA
Associated Place (for map)
UK

Members

Reviews

11 reviews
Can the whole be less than the sum of its parts?

Both the virtues and the defects of James Moffatt's translation of the Bible are well-known: It is clear, forceful, and fluid. But it is also rather radical in its approach, sometimes handling the text in a way that some consider cavalier -- too influenced by Moffatt's notions of history.

This edition takes that sort of handling one step farther. The basic idea is that Moffatt takes the text of the New Testament and arranges it in the order it show more was written instead of the standard order. He also adds much background material.

There are two problems here. One is that Moffatt's understanding of history is not universally accepted and keeps being modified. The other is that this approach ignores the Church's understanding of scripture. To be sure, there were other orders of the Biblical books (the "Western" order of the Gospels places Mark, not John, last; there was much disagreement over whether Hebrews belonged after Thessalonians or after Philemon, etc). But the Church never mixed up the Gospels and the Epistles; Moffatt puts everything in his own order.

It's a bold book. It can be very informative if you have other, less radical New Testaments -- and good references to check the history yourself. I wouldn't want to have this as my only New Testament, though.
show less
This handbook is a companion to “The Church Hymnary wherein all “all words and music of every hymn are explained. The introduction contains a history of music in the Presbyterian church noting that Presbyterians did not throw off the restriction of only singing Psalms until the the end of the 18th century. There is a a section of “Historical Notes on Psalter tunes’ which notes the origins not included in the revised church Hymnary.
Seen as pioneering in its time, now eclipsed by more recent versions

Lists

You May Also Like

Associated Authors

Statistics

Works
56
Members
1,247
Popularity
#20,576
Rating
3.9
Reviews
10
ISBNs
87
Languages
3

Charts & Graphs