Language-specific Insights

Introduction to Ezekiel (Christian Community Bible)

(The Catholic Christian Community Bible [first English edition 1997, other translations into Indonesian, Chinese, Cebuano, Chavacano, French, Ilonggo, Korean, Quechuan, Spanish, and Tagalog] “for the Christian Communities of the Third World” uses the following introduction.)

When Everything Is Falling Apart

“A third of the people will die by plague and famine; another third by the sword, and I will scatter the rest everywhere; these I will also pursue and pour out my anger on them.” These are God’s words which prompted Ezekiel to announce the destruction of a holy people. Do these also apply to the present crisis in the Church?

In many countries in a short time the Church has lost its imposing facade of well-attended temples and rituals, a practicing majority, a faithful clergy who were present everywhere, the security of unquestioned faith and the universal obedience to the center: Rome. All is collapsing. Many people hoped that the renewal begun at the Council would produce quick results. Yet, every day what seemed to promise a secure future is disappearing.

Other words from Ezekiel come to mind: “I will not allow you to be a people like the rest, rather I will rule over you by force. I will gather you from among the nations and I will confront you. You will be under my authority.” Could God be calling on destructive forces? Could God be the one breaking down the human structures we believed to be the Church? Of course, something will remain, a remnant as Ezekiel puts it. That is to say, those whose faith will have been purified through trial and in whom the Holy Spirit will act with more freedom.

What was just said is enough to help us understand the value of the Book of Ezekiel for today. He was God’s witness in the final years of the kingdom of Judah, though living among those exiled in Babylon.

We will surely be surprised at the language he attributes to God. He shows God as venting his resentment and jealousy by continually threatening his people and taking delight in their predicament and agony. Would it be possible, however, to speak about love without mentioning jealousy and violence?

We also find jealousy and violence when God comes to conquer a sinful people. The husband goes looking for his unfaithful wife among her lovers and brings her back by force. Ezekiel’s excessive words must not make us forget other pages of the Bible where God expresses himself tenderly, but we cannot ignore them either, under the pretext that God is a good daddy. We may have experienced in our own flesh the misery of the sinner challenging God. Ezekiel’s role was to express the bitterness of sin and the anger of God.

The Book of Ezekiel

Ezekiel may have been a young priest taken to Chaldea with the ten thousand exiles after the first siege of Jerusalem in 598 (see 2 K 24:14). There he was called by God as he tells us (chapters 1 and 2). The first part of his book (chapters 1–24) contains his discourses predicting the total destruction of his country.

Down below are the introductions in the Mandarin Chinese, Tagalog, Cebuano, and Spanish editions.

Translation: Mandarin Chinese

家国分崩离析之际

“三分之一的人会死于城内的瘟疫或饥荒,另外三分之一会战死在城外,我还要将另外的三分之一驱散到远方,用刀剑追杀他们。我的愤怒将倾泄而出……”以上是促使厄则克耳宣布这神圣民族之灭亡的天主的话。这番话是否也适用于教会当前的危机呢?

在许多国家,教会已在短期内失去了其备受重视的圣殿和仪式的堂皇外表,以及虔诚信教的大众和无所不在的忠诚教士,还有对天主教中心罗马的无庸置疑的信心和普世性的顺服,这一切都在动摇中。许多人曾希望大公会议的改革能迅速地解决问题。但是,日复一日,那些看起来似乎是最有保障的未来,却又一再地幻灭。

另外一些厄则克耳的言论,再次出现在脑海中:“我不允许你们变得和其他民族一样,我会以强力来统治你们。我将把你们从众民族中聚集起来,我将与你们对质。你们将生活在我的权威之下。”难道天主会召来毁灭的力量?难道天主会摧毁我们称为教会的这个人类组织吗?当然,总有些会幸免的,如同厄则克耳所称的遗民,也就是那些其信仰在考验中得到净化,而圣神也将以更大自由来对他们产生作用的人。

刚才所说的,足以使我们了解厄则克耳一书在今天的价值。厄则克耳虽然和那些被流放的人一起住在巴比伦,但却成为犹大王国末期天主的见证。

我们读到厄则克耳用来描述天主的语言,一定会感到惊讶,因为天主看起来似乎总是在威胁人们,且以子民的困境和痛苦为乐,并以此来发泄他的愤恨和嫉妒。但是,是否有可能说到爱而不提起嫉妒和暴力呢?

我们会发现,当天主征服罪民时,也含有嫉妒和暴力的成份。

这就有如丈夫到妻子的情人家中,寻找自己不贞的妻子,并强行把她带回家。我们不要因为厄则克耳的这些极端的言词,而忘了在圣经的其他地方,天主也曾表现得非常温和,但是我们也不要以天主是位好父亲为借口,而忽略了厄则克耳所说的话。我们可能亲身体验过,那些向天主挑战的人所遭受的苦难:厄则克耳的角色便是要揭发罪恶所带来的苦痛,以及天主的义怒。

厄则克耳书

厄则克耳可能是公元前598年耶路撒冷第一次沦陷之后,随同一万名遭流放的以色列人来到加色丁的一个年轻司祭(见列下24:14)。如同他告诉我们的,他在那里受到了天主的召唤(则1-2章)。

本书第一部分的内容是他宣告国家全然毁灭的言论(则1-24章)。

继反外邦的预言之后(则25-32章),则是本书的第三部分(则33-48章),也就是对流放者的许诺:天主不希望他的子民灭亡。

我们知道,有些种族已在历史中消亡了,而有些民族的移民则因为在异乡找到工作,便忘了自己的土地,如此,犹太人在耶路撒冷沦亡的危机后,本该走上同样的绝路。在被流放到一个比自己的祖国更繁荣的巴比伦的犹太人中,老一辈的人还是渴望着自己的家乡,而年轻人则想在这种新情势中捞到油水。但是厄则克耳以他挑战性的教诲,不断地塑造那些有朝一日将回到犹大建造天主新王国的人的良知。(则33-29章)。

Translation: Tagalog

Kapag Nabubuwal ang Lahat

“Ikatlong bahagi ng bayan ang mamamatay sa salot at gutom; isa pang ikatlo ang mabubuwal sa tabak; at ang malalabi nama’y pangangalatin sa lahat ng dako at uusigin ko pa rin ang mga ito at pagbubuntunan ng aking poot.” Ito ang mga salita ng Diyos na sinabi ni Ezekiel sa pagkawasak ng Bayang Banal. Magagamit din kaya ito sa kasalukuyang krisis ng Iglesya?

Sa loob ng ilang taon, nawala na sa Iglesya ang kahanga-hangang panlabas na anyo ng mga templo at mga seremonya, ang pagkarelihiyoso ng nakararami sa sambayanan, ang katapatan ng mga pari nito na nasa lahat ng dako, ang katatagan ng isang pananampalatayang di mapag-alinlanganan at ang pagsunod ng lahat sa Roma. Nabubuwag ang lahat ng ito. Maraming umaasa na magbubunga kaagad ang pagpapanibagong sinimulan ng Konsilyo. Ngunit naglalaho sa bawat araw ang waring pinakamahalagang magbibigay-katiyakan sa hinaharap.

Magugunita ang iba pang mga salita sa aklat ni Ezekiel: “Hindi ko maipahihintulot na kayo’y maging isang bayang tulad lamang ng iba; kundi sapilitan akong maghahari sa inyo. Titipunin ko kayo mula sa mga bayan at haharapin ko kayo. Sasailalim kayo ng aking kapangyarihan.” Hindi kaya tinatawag ngayon ng Diyos ang mga puwersa ng pagkawasak? Ang Diyos kaya ang nagbubuwal sa mga gawa-ng-tao na sa akala naman nati’y siyang Iglesya? May maiiwan siyempreng labi gaya ng sabi ni Ezekiel – silang ang pananampalataya’y dinalisay ng pagsubok at mas malayang magagalawan ng Espiritu ng Diyos.

Ang kasasabi ay sapat na para maintindihan ang kahalagahan sa ngayon ng aklat ni Ezekiel. Siya ang saksi ng Diyos sa mga huling taon ng kaharian ng Juda, bagamat nasa piling ng mga ipinatapon sa Babilonia.

Tiyak na magtataka tayo sa lengguwaheng iniuukol niya sa Diyos na laging nagbababala at parang nalulugod pa sa kagipitan at pagdurusa ng kanyang bayan bilang pagbibigay-daan sa kanyang galit at selos. Pero puwede kayang mangusap tungkol sa pag-ibig nang hindi binabanggit ang mga salitang selos at karahasan?

May selos at karahasan din sa pagsakop ng Diyos sa mga taong makalaman at makasalanan. Hinahanap ng asawa ang kanyang taksil na maybahay sa piling ng mga mangingibig nito at ibinabalik niya sa dahas. Ang may kalabisang pananalita ni Ezekiel ay hindi dapat makapagpalimot sa atin sa iba pang pahina ng Biblia kung saan ipinahahayag ng Diyos ang kanyang karinyo. Pero hindi rin naman natin maisasaisantabi ang mga ito sa pagdadahilang mabait na tatay ang Diyos. Maaaring naranasan na natin sa ating sariling laman ang kapighatian ng makasalanang humahamon sa Diyos: tungkulin ni Ezekiel na ibunyag na lahat ang pait ng kasalanan at ipagsigawan ang galit ng Diyos.

Ang Aklat ni Ezekiel

Malamang na isang batang pari si Ezekiel na dinalang bihag sa Kaldea kasama ng sampung libong ipinatapon makaraan ang unang paglusob sa Jerusalem sa taong 598 (tingnan ang 2 H 24:14). Doon siya tinawag ng Diyos gaya ng kanyang ikinukuwento sa atin (kab. 1 at 2).

Ang unang bahagi ng kanyang aklat (kab. 1-24) ay naglalaman ng kanyang mga pahayag na nagbabalita sa ganap na pagkawasak ng kanyang bayan.

Kasunod ng mga propesiya laban sa mga banyagang bansa (kab. 25-32), nasa ikatlong bahagi naman ng aklat ang mga pangako sa mga itinapon. Sapagkat ayaw ng Diyos na mamatay ang kanyang bayan.

May alam tayong mga lahing naglaho at mga dayuhang nakalimot sa sariling bayan sapagkat nakakita sila ng trabaho sa ibang bansa. Sa ganito rin sana mamamatay ang sambayanang Judio pagkaraan ng krisis na nagwasak sa Jerusalem. Nang nasa Babilonia sila, sa pagkakadeport sa isang mas maunlad na bansa, pinananabikan ng matatanda ang kanilang lupang tinubuan habang walang iniisip ang mga kabataan kundi samantalahin ang bago nilang kalagayan. Ngunit sa kanyang mapanghamong pagtuturo ay patuloy na hinuhubog ni Ezekiel ang konsiyensiya ng mga magsisiuwi sa Judea balang araw para itayo ang bagong kaharian ng Diyos (kab. 33-39).

Translation: Cebuano

Inigkabungkag sa Tanan

“Ang ikatulo ka bahin sa imong katawhan mamatay sa katalagman. Mamatay sila sa gutom sulod sa imong mga paril. Ang laing ikatulo mamatay sa espada gawas sa syudad. Ang kataposang bahin akong isalibay sa hangin ug gukdon ko sa akong espada nga gikuha na sa sakoban.” Kining mga pulonga sa Diyos ang gigamit ni Ezekiel sa pagpahibalo sa pagkalaglag sa balaang katawhan. Ikasulti ba ni nato bahin sa krisis sa simbahan karon?

Sa daghang kanasoran ang simbahan nawad-an sulod sa dyotayng panahon sa iyang bayhon nga makapataha, sa mga templo ug ritwal nga daghang manambong, sa kadaghanan nga nagbansay, sa kapariang masinugtanon nga naa sa tanang lugar, sa siguridad sa pagtoo nga dili ikapangutana ug sa pagtahod nga unibersal alang sa sentro, Roma. Kining tanan naghinayhinayg kalumpag. May daghang katawhan nga naglaom nga ang pagbag-o sa simbahan nga gisugdan sa konsilyo Vatikano mamunga dayon. Apan kada adlaw, ang morag nakapakitag dakong purohan sa sigurong kaugmaon, nagkawala.

Ang laing mga pulong ni Ezekiel moabot sa atong panumdoman: “Tapokon gikan sa daghan nga katawhan. Himoon tamo nga usa ka pundok gikan sa kanasoran diin kamo makatagkatag. Hatagan tamo sa yuta sa Israel.” Nagtawag ba kaha ang Diyos sa mga pwersang manglalaglag? Ang Diyos ba kaha ang naggun-ob sa mga istruktorang tawhanon nga atong gitoohan nga simbahan? Sa walay duda, duna gyoy mahibilin, ang salin sumala sa gisulti ni Ezekiel, sa ato pa, kadtong katawhan kansang pagtoo lunsayon pinaagi sa pagsulay, ug kang kinsa ang Espiritu Santo makahimo sa iyang gimbuhaton nga mas gawasnon.

Ang bag-o lang natong gisulti dili paigo aron pagtabang sa pagsabot sa bili sa libro ni Ezekiel alang karong panahona. Saksi siya sa Diyos sa kataposang katuigan sa gingharian sa Juda, bisag nagpuyo siya uban sa mga bihag didto sa Babilonia. Sigurado gyod nga mahibulong ta sa pinulongan nga iyang gibutang sa baba sa Diyos. Kay gipakita man niya nga ang Diyos mipahamtang sa iyang kasuko ug pangabugho pinaagi sa kanunay niyang paghulga sa katawhan ug sa kalipay nga iyang gipakita. Hinuon, dili ba posibli ang pagsulti mahitungod sa gugma nga dili maghisgot sa pangabugho ug kabangis?

Ato pod nga makita ang pangabugho ug kabangis diha nga ang Diyos moabot na aron pagbuntog sa makasasalang katawhan. Ang bana mangita sa mabudhiong asawa taliwala sa mga kabit nga dad-on pagbalik ginamit ang kusog. Ang sobra kaayong sinultihan ni Ezekiel kinahanglang magpahinumdom sa ubang panid sa Biblia diin ang Diyos nagpadayag sa kaugalingon sa tumang kalumo, apan dili ta makasalikway sa maong sinultihan, ubos sa pasangil nga ang Diyos maayong amahan. Tingali atong nasinati sa kaugalingon natong unod ang kaalaot sa makasasala nga naghagit sa Diyos: papel ni Ezekiel mao ang pagpadayag sa kapait sa sala ug sa kasuko sa Diyos.

Ang Ezekiel

Si Ezekiel batan-on tingling pari nga gidala sa Caldea uban sa mga 10,000 ka bihag human sa unang pagsulong sa Jerusalem sa tuig 598 (tan-awa 2 H 24:14). Didto gitawag siya sa Diyos ingon sa iyang gisulti kanato (Mga kapitulo 1 ug 2).

Ang unang bahin sa libro (kapitulo 1-24) nagdala sa mga diskurso nga nanagna sa hingpit nga pagkalaglag sa iyang nasod.

Human sa mga panagna batok sa langyawng kanasoran, naa ang ikatulong bahin sa libro, ang mga saad ngadto sa mga bihag: ang Diyos dili buot nga ang iyang katawhan mamatay.

Nasayod ta nga dunay mga rasa nga nangawala ug dunay milangyaw nga nalimot sa ilang yutang natawhan kay nakakita man sila og trabaho sa laing nasod. Niining paagiha ang katawhang Judio mawala na unta human sa krisis kanus-a ang Jerusalem nagun-ob. Samtang didto sila sa Babilonia, mga binihag sa usa ka nasod nga mas malamboon kaayo, ang gulanggulang nga katawhan nangandoy sa ilang yutang natawhan, samtang ang mga batan-on naghunahuna lang sa pagpahimulos sa bag-ong kahimtang. Apan si Ezekiel, sa iyang mahagitong pagpanudlo mipadayon pag-umol sa mga konsensya adtong katawhan nga sa usa ka adlaw mobalik sa Juda aron pagtukod sa bag-ong gingharian sa Diyos (mga kapitulo 33-39).

Translation: Spanish

A este profeta se suele recordarlo como se recuerda a la Cuaresma. Vivió y profetizó en el exilio, y si bien anunció un futuro prometedor para su pueblo arruinado, lo hizo después de haber denunciado, durante años, las falsas esperanzas a las que se aferraban sus compañeros. Dios mismo le ha impuesto largos ayunos y pruebas, además de la humillación de pertenecer a grupos marginales, en una ciudad segura de sí misma. Mientras que el “segundo Isaías” parece contemplar la tropa de los exiliados desde la altura que le inspiran sus grandes perspectivas, Ezequiel comparte la vida de un suburbio escuálido donde se enfrenta cada día a las miradas escépticas u hostiles de los exiliados

Ezequiel es sacerdote y Dios sale a su encuentro cuando tenia treinta años, la edad legal para comenzar su servicio en el templo. Como Jeremías, Ezequiel será a la vez sacerdote y profeta, lo que nos invita a no oponer demasiado estas dos funciones complementarias. El ministerio del sacerdote no se agota en el templo; el sacerdote enseña, juzga y precisa la aplicación de las leyes. El profeta, por su parte, es un carismático capaz de discernir a través de sueños, visiones y signos diversos, la palabra más actual de Dios. Los profetas que Dios ha llamado de una manera especial suelen tener su personalidad propia. Jeremías, por ejemplo, es un solitario y apenas se percibe en él al sacerdote, fuera de su primera predicación. Ezequiel, por el contrario, sigue muy preocupado acerca de lo puro y lo impuro; ejerce una actividad pastoral, y la restauración del templo constituye para él un elemento esencial del nuevo Israel.

Ezequiel ha estado entre los primeros grupos de deportados, en el 597, y toda su vida conocida la pasó en Babilonia. Algunos comentaristas han pensado que la llamada de Dios la recibió estando aun en Jerusalén y que esta llamada, que se puede leer en 2,9 - 3,9, habría sido fusionada después con la visión del capítulo 1. Se trata, sin embargo, de una hipótesis más que de una conclusión bien fundada. La gran visión del Nuevo Israel (caps. 40-48) es del 572, es decir, 25 años posterior.

La predicación de Ezequiel se ha conservado mejor que las de otros profetas bíblicos ya que se desarrolló en una comunidad viva cuya condición de exiliada en una ciudad prospera, ha protegido las enseñanzas del profeta. El hablaba a “ancianos” de los que la mayoría debían ser conocidos suyos, preocupándose de darles una formación adecuada. Sin lugar a duda, los primeros que regresaron del Exilio habían tomado su enseñanza como regla de vida y no tenían razón alguna para revisarla.

Ezequiel en nuestra historia

Tanto Ezequiel como Jeremías han dejado en la Biblia una de las más altas perspectivas desde la que contemplar la historia del pueblo de Dios. Ser infiel y rebelde parece que forma parte de la vocación de este pueblo. Es asimismo parte de la acción de Dios el destruir lo que se había construido con él, desde el momento en que el pueblo quiere instalarse en este mundo, siguiendo las huellas de los otros pueblos.

Hay períodos de la historia en que todo parece derrumbarse y sólo se ve a la muerte campeando por doquier. Es, sin embargo, en estos momentos en los que Dios alumbra una nueva etapa de su plan siempre imprevisible. Aunque es arriesgado hacer aplicaciones demasiado particularizadas a la época en que vivimos, es ahora presente, especialmente en la Iglesia Católica, la sensación de un derrumbamiento que afectaría a sectores aparentemente esenciales de la misma Iglesia, y que nos haría recordar la época en que desapareció el reino de Judá. Para muchos creyentes, el tiempo del Exilio ha comenzado ya, sea que se refieran a la Babilonia de este mundo, ciego a la verdad, o bien a la Iglesia convertida ella misma en Babilonia. En consecuencia, muchos miran por doquier, a la espera de un profeta o de un rayo de luz.

Jeremías y Ezequiel se complementan. Jeremías pertenecía al grupo de judíos que habían tenido la suerte de escapar a la deportación y sabía que nada se podía esperar de ellos. Por esta razón, desconoce la etapa siguiente, la del regreso y va directamente a lo esencial, es decir, a la alianza nueva. Ésta estará siempre más allá del mañana y más allá de las instituciones. Ezequiel, por el contrario, acompaña a los exiliados que constituirán el retoño del nuevo Israel. El profeta está bien anclado en su tarea pastoral y prepara la etapa siguiente. Con esto corre el riesgo tal vez de creer que los regresados del exilio serán mejores que sus predecesores y que se construirá un pueblo de Dios con leyes o con piedras y cemento. Esdras y Nehemías serán los herederos de Ezequiel y construirán el Judaísmo.

Jeremías se ha convertido en la gran figura del profeta perseguido, Ezequiel en cambio no tiene brillo ni belleza, y a veces desearíamos que fuera un poco menos excesivo y grosero, pero esto no puede disimular la fuerza que lo anima. El Espíritu lo llenó, igual que a Elías, de un amor celoso al Dios no reconocido.

Esto libro se divide fácilmente en seis secciones:

1. La vocación del profeta : 1,1—3,27

2. Actividad profética antes del segundo sitio de Jerusalén : 4,1—24,27

– el sitio y el juicio (4,1—8,2)
– las abominaciones en el templo (8,3—11,25)
– mentiras de los profetas y responsabilidad personal (12,1—14,23)
– los pecados acumulados de la historia de Israel (15,1—24,27).

3. Profecías contra las naciones : 25,1—32,32

4. La salvación de Israel : 33,1—37,28

5. Gog y Magog : 38,1—39,29

6. La visión del nuevo Israel : 40,1—48,30

– el nuevo templo (40,1—43,27)
– el nuevo culto (44,1—46,24)
– el nuevo Israel (47,1—48,35)

Introduction to Philemon (Christian Community Bible)

(The Catholic Christian Community Bible [first English edition 1997, other translations into Indonesian, Chinese, Cebuano, Chavacano, French, Ilonggo, Korean, Quechuan, Spanish, and Tagalog] “for the Christian Communities of the Third World” uses the following introduction.)

Philemon from Colossae has a slave named Onesimus: a typical name for a slave since Onesimus means “useful” (v. 11). Onesimus escapes and goes to Rome where he expects to disappear in the crowd. Accidentally, or luckily, he meets Paul whom he had known in his master’s house. At this point, Paul is imprisoned in Rome, but enjoys certain privileges enabling him to go out in the company of a policeman. Onesimus is converted and baptized; then Paul makes him go back to his former master with the letter of recommendation that we read here.

Paul asks that the slave be seen as a brother, and even suggests that the slave be freed (v. 21).

We have already seen the advice Paul gives to slaves in Col 3:22. In those first years of the Church, obtaining God’s life in Christ seemed such a tremendous privilege, providing such inner freedom, that being a slave or being free did not greatly matter (see 1 Cor 7:17).

At that time no one thought that a change of social structure was feasible: there were slaves and there would always be slaves. The Christians were few and without any influence. Thus, they were not concerned about reforming society, nor about laws to eliminate slavery. Even before the time it became necessary to think about changing the laws, faith was already against treating slaves as “objects” or inferiors: because they were Christians, an increasing number of masters — in the Church — spontaneously renounced their rights and granted freedom to their slaves.

Many people think that the Christian community has nothing to say concerning their responsibilities to society. Here, on the contrary, we see how Paul involves the whole community in Philemon’s problem.

Down below are the introductions in the Mandarin Chinese, Tagalog, Cebuano, and Spanish editions.

Translation: Mandarin Chinese

哥罗森城的费肋孟有一个奴隶,名叫敖乃息摩,这是个典型的奴隶名字,意思是“有用的”(见11节)。敖乃息摩逃到罗马,希望能藏身于人群中不被发现。偶然地,或者说幸运地,他遇到了从前在主人家认识的保禄。当时保禄被囚于罗马,但他享有一种特权:即能在看守监督下走出牢房。敖乃息摩得以皈依并领洗了。于是保禄写了这封介绍信,让他带信重返主人家中。

保禄要求:奴隶应被视为兄弟,他甚至建议应让奴隶获得自由(见21节)。

Translation: Tagalog

May aliping nagngangalang Onesimo si Filemong taga-Colosas. Isang karaniwang pa-ngalan ito ng isang alipin dahil “May silbi” ang ibig sabihin ng Onesimo (11). Tumakas si Onesimo at nakarating sa Roma na umaasang hindi na siya makikita sa karamihan ng tao. Nagkataon man o kaya’y pinalad, nakatagpo niya si Pablo na nakilala niya sa bahay ng kanyang amo. Noo’y nakabilanggo si Pablo sa Roma pero may mga pribilehiyo siya kaya malaya siyang nakalalabas kasama ang isang pulis. Sumampalataya si Onesimo at bininyagan; at pinabalik siya ni Pablo sa kanyang amo, dala ang sulat ng rekomendasyon na mababasa natin dito.

Hinihingi ni Pablo na ituring na kapatid ang alipin, at iminumungkahi pa na palayain ang alipin (b. 15-16 at 21).

Nakita na natin ang payo na ibinibigay ni Pablo sa mga alipin sa Col 3:22. Sa mga unang taong iyon ng Iglesya, parang isang napakalaking pribilehiyo ang magkaroon ng buhay kay Kristo na naghahatid ng lubos na kalayaan ng kalooban kayat hindi gaanong pinahahalagahan ang pagiging alipin o malaya (tingnan 1 Cor 7:17).

Hindi naisip ninuman nang panahong iyon na posibleng baguhin ang estruktura ng lipunan: may mga alipin at laging magkakaroon ng mga alipin. Kakaunti ang mga Kristiyano at walang anumang impluwensiya. Kaya hindi nila problema ang baguhin ang lipunan o kaya’y ang mga batas na susugpo sa pang-aalipin. Ngunit bago pa man kinailangang pag-isipang baguhin ang mga batas, laban na ang pananampalataya sa pagtrato sa mga alipin bilang “mga gamit” o mas mababang klase ng tao. Dahil sa pagiging mga Kristiyano, kusang iwinaksi ng dumaraming mga amo – sa Iglesya – ang kanilang mga karapatan at binigyan ng kalayaan ang kanilang mga alipin.

Marami ang nag-aakala na walang kinalaman ang pamayanang Kristiyano tungkol sa kanilang mga responsabilidad sa lipunan. Ngunit nakikita natin dito kung paanong pina-kikibahagi ni Pablo ang buong pamayanan sa problema ni Filemon.

Translation: Cebuano

Si Filemon nga taga Colosas dunay ulipon nga ginganlang Onesimo; kumon ni nga ngalan sa ulipon, kay ang pulong Onesimo nagkahulogag “Mapuslanon” (basaha ang b. 11) Si Onesimo milayas ug miadto sa Roma ug nagtoo nga dili siya makit-an taliwala sa bagang katawhan. Apan sa wala lang damha gikahibalag niya si Pablo nga nailhan na niyang daan sa uban pa siya sa agalon. Niining higayona, napriso na si Pablo sa Roma, apan duna siyay prebilihiyo sa paggawasgawas uban sa mga gwardya. Nakabig niya si Onesimo ug nabunyagan; ug gipabalik siya ni Pablo sa kanhing agalon dala ang sulat nga mabasa karon.

Giawhag ni Pablo nga isipon si Onesimo nga igsoon, gani misugyot siya nga hatagan nig kagawasan (b. 21).

Nabasa na nato ang tambag ni Pablo sa mga ulipon sa Col 3:22. Sa unang katuigan sa Simbahan, ang pagpuyo sa kinabuhi sa Diyos diha ni Cristo giisip nga dakong pribilihiyo nga naghatag og kagawasan. Sa kailadman sa tawong ingon kagawasnon dili na kaayo ni mahinungdanon (basaha sa 1 Cor 7:17).

Niadtong panahona, wala pa moabot sa ilang pangisip nga posibli ang pag-usab sa mga gambalay sa katilingban. Abi nilag ang pagkaulipon kabahin na sa kinabuhi busa, magpabilin silang ulipon sa hangtod. Dyotay ra ang kristyanos ug wala silay implowensya sa katilingban. Mao nga wala mosantop sa ilang hunahuna ang pag-usab sa sosyedad o paghimog mga balaod nga magdili sa pangulipon. Apan bisan pa ining tanan, ang kristohanong pagtoo supak nang daan sa pag-isip sa mga ulipon nga “mga butang” lang o nga ubos, kay kristyanos sab sila. May mga agalon nga nakristyanos nga misalikway sa ilang pagkaagalon ug naghatag og kagawasan sa mga ulipon.

Daghan ang naghunahuna nga ang mga kristohanong katilingban walay kalabotan sa mga responsabilidad sa sosyedad. Makita nato dinhi giunsa ni Pablo pagpaapil sa tibuok katilingban sa problema ni Filemon.

Translation: Spanish

Filomón de Colosas tenía un esclavo de nombre Onésimo; hermoso nombre para un esclavo, pues Onísimo quiere decir “útil”! Onésimo se escapa y se va a Roma, donde espera desaparecer en medio de la muchedumbre de la gran cuidad. Por casualidad y felizmente para él, se encuentra con Pablo, a quien había conocido en casa de su amo.

En ese momento Pablo está preso en Roma, pero goza de algunos privilegios, como poder salir acompañado de un policía. Onéismo se convierte y es bautizado. Después de lo cual Pablo lo hace repatriar a casa de su antiguo amo con una carta de recomendación que es la que leemos aquí.

Es interesante comparar esta carta de Pablo con otra escrita algunos antes por Cicerón a favor de un esclavo que estaba en idéntica situación. El gran humanista pagano pide el perdón para el culpable; Pablo, en cambio, pide que el esclavo sea considerado como un hermano e incluso sugiere que sea liberado (v. 21).

Ya hemos hablado de los consejos que daba Pablo a los esclavos en Col 3, 22. Durante los primeros años de la Iglesia, el descubrimiento de una vida nueva en Cristo parecía de una importancia tan superior que todo lo demás, ser esclavo o libre, no tenía importancia (véase 1Cor 7, 17).

En aquella época nadie pensaba en la posibilidad de un cambio en las estructuras sociales. ¡Había esclavos, y los habría siempre! En realidad la esclavitud iba a durar en occidente hasta la invención de nuevos métodos para utilizar la fuerza animal. Además, los cristianos eran una minoría sin influencia. Pero antes de que se pensara en cambiar las leyes, los cristianos, guiados por su fe, se negaban a tratar a los esclavos como “objeto” o como seres inferiores, y cada vez con más frecuencia los amos, en la Iglesia, renunciaban espontáneamente a sus derechos y liberaban a sus esclavos.

Muchas personas piensan que la comunidad cristiana no tiene nada que decir en lo que se refiere a sus responsabilidades en la sociedad, pero aquí vemos, por el contrario, cómo Pablo compromete a toda la comunidad en el problema de Filemón.

the Jews

The translation of the Greek οἱ Ἰουδαῖοι (hoi Ioudaioi), traditionally “the Jews” in English, is used particularly often in the Gospel of John and has been receiving attention in the last 50 years. Below you’ll find an overview of how some English translators and translation have translated it, why they did so and the solutions some other languages have chosen.

Starting in the late 1960s, at the time the English Today’s English Version (Good News Bible) and respective translations in other languages (see below) were published, many translators started to question the translation of hoi Ioudaioi with “the Jews.”

Robert Bratcher, the translator of the Today’s English Version New Testament describes why his translation uses four different translations for the same Greek words (in The Bible Translator 1975, p. 401ff. ): “Jewish people,” “Judeans,” “people hostile to Jesus,” and “the authorities in Jerusalem” (for more see here):

“In order to better understand the meaning of ‘the Jews’ in the Gospel of John, we must first look at the use and meaning of ‘the world’ in this Gospel. The author sees everything in terms of opposite forces: light and darkness, truth and error, life and death, God and the Devil. And he makes a sharp distinction between the world and Jesus and his followers, especially in the last half of the Gospel. Of course the world is the object of God’s love and of Christ’s saving mission (John 3:1617; 12:47; 17:21, 23), but it is not the object of the love of the followers of Jesus: they are not commanded to love the world. The disciples of Jesus are in the world (John 13:1), but they do not belong to it (John 15:19). The world hates Jesus and his disciples, because they do not belong to it (John 15:1819; 17:14, 15, 16). The world loves only those who belong to it (John 15:19). It does not know Jesus (John 1:10), or the Father (John 17:25), and cannot receive the Spirit of truth (John 14:17). The world’s ruler is to be overthrown (John 12:31, 14:30; 16:11). When Jesus is parted from his disciples, they will be sad, but the world will be glad (John 16:20). Jesus has overcome the world (John 16:33); his kingdom is not of this world (John 18:36). In the Gospel of John ‘the world’ stands in opposition to Jesus and his disciples.

“‘The Jews’ belong to ‘the world,’ as compared with Jesus and his followers. The Jews, like the world, do not know the Father. They have never heard his voice or seen his face, nor do they believe in the one whom he sent (John 5:37, 38). Jesus says to the Jews. ‘You come from this world, but I do not come from this world’ (John 8:23). (…)

“The author clearly places himself, and those whom he represents, as separate from the Jews. He speaks of ‘the Passover of the Jews’ (John 2:13; 6:4; 11:55), the religious rules of the Jews about purification (John 2:6), a religious festival of the Jews (John 5:1), the Festival of Shelters of the Jews (John 7:2), the Day of Preparation of the Jews (John 19:42), and the way in which Jews prepare a body for burial (19:40).

“And quite as clearly he regards Jesus as not ‘a Jew’. In talking to the Jews. Jesus speaks of ‘your Law’ (John 7:19; 8:17; 10:34) and ‘your circumcision’ (John 7:22). Abraham is ‘your father’ (John 8:56). When the Jews say to him. ‘Our ancestors ate manna in the desert’ (John 6:31), Jesus replies, ‘What Moses gave you was not the bread from heaven’ (John 6:32), and later on says, ‘Your ancestors ate the manna in the desert’ (John 6:49).

“It is true that twice Jesus is called a Jew: by the Samaritan woman (John 4:9) and by Pilate (John 18:35). But in both instances the term is used in its sense of ‘person of Judah’, contrasted with the Samaritan and the Roman. The same applies in John 4:22, where Jesus says to the Samaritan woman. ‘You (Samaritans) do not really know whom you worship; we (Jews) know whom we worship, for salvation comes from the Jews.’

“Apart from those two instances, it is only in John 1:11 that Jesus is identified as a Jew. in the statement that he came to ‘his own country’, but ‘his own people’ did not receive him. This passage, however, does not go against the Gospel as a whole, in which Jesus is shown as not being a part of ‘the Jews.’

“What accounts for this? It seems clear that the deep differences shown between Jesus and ‘the Jews’ of his time reflect the hostility between Church and Synagogue at the time the author wrote his Gospel. He has moved back the disputes and arguments of his own time into the time of Jesus, and they are represented as taking place between Jesus and the people of his time.

“The prominent part played by the Pharisees in the opposition to Jesus is worthy of note here. The High Priest and the chief priests are mentioned often, especially in chapters 18-19, as we would expect. They were, after all, the religious authorities responsible for arresting Jesus and turning him over to Pilate. What is surprising is that the Pharisees appear so often in the Gospel (see John 1:24; 4:1; 7:32, 47, 48; 8:13; 9:13, 15, 16, 40; 11:46; 12:19, 42), and are at times identified as ‘the Jews’, that is, the authorities. Their part in relation to Jesus in the Gospel of John is different from the part they play in the other Gospels. In John it is their refusal to believe in Jesus and his claims that brings them into conflict with him. They are not, as in the other Gospels, condemned by Jesus because of their hypocrisy or their understanding of the Law. (…)

“The translator is bound to represent faithfully the way in which the author describes the ministry of Jesus. But the way in which he will translate the Greek hoi loudaioi every time it appears in the Gospel is not an easy matter to decide. (1) Should he not, always and everywhere, translate it by ‘the Jews’? This certainly may be argued, since the author does not use the expression in a precise national or racial sense of the people of Israel in the years A.D. 30-33, but of the opponents of his own time who denied the claims the Church makes about Jesus the Messiah. If the translator did this, however, he would almost be forced to use quotation marks — ‘the Jews’ — to show the strangeness of the phrase. (2) But since the author has placed these disputes in the time of Jesus, it is at this level that the translation must take place, so that ‘the Jews’ must be identified in terms of the people of Jesus’ own time. But as a matter of fact Jesus was a Jew, and to translate a passage, for example. ‘Jesus, in Jerusalem, said to the Jews’, is as unnatural as to say, ‘The President, in Washington, said to the Americans’, or, ‘The Queen, in London, said to the British.’

“In translating on this ‘historical’ level, however, does not the translator somehow distort the meaning of the text? The answer depends on whether we believe that the author intended his readers to understand his Gospel as reporting historical events which took place in Judea, Samaria, and Galilee in the early part of the first century. Assuming that he did, it seems to me that the translator does not have much of a choice, unless he says something like ‘the enemies of Jesus’, or ‘the unbelievers’ every time ‘the Jews’ is used of the opponents of Jesus.

“Consequently, in following the course which I think is the only right one to take, the translator must carefully observe the different senses in which ‘the Jews’ is used in the Gospel of John—and this is what will be done in this study, with an examination of every occurrence of the phrase and its meaning in the ‘historical’ setting of the Gospel. (…)

“According to this review, ‘the Jews’ in the Gospel of John may have four different meanings:

  • its natural sense, meaning simply Jewish people
  • Judeans, people who live in and near Jerusalem
  • people hostile to Jesus
  • the authorities in Jerusalem

For the Contemporary English Version in the 1990s, similar translation strategies were taken, as explained by David Burke, a member of the translation team (see the reprint from an original article in TIC TALK 24, 1993 ). Other English translations that use varied translations for hoi Ioudaioi include the Living Bible, New International Version, Common English Bible, New Living Translation, The Inclusive New Testament, and others.

For a recent translation of the New Testament, its translator and Eastern Orthodox scholar David B. Hart (2017) explains why he chose to use ‘Judaean’ for every occurrence of the singular Ioudaios or the plural Ioudaioi throughout the New Testament (for more see here):

“The next term is Ioudaios — or Ioudaioi in the plural — which is usually rendered ‘Jew’ or ‘Jews,’ except in places where ‘Judaean’ or ‘Judaeans’ seems better to fit the context: again a perfectly justifiable practice, but also one that inadvertently introduces a distinction into the text that would not have been entirely intended by the authors. The books of the New Testament were written in an age in which national, ethnic, religious, and racial identities were not arranged in the often pernicious categories that came to hold sway in subsequent centuries; and it would be a severe distortion of the texts of the New Testament to allow these later developments to cast a shadow backward onto a time innocent of the evils of mediaeval or modern history. For example—and the most striking example — the Gospel of John has often been accused of anti-Semitism, despite the anachronism of the very concept. Where English readers are accustomed to reading the Gospel as referring, often opprobriously, to ‘the Jews,’ the original text is usually referring to the indigenous Temple and synagogue authorities of Judaea, or to Judaeans living outside Judaea, or even to ‘Judaeans’ as opposed to ‘Galileans’ (see, for instance, John 7:1). The Gospel definitely reflects the disenchantment of Jewish Christians in Asia Minor with those they saw as having expelled them from the synagogue, and later Christian culture certainly often took this as an excuse for anti-Jewish violence and injustice, but it would be absurd to impute to the Gospel the sort of religious prejudices born in later generations, or certainly the racial ideologies that are so much a part of the special legacy of post-Enlightenment modernity. I have rendered the word as ‘Judaean’ or ‘Judaeans’ throughout, even where that sounds somewhat awkward, and even in places where ‘Jew’ or ‘Jews’ would be an utterly anodyne or bracingly affirmative translation. After all, the general extension of the term ‘Jews’ to all who worshipped Israel’s God meant principally that their cultic life was focused on the Temple in Jerusalem. Again, my rationale for doing this, and for ignoring my own twinge of reluctance whenever it produced a somewhat inept construction, is that I thought it better to preserve the unity of the word and the concept in the language of the ancient authors than to impose distinctions that would make the texts conform more readily to our cultural categories (and historical sins). (source: Hart 2017, p. 548f.)

Other English translations that use Judeans in most passages in John for Ioudaioi include N.T. Wright’s Kingdom New Testament (in the UK: New Testament for Everyone), the Messianic Jewish Bible Project’s Tree of Life translation, and David Stern’s Jewish New Testament.

Amy-Jill Levine argues about both of those translation choices (in Christian Century 2023 ) (for more see here):

“Second is the move to substitute for ‘Jews’ terms such as ‘Judeans,’ ‘Jewish leaders,’ or ‘religious leaders.’ ‘Judeans’ is a legitimate translation of Ioudaioi. But this approach draws attention to itself as a failed attempt to get around the problem: the lector says ‘Judeans,’ but the congregation hears ‘Jews.’

“A consistent reading of ‘Judean’ rather than ‘Jew’ also strips Jesus, his family, and his disciples of their Jewish identity—especially since in John’s Gospel they are not Judeans but Galileans. Further, the translation ‘Judean’ undercuts Jewish continuity over time and disallows the idea of speaking of Jesus and Paul as Jews. The upshot is that to replace the word ‘Jews’ with something else is to create or construct a judenrein text, to use the German term, a text ‘purified’ of Jews.

“Replacing ‘Jews’ with ‘Jewish leaders’ and ‘religious leaders’ is already compromised because John’s Gospel reads not ‘leaders’ but ‘Jews.’ Next, the literary sensibilities of the Gospels merge various Jewish groups. The Gospel of Matthew begins the process of lumping together Pharisees and Sadducees, inserts Pharisees into Mark’s template to increase their vilification, then speaks of ‘all the people’ (27:25), and finally mentions ‘the Jews’ (28:15) strategically to indicate those who believe the ridiculous story that Roman soldiers would have admitted to falling asleep while guarding Jesus’ tomb. John’s Gospel omits the Sadducees and morphs Pharisees and/or priests into ‘Jews.’

“‘Religious leaders’ also gives an unclear impression since the high priest, appointed by Rome, does not lead a ‘religion’ in terms of doctrine or practice, save for his oversight of the Jerusalem temple. Moreover, even if we do speak of ‘leaders,’ it remains the case that most Jews chose not to follow the lead of Jesus and his disciples.”

In The Jewish Gospel of John its translator explains why he chose to not translate but instead transliterate virtually every occurrence of Ioudaioi (for more see here):

“The Gospel of John was initially written for a particular audience consisting of a variety of intra-Israelite groups, one of the main ones being the Samaritan Israelites. To them, unlike for us today, the word Ioudaioi did not mean ‘the People of Israel,’ i.e. ‘the Jewish people’ as we call them today. For these people, the people I propose are one of the main audiences for the Gospel of John, the Ioudaioi, meant something different.

“One modern example that illustrates this ancient dynamic comes from an Eastern European setting. The Ukrainians often called Russians, with whom they had an uneasy relationship to say the least, ‘Maskali.’ The Ukrainian word ‘Maskal’ comes from the name of the Russian Imperial Capital — Moscow. Those who were either of Russian ethnic descent, or who even as much as acknowledged Moscow’s authority or leading role in the region, could be referred to as ‘Maskal.’ In fact, the Maskal did not have to be from Moscow or be ethnically Russian at all. The individual simply needed to be (or be perceived to be) a supporter of a Moscow-led political agenda. Other peoples outside of the Russian-Ukrainian political conflict, who were familiar with the issues, never used the designation ‘Maskali’ themselves, knowing that it was a Ukrainian term for the Russians and Russia’s affiliates.

“Therefore, using a similar analogy, those who acknowledged the Jerusalem-approved authorities in Kfar Nahum (Capernaum) and Cana, which were far from Jerusalem, were also referred to by the principal name for the Jerusalemite formal rulers and leading sect — the Ioudaioi. All members of the Jerusalem-led system became the Ioudaioi in the Gospel of John. This is very similar to the way ‘Russians’ became ‘Maskali’ to Ukrainians and to others who witnessed their polemic. So when the audience for John’s Gospel heard these anti-Ioudaioi statements (like John 7:1-2), whom did they think the author/s had in mind? This is the key question.

“To Samaritan Israelites, whatever else the Ioudaioi may have been, they were certainly Judeans –- members of the former Southern Kingdom of Israel who had adopted a wide variety of innovations that were contrary to the Torah as Samaritans understood it. Judging from this Gospel, the original audience understood that, as well as simply being Judeans, the Ioudaioi were: i) Judean authorities, and (ii) affiliated members of this authority structure living outside of Judea.

“These affiliates were located both in the territories of the former Northern Kingdom of Israel (Galilee) and in the large Israelite diaspora outside the Land of Israel, both in the Roman Empire and beyond. In this way, the Gospel of John, like the other Gospels, portrayed Jesus’ antagonists as representatives of sub-groups within Israel, and not the people of Israel as a whole. In other words Ioudaioi (‘the Jews’ in most translations) in this Gospel are not ‘the Jewish People’ in the modern sense of the word.

“The translation of Ioudaioi always and only as ‘Jews’ sends the reader in the opposite direction from what the author intended. While the translation of this word simply as ‘Judeans,’ is a more accurate choice than ‘Jews,’ it is still not fully adequate –- for three reasons that come to mind:

  • The English word Jews evokes, in the minds of modern peoples, the idea of Jewish religion (i.e. Jews are people who profess a religion called Judaism) and therefore cannot be used indiscriminately to translate the term Ioudaioi, since, in the first century, there was no separate category for religion (Judaism, when it was used, meant something much more all-encompassing than what it means to us today). In a sense, it was only when non-Israelite Christ-followers, in an attempt to self-establish and self-define, created the category called Christianity, that the category called Judaism, as we know it today, was also born. Since then most Christian theologians and most Jewish theologians after them project our modern definition of Judaism back into the New Testament.
  • On the other hand, the English word Judean evokes in the minds of modern people, oftentimes, an almost exclusively geographical definition (a Judean is the person who lives in Judea or used to live in Judea) and hence cannot be used indiscriminately either, since today it does not imply everything it intended to imply in late antiquity.
  • The word Judean, without clarification and nuancing, does not account for the complex relationship of the outside-of-Judea affiliates with the Jerusalem authorities either.

“Because of the lack of a perfect word to describe what was meant by Ioudaioi in the Gospel of John, I suggest that the word is best left untranslated.” (source: Lizorkin-Eyzenberg 2015, p. XIff.)

In other languages, many common language versions (approximate equivalents to the English Today’s English Version (Good News Bible) or other simplified translations (as well as non-simplified versions) use varied translations for Ioudaioi in John as well. Below are some examples of translations of hoi Ioudaioi in John 1:19:

  • Portuguese: líderes judeus (Jewish leaders) (in Nova Tradução na Linguagem de Hoje — New Translation in Today’s Language)
  • French: autórités juives (Jewish authorities) (in Bible en français courant — Bible in Modern French) or chefs juifs (Jewish leaders) (in Parole de Vie — Word of Life)
  • Spanish: autoridades judías (Jewish authorities) (in Dios Habla Hoy — God Speaks Today)
  • Italian: autorità ebraiche (Jewish authorities) (in Traduzione Interconfessionale in Lingua Corrente — Interconfessional Translation into Modern Language)
  • Dutch: Joodse leiders (Jewish leaders) (in BasisBijbel — Basic Bible)
  • German: führende Männer (leading men) (in Die Gute Nachricht: Die Bibel im heutigen Deutsch — Good News: The Bible in Today’s German), führende Männer des jüdischen Volkes (leading men of the Jewish people) (in Neue Genfer Übersetzung — New Geneva Translation), or jüdische Behörden (Jewish authorities) (in BasisBibel — Basic Bible)
  • Indonesian: penguasa Yahudi (Jewish authorities) (in Alkitab dalam Bahasa Indonesia Masa Kini — The Bible in Today’s Indonesian)
  • Hindi: यहूदी धर्म-गुरुओं ने Yahūdī dharma-guruoan ne (Jewish religious leaders (in पवित्र बाइबिल CL — Holy Bible CL)
  • Nepali: यहूदी अगुवाहरूले Yahūdī aguvāharūlē (Jewish leaders) (in सरल नेपाली पवित्र बाइबल (Simple Nepali Holy Bible)
  • Hebrew: רָאשֵׁי הַיְּהוּדִים rashei hayehudim (heads of the Jews) (Modern Hebrew New Testament)

Wendland (1998, p. 93) gives a large range of translations that was used in Chichewa interconfessional translation (publ. 1999): “Jewish leaders” (John 2:18); “people” (John 7:35); Jewish guards of the Temple (John 18:12); “Jewish elders/authorities” (John 18:28); “tribe/nation of Jews” (John 18:33); “whole crowd” (John 18:38).

Learn more on Bible Odyssey: Jew/Judean (Word Study) .

translations with a Hebraic voice (2 Kings 2:6-11)

Some translations specifically reproduce the voice of the Hebrew text of the Old Testament / Hebrew Bible.

English:
Then Eliyyahu said to him:
Pray stay here,
for Yhwh has sent me to the Jordan.
But he said:
By the life of Yhwh and by your own life, if I should leave you. . . !
Thus the two of them walked on.
Now fifty men of the Sons of the Prophets went
and stood opposite, at a distance,
while the two of them stood by the Jordan.
And Eliyyahu took his mantle, folded it up, and struck the waters,
and they split in half, to here and to there,
and the two of them crossed over on dry-ground.
It was when they crossed that Eliyyahu said to Elisha:
Make-request: what may I do for you before I am taken from beside you?
Elisha said:
Pray let a twofold measure of your spirit be upon me!
He said:
You have made a difficult request.
If you see me being taken from you, it will be thus for you,
but if not, it will not be.
And it was, as they were walking, walking along and speaking
that here, a chariot of fire and horses of fire:
they parted the two of them,
and Eliyyahu went up in the storm to the heavens.

Source: Everett Fox 2014

German:
Elijahu sprach zu ihm:
Verweile doch hier,
denn Er hat mich an den Jordan gesandt.
Er aber sprach:
Sowahr Er lebt, sowahr deine Seele lebt:
verlasse ich dich je, …!
So gingen sie beide.
Mitgegangen aber waren von den Jungkündern fünfzig Mann,
die blieben gegenüber stehn, von fern,
als die beiden am Jordan standen.
Elijahu nahm seinen Mantel,
er ballte ihn
und schlug das Wasser,
das spaltete sich hierhin und hierhin,
auf dem Sandgrund schritten die beiden hindurch.
Es geschah nun, als sie hindurchgeschritten waren,
zu Elischa sprach Elijahu:
Wünsche,
was soll ich dir tun,
ehe ich von dir hinweggenommen werde?
Elischa sprach:
Geschähe doch, daß mir würde von deinem Geistbraus das Erstlings-Doppelteil!
Er sprach:
Schweres hast du erwünscht!
darfst du mitansehn,
wie ich von dir hinweggenommen werde,
wirds dir so geschehn,
sonst aber: wirds nicht geschehn.
Es geschah:
während sie weitergingen, gingen und redeten,
da, Feuergefährt und Feuerrosse,
sie trennten die beiden.
Elijahu stieg im Sturm zum Himmel.

Source: Buber / Rosenzweig 1976

French:
Élyahou lui dit: « Siège donc là, oui, IHVH-Adonaï m’envoie au Iardèn. »
Il dit: « Vive IHVH-Adonaï, vive ton être, je ne t’abandonnerai pas. »
Ils vont, les deux.
Cinquante hommes, des fils des inspirés, vont et se tiennent en face, de loin.
Les deux se tiennent sur le Iardèn.
Élyahou prend sa cape, l’entortille, frappe les eaux.
Elles se divisent, là et là. Ils passent, les deux, à sec.
Et c’est à leur passage, Élyahou dit à Èlisha‘:
« Demande ce que je ferai pour toi, avant que je sois pris loin de toi. »
Èlisha‘ dit: « Que deux bouches de ton souffle soient donc en moi ! »
Il dit: « Tu es dur en demandes.
Si tu me vois pris loin de toi, pour toi, ce sera oui. Sinon, ce sera non. »
Et c’est eux, ils vont, vont et parlent.
Et voici, un char de feu, des chevaux de feu, séparent les deux.
Élyahou monte, dans la tempête, aux ciels.

Source: Chouraqui 1985

For other verses or sections translated with a Hebraic voice, see here.

sow the word

The Greek in Mark 4:14 that is translated as “sow the word” or similar in English is translated in Taglish (Pinoy) as nagshe-share ng salita ng Diyos or “share the word of God.” Taglish is a mixed language between Tagalog and English that uses some English words but Tagalog syntax. Nagshe-share is based on the English word “share” which is duplicated (-she and share) to express the continuing action and is preceded by the Tagalog past tense affix nag-. (Source: Anicia Del Torro; for more information about the Taglish version, see here )

Introduction to 2 Kings (Christian Community Bible)

(The Catholic Christian Community Bible [first English edition 1997, other translations into Indonesian, Chinese, Cebuano, Chavacano, French, Ilonggo, Korean, Quechuan, Spanish, and Tagalog] “for the Christian Communities of the Third World” uses the following introduction.)

The second Book of Kings continues to look at the progressive decline of the two kingdoms to the North and to the South, Israel and Judah.

It would be a mistake to believe that the nation prospered at first because it had good and just kings, David and Solomon, and that after them the bad kings ruined everything; or that the Jewish people who were destroyed by the Chaldeans were more sinful than David’s contemporaries.

When we read attentively, we realize that the author of the book does not judge the founders of the kingdom and their successors with the same severity. Was Jeroboam II, who restored prosperity and independence to Israel and brought peace for forty years, inferior to Solomon? Was he, perhaps, less of a believer? And yet, the first Book of Kings delights in describing Solomon’s luxury, vanity and greatness, whereas the second Book of Kings treats Jeroboam II only one paragraph, as if the fact of having a temple other than the one in Jerusalem was a priori a condemnation of all his achievements.

Here we must see God’s way of teaching. At first he encourages his people with the possibility of achieving independence and prosperity, because they live in the historical moment when this conquest must be accomplished. God does not show them all the negative aspects of what they are doing; he does not point out Solomon’s faults or the vanity of his luxury. But, later, God invites his people to observe with a critical eye, and while the great dream of Solomon’s kingdom is vanishing, God teaches them to seek another more lasting and important conquest, that of the Reign of Justice.

Down below are the introductions in the Mandarin Chinese, Tagalog, Cebuano, and Spanish editions.

Translation: Mandarin Chinese

列王纪下:引言

列王纪下继续叙述以色列和犹大南北两大王国的渐渐没落的过程。

信德的教诲

读者常认为:这个国家初期的繁荣应归功于达味和所罗门这样懂仁政的明君,而后来的世道不仁,是昏君断送了大好江山,或者是加色丁毁灭的犹太人比达味那时候的百姓更罪大恶极。其实这是一种错觉。读者不要忘了我们在读的列王纪不单是一部历史书籍,更是一本有宗教目的和意义的教诲书。

如果我们用心来读的话,我们就会了解本书的作者并没有用同样严厉的尺度,来评断王国的创始君主和他后来的继承人。难道恢复了以色列的繁荣独立,并带来四十年和平的雅洛贝罕二世会比不上所罗门吗?作者没有提他是因为他的信仰不够虔诚吗?在列王纪上里作者用了大量篇幅津津乐道描写所罗门在物质上的繁荣富贵。到了列王纪下里对雅洛贝罕的描写只有一段。作者似乎在暗示我们,雅洛贝罕在圣城外建过一座圣殿,这一举动将他的其他成就几乎一笔勾销了。

天主教诲人的方式

我们从这样的叙述中可以了解天主教诲人的方式,或者说人们对天主这种教育方式的理解。天主最初用王国的独立和繁荣来鼓励祂的子民,因为人无法超越历史而生活。人们对自己生存时代的踪影无法自知,因为我们的归属感限制了我们的超越性,天主并没有指出所罗门的过错,或是那奢华的虚荣心理。后来的作者们开始用一种批判的眼光来看过去的历史,反思历史的对否。而且随着所罗门国王伟大梦想的逐渐消逝,天主呼唤子民去追求一个更加持久而且更重要的王国,那便是正义的王国。

Translation: Tagalog

2 Mga Hari Introduksyon

Patuloy na tinitingnan ng ikalawang Aklat ng Mga Hari ang palalang pagkabulok ng dalawang kaharian sa hilaga at sa timog, ang Israel at ang Juda.
Ngunit magiging pagkakamali kung iisiping sumagana ang bansa sa simula dahil nagkaroon sila ng mga haring mabuti at matuwid na sina David at Solomon. At pagkatapos ay mga masamang hari naman ang sumira ng lahat. O kaya’y mas makasalanan ang bayang Judio na winasak ng mga Kaldeo sa mga kapanahon ni David.

Kung babasahin natin ito nang mabuti, maiintindihan nating hindi parehong mahigpit ang paghuhusga ng sumulat ng libro sa mga nagtatag ng kaharian at sa mga kahalili nila. Mas mahina nga kaya kay Solomon si Yeroboam II na muling nagtayo ng isang masagana at malayang Israel at naghatid ng apatnapung taong kapayapaan? Mas mahina nga kaya ang kanyang pananampalataya? Gayunpama’y nasisiyahan ang unang Aklat ng Mga Hari sa paglalarawan sa luho at kadakilaan ni Solomon, na pawang mga materyal na bagay lamang. Samantalang iisang talata lamang ang inilalaan ng ikalawang Aklat ng Mga Hari para kay Yeroboam II na para bang ang pagkakaroon ng templong iba kaysa nasa Jerusalem ang mula sa simula’y isa nang paghatol sa lahat niyang mga gawa.

Kailangang makita natin dito ang paraan ng pagtuturo ng Diyos. Sa simula’y pinasisigla niya ang kanyang bayan na puwedeng makamit ang kasaganaan at kalayaan. At dahil ang mga taong ito ay nasa sandali ng kanilang kasaysayan na kailangang isagawa ang pagkakamit na ito, hindi ipinakikita sa kanila ng Diyos ang lahat ng negatibong aspekto ng kanilang ginagawa. Hindi niya binibigyang-diin ang mga depekto ni Solomon o ang kawalang-saysay ng kanyang luho. Ngunit pagkatapos ay inaanyayahan naman ng Diyos ang kanyang bayan na magmasid nang may mapanuring diwa. At sa paglalaho ng mataas na pangarap ng kaharian ni Solomon, tinuturuan sila ng Diyos na hangarin nilang kamtin ang mas tumatagal at mas mahalaga – ang Paghahari ng Katarungan.

Translation: Cebuano

Ang ikaduhang basahon sa mga Hari nagpadayog saysay sa inanay nga pagkaut-ot sa duha ka gingharian sa Amihanan ug sa Habagatan, ang Israel ug ang Juda.

Sayop ang panghunahuna nga kadtong pag-uswag sa ilang nasod gikan sa pagbaton nilag maayo ug tarong nga mga hari sama ni David ug Solomon ug nga human nila, ang nakasunod nga mga hari nakaguba ining tanan; o nga ang mga Judio nga gipukan sa mga Kaldeo mas makasasala kay sa katawhan sa panahon ni David.

Kon ayohon natog basa kining basahon, mamatikdan nga dili parehas og gibug-aton ang gipahamtang sa tagsulat ngadto sa mga hari ug sa ilang sumusunod. Mas ubos ra ba si Yeroboam II, nga mipabangon sa Israel sa kauswagan, sa kaugalingnan ug sa kalinaw sulod sa 40 ka tuig kay ni Solomon? O menos ba kaha siya nga magtotoo? Ug gani, sa unang basahon sa mga Hari, mahimut-on nga gisaysay sa tagsulat ang kaluho ug kabantog ni Solomon: mga butang materyal. Samtang ang ikaduhang basahon sa mga Hari, pipila ra ka tudling ang gigahin alang ni Jereboam II bahin sa pagtukod niya og laing templo gawas sa Jerusalem, paagi nga nagpasabot nga tungod ining iyang gibuhat, nawad-ag bili ang tanang kaayohan nga iyang nahimo.

Pinaagi ini, makita nato unsaon sa Diyos pagtudlo: una, dasigon niya ang iyang katawhan sa pagpaningkamot aron pagkab-ot sa kaugalingnan ug kauswagan, kay kining maong katawhan naa man sa kahimtang diin kinahanglan gyod nga modaog sila. Pasagdan sa Diyos nga sila magkasayupsayop. Wala niya badlonga si Solomon nga nagpuyo sa tumang kaluho. Apan unya, sa paglabay sa panahon, hinayhinay nga matukas sa ilang atubangan ang gingharian nga ilang gidamgo ug gipangandoy nga nag-anam og kahanaw. Nagmata sila ug nakaamgo; nakakat-on silag pagtulon-an gikan sa Diyos sa pagpangitag gingharian nga molungtad ug malukpanon, diin maghari ang Hustisya.

Translation: Spanish

El segundo libro de los Reyes (dijimos que son las dos partes de un mismo libro) sigue contemplando la historia de los dos reinos del norte y del sur, Israel y Judá.

El autor quiere demostrar que su decadencia fue el castigo de su infidelidad a la alianza de Dios. Sería un error, sin embargo, pensar que los últimos reyes fueron peores que los primeros. Al leer atentamente, nos damos cuenta que el autor no juzga con la misma severidad a los próceres del reino y a sus sucesores. ¿Acaso Jeroboam II, que restableció un Israel próspero e independiente, y le aseguró cuarenta años de paz, era inferior a Salomón? ¿Acaso era menos creyente? Sin embargo, el primer libro de los Reyes se complace en describir el lujo y la grandeza de Salomón, cosas muy materiales en definitiva, mientras que el segundo no dedica más que un párrafo a Jeroboam II, como si el hecho de tener otro templo que el de Jerusalén condenara a priori toda su obra.

Se debe ver en esto la pedagogía de Dios que, al comienzo, entusiasma a su pueblo con la posibilidad de conquistar independencia y prosperidad, y porque estos hombres están en el momento histórico en que deben realizar esta conquista, Dios no les muestra todos los aspectos negativos de lo que están haciendo; no insiste en los defectos de Salomón o en la vanidad de su lujo. Pero, más tarde, Dios invita a su pueblo a que mire con espíritu crítico y, mientras el gran ensueño del reino de Salomón se va desvaneciendo, les enseña a buscar otra conquista más duradera e importante, que es la del Reino de Justicia.

Dios es el gran educador, y su pedagogía se manifiesta en el decurso de la historia como en el de las etapas sucesivas de nuestra propia vida.

Introduction to Haggai (Christian Community Bible)

(The Catholic Christian Community Bible [first English edition 1997, other translations into Indonesian, Chinese, Cebuano, Chavacano, French, Ilonggo, Korean, Quechuan, Spanish, and Tagalog] “for the Christian Communities of the Third World” uses the following introduction.)

Haggai is the first of the post-exilic prophets. These three: Haggai, Zechariah and Malachi proclaim the word of God in an entirely new age. The former prophets denounced Israel’s sins and announced the imminent Judgment. Now, after the trial of the destruction of Jerusalem and the Exile in Babylon, the Jewish community must rebuild the nation, and this is when the prophets demand that first, the Temple must be rebuilt. It is a fact that the Jews (and this is true for us, too) had to serve God before asking him for the solution to their problems.

Haggai’s message is prophetic in another sense: it initiates a new stage in Sacred History in which the growth of the Jewish people will depend on their faithfulness to the Law and on their worship. The Temple is already the Dwelling place of God among his people. They have to wait also for a mysterious coming of God: that day when he will come to visit his people.

Down below are the introductions in the Mandarin Chinese, Tagalog, Cebuano, and Spanish editions.

Translation: Mandarin Chinese

哈盖是放逐以后的第一位先知。哈盖、匝加利亚、玛拉基亚,还有依撒意亚56-66章的作者,这四位先知在一个全新的时代宣告了天主的圣言。以前的先知都是揭发以色列的罪恶,并指出它的毁灭。但是经过耶路撒冷灭亡的考验,以及巴比伦的流放之后,犹太人必须重建家园,先知便在此时指出当务之急是圣殿必须重建。

对犹太人,对我们都一样,在祈求天主解决问题之前,必须先侍奉天主。哈盖有先见之明,圣经历史到了新的阶段,犹太人以忠于法律和信仰为基础,将在此有所成长。圣殿原本是天主在子民间的居所,但是他们还必须等待天主神秘的来临,到那一天,祂将亲见子民。

Translation: Tagalog

Si Ageo ang nangunguna sa mga propeta pagkatapos ng Pagkatapon. Ipinahahayag ng tatlong propetang ito -- sina Ageo, Zacarias at Malakias -- ang salita ng Diyos sa isang ganap na bagong panahon. Inilantad at tinuligsa ng mga naunang propeta ang mga kasalanan ng Israel at ibinalita ang nalalapit na Paghuhukom. Pero ngayon, pagkatapos ng mga pagsubok sa pagka-wasak ng Jerusalem at ng Pagkatapon sa Babilonia, kailangang itayong muli ng pamayanang Judio ang kanilang bansa. At dito hinihingi ng mga propeta na ang Templo muna ang dapat na itayong muli.

Tiyak na kailangan munang paglingkuran ng mga Judio ang Diyos, at gayon din para sa atin, bago hingin sa kanya na lutasin ang kanilang mga problema. Pero propetiko sa ibang kahulugan ang mensahe ni Ageo: sinisimulan nito ang isang bagong yugto sa Banal na Kasaysayan kung saan lalago at magbubunga ang sambayanang Judio mula sa pagiging tapat nito sa Batas at sa pagsamba. Ang Templo na ang Tahanan ng Diyos sa gitna ng kanyang bayan, pero kailangan pa rin nilang hintayin ang mahiwagang pagdating ng Diyos sa araw na dumaan siya para dalawin ang kanyang bayan.

Translation: Cebuano

Si Ageo ang una sa tanang propeta human sa pagkabihag. Kining tulo: si Ageo, Zacarias, ug Malakias, nagsangyaw sa pulong sa Ginoo sa bag-o gyod nga panahon. Ang mga propeta kaniadto nagsalikway sa mga sala sa Israel, ug nagsangyaw sa umaabot nga Hukom. Apan karon, human sa mga pagsulay sa pagkaguba sa Israel, ug sa Pagkabihag didto sa Babilonia, ang katilingban sa mga Judio kinahanglan nga magtukod pag-usab sa nasod, ug dinhi ang mga propeta nag-ingon nga kinahanglan unahog tukod pag-usab ang Templo.

Namatud-an na nga ang mga Judio -- ug kita sab -- moalagad una sa Ginoo sa dili pa mangayo sa kasulbaran sa ilang mga suliran. Apan ang mensahe ni Ageo may pagkatagna sab; nagpasiugda ni og bag-ong lakang sa Balaang Kasaysayan diin ang kauswagan sa mga Judio makab-ot pinasikad sa kamatinud-anon sa Balaod ug sa pagsimba. Ang Templo mao na ang pinuy-anan sa Ginoo taliwala sa Iyang katawhan, apan maghulat sab sila sa misteryoso nga pag-abot sa Ginoo, sa adlaw nga Siya moanha sa Iyang katawhan.

Translation: Spanish

Ageo encabeza a los profetas posteriores al destierro. Estos tres, Ageo, Zacarías y Malaquías, transmiten la Palabra de Dios en un tiempo totalmente nuevo. Los antiguos profetas denunciaban los pecados de Israel y anunciaban el Juicio inminente. Pero ahora, pasadas las pruebas de la destrucción de Jerusalén y el destierro a Babilonia, la comunidad judía debe reconstruir su patria y es entonces cuando los profetas exigen que se reconstruya primeramente el Templo.

Bien es cierto que los judíos, como nosotros, debían servir a Dios antes que pedirle la solución de sus problemas. Pero el mensaje de Ageo es profético en otro sentido: inicia una nueva etapa de la Historia Sagrada en que la maduración del pueblo judío se haría a partir de la fidelidad a la Ley y al culto. El Templo ya es la Morada de Dios en medio de su pueblo, pero también queda en espera de una venida misteriosa de Dios, del día en que visitará a su pueblo.

word play in Amos 8:2

The Hebrew in Amos 8:2 uses a word play between the words for “summer fruit” (qāyiṣ) and “end” (haqqêṣ) that some English translations try to emulate subtly: “What do you see, Amos?” he asked. “A basket of ripe fruit,” I answered. Then the Lord said to me, “The time is ripe for my people Israel; I will spare them no longer.” (New International Version) and some more explicitly: “What do you see, Amos?” he asked. I replied, “A basket full of ripe fruit.” Then the Lord said, “Like this fruit, Israel is ripe for punishment! I will not delay their punishment again.” (New Living Version).

Source: John Ellington in The Bible Translator 1991, p. 301ff.