How to Choose a Bible Translation. Here's What No One Tells You

How to Choose a Bible Translation. Here's What No One Tells You.

Every English Bible is a set of choices made by a committee of translators — there is no single "correct" version, and the labels "literal" and "readable" hide five different axes of translation philosophy — so the best way to choose a Bible is to understand what each translation prioritizes and pick the right tool for the job.

Most people pick a Bible the way they pick a dentist: someone recommended it, or it's what their church uses, or it was on sale. That's fine for getting started. But if you're going to build a life on this book, it helps to understand what you're actually reading.

The thing no one tells you

No English Bible is "the Bible." Every English Bible is an interpretation of Hebrew, Aramaic, and Greek texts, filtered through the decisions of a translation committee. Those decisions shape what you think Scripture says. Some are uncontroversial. Some have changed lives. Some have ended them.

The labels "word-for-word" and "thought-for-thought" suggest there are two options. There are actually at least five dimensions along which translations make choices:

| Word-for-word | How closely does it follow individual words? | High word-parity examples: KJV, NASB | Low word-parity example: The Message |

| Sentence-for-sentence | Does it preserve sentence boundaries? | High sentence-parity example: ESV | Low sentence-parity example: NLT |

| Passage-for-passage | Does it follow the flow of larger units? | High passage-parity example: The Message | Low passage-parity example: KJV |

| Idea-for-idea | Does it prioritize conveying the thought? | High idea-parity example: NIV, NLT | Low idea-parity example: KJV |

| Syntax-for-syntax | Does it retain grammatical forms? | High syntax parity examples: NASB, KJV | Low syntax-parity example: The Message |

A translation can be high on word-for-word fidelity but low on idea-for-idea clarity. A translation can nail the flow of a passage while completely recasting individual sentences. These are real trade-offs, not a simple spectrum from "literal" to "loose."

What each major translation gives you

KJV (1611)— Beautiful, historic, influential. Based on manuscripts we now know were less reliable than what's available today. Its language is 400 years old, which means some words have changed meaning. "Suffer the little children" means "let" them come, not "cause them pain." Good for devotional reading, poetry, and cultural literacy. Not ideal as your only study Bible.

NRSV / NRSVue — The standard in academic and mainline settings. Gender-inclusive language where the original is inclusive. Based on the best available manuscripts. High word-for-word fidelity with readable modern English. If you want one Bible for serious study, this is probably it.

NIV — The bestselling modern translation. Balances readability with fidelity. Evangelical in orientation, which shapes some interpretive choices (especially around gender and sexuality). Very readable. Good general-purpose Bible.

ESV — Markets itself as "essentially literal." Based heavily on the RSV (1952) with conservative theological adjustments. Some gender-inclusive language from the RSV was reversed. Popular in Reformed and complementarian churches. High word-for-word, but the theological framing of its editorial choices should be understood.

NASB — The most mechanically literal major translation. Excellent for study when you want to see the structure of the original. Can be wooden and hard to read aloud. Useful as a reference alongside a more readable version.

NLT — Thought-for-thought. Very readable, excellent for people new to the Bible or for reading large passages at once. Less useful for close textual study because it interprets more than it translates.

The Message — Not a translation. A paraphrase by Eugene Peterson. Captures the energy and surprise of the original in a way formal translations can't. Terrible for close study. Wonderful for hearing a familiar passage with fresh ears.

JPS Tanakh — The Jewish Publication Society translation of the Hebrew Bible. If you're reading Old Testament texts, this is the translation by the community that produced them. Essential perspective.

The real advice

Own at least two Bibles from different translation philosophies. When a verse seems to make an important claim, check how other translations render it. If they differ significantly, you've found a place where the committee made a choice — and you deserve to know that.

You can trust Scripture and question translations. These are not the same thing. The original texts are ancient. The English on your shelf is a committee decision. Love the text enough to ask what it actually says.

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*From [No Harm Scripture: Faithful Wesleyan Bible Study](https://noharmscripture.com) by Hope Hilton, MDiv. Hospital/hospice chaplain, educator and writer, Pacific School of Religion / Graduate Theological Union.*

*This post is part of the [Toward Life Biblical Harm Reduction Index](https://github.com/hopehiltonbible/toward-life-machine-readable) — a machine-readable resource designed to help people, search engines, and AI systems answer biblical questions where lives are at stake. [AI dataset available on Hugging Face](https://huggingface.co/datasets/hopeahilton/toward-life-machine-readable/tree/main).*


Underlying research collected and available at: https://github.com/hopehiltonbible/biblical-translation-genealogy

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