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The NKJV Large Print Thinline Reference Bible - Maclaren Series 

R. Grant Jones
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A review of Thomas Nelson's Maclaren Series New King James Version (NKJV) Large Print Thinline Reference Bible in black genuine leather (ISBN 9780785297932, Style# 8096BK). The words of Christ are in blue. This Bible contains the sixty-six books of the Protestant canon.
The text is printed in two 65 mm wide columns, organized into paragraphs, with in-text headings and chapter numbers printed in blue. Approximately 43,000 cross references and text and translation notes appear at page bottom, and are tagged to the text with blue chapter:verse numbers. (Some editions of the NKJV contain about 72,000 cross references and notes.)
The 10 point Comfort Print text is attractively printed with generous line spacing. Variations in print darkness are noticeable. Cross references and notes are in a roughly 7.5 point font.
The volume is tall, wide, and thin, measuring 10 1/16 x 6 15/16 x 1.38 inches in dimensions. Margins are narrow. The widest margin is at the top (13 to 15 mm).
Book introductions are not included, but a 39 page concordance appears in the back of the volume. Printed in a 6.5 point font in three columns, the concordance lists about 2500 key words.
The roughly 38 gsm paper is opaque, and show-through (ghosting) is not an issue. The paper is almost white, with a somewhat glossy surface.
The volume is sewn and lies open in Genesis. Page edges are covered in gold, and show a pattern of overlapping, rounded rectangles.
Two 10 mm wide ribbon markers are provided, one black, one blue. Head and tail bands are black.
The genuine leather cover features five raised hubs, a line of stitching along the edge, and an attractive grain pattern. The cover is flexible, and the construction appears to be edge-lined (rather than paste-off/paste-down).
Seven color maps are located in the back. This edition was printed in China.
The "NKJV vs ESV" videos: • NKJV vs ESV, Part 1 and • NKJV vs ESV, Part 2 .
Video contents:
00:00 Introduction
01:35 Page layout
04:00 The font in the text
05:17 Cross references
06:00 Text and translation notes
07:44 More on layout
09:05 Paper
09:55 The concordance
10:50 The color maps
11:33 Liner, head band, ribbons
13:02 The cover
13:38 Sewn binding
14:11 It lies open
14:50 Presentation, title, and copyright pages
16:56 Compared to the 2018 edition
19:02 Text block width
19:45 Blue versus red
20:24 Font comparisons
21:39 Summary

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26 июл 2024

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Комментарии : 58   
@RGrantJones
@RGrantJones Год назад
Links to the "NKJV vs ESV" videos: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-c7GOD23u60g.html and ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-KwAFTRc5jic.html . By the way, there is a typo in the video. I mistakenly identified the translation in the Thompson Chain (shown in the font comparisons section) as the '95 NASB. It presents the '77 NASB text, of course.
@matthaeusprime6343
@matthaeusprime6343 8 месяцев назад
I'm a Roman Catholic, but I love the NKJV translation. I fell in love with it listening to the audiobook they put out awhile back. An Apocrypha would be greatly welcomed.
@requeteque1970
@requeteque1970 3 месяца назад
You need to read the Bible and repent
@matthaeusprime6343
@matthaeusprime6343 3 месяца назад
@@requeteque1970 what a curious comment. As a Franciscan I repent everyday and I read and pray through the bible everyday. I pray you practice what you preach, and I will pray for you as well. Pax Vobis
@kree9359
@kree9359 Год назад
I always enjoy your reviews. Thanks!
@RGrantJones
@RGrantJones Год назад
Thank you for the kind comment, kree935!
@tony.biondi
@tony.biondi Год назад
Thank you, brother. Thorough and excellent work, as always.
@RGrantJones
@RGrantJones Год назад
Thank you for the kind comment, Tony!
@Ricardo-kv5tk
@Ricardo-kv5tk Год назад
Love your channel, could you please do a video showing us your library/ collection It would be awesome to see!
@RGrantJones
@RGrantJones Год назад
Thanks for the recommendation, Ricardo! Many of my books are double-parked, so making that video could be challenging, but I'll think about it. Thanks for commenting!
@chrispoe1604
@chrispoe1604 Год назад
One thing that I noticed in the video is that in the footnotes, references to things like "Bomberg" and "Syriac" are spelled out in full, whereas other recent NKJV Comfort Print editions (such as the Single-Column Reference Bible) as well as the Schuyler Quentel use the traditional NKJV abbreviations for these but have no explanation of the abbreviations or format the way that older editions of the NKJV do. Those of us who have been reading this version for decades know what those abbreviations mean, but I wouldn't have known what they meant when I first started reading the Bible. I wouldn't have known what "Bomberg" and "Syriac" meant either, but printing it in full instead of abbreviating them without explanation at least makes it easier to look up. Omitting "How to Use This Reference Bible" (as it is called in one of my older NKJV Bibles) also leaves the reader without an explanation of certain features of the cross reference system and an explanation of the different types of marginal notes. The NKJV also traditionally set off OT quotes in the NT in oblique type, (similar to the all caps in the NASB) something that has been dropped with the Comfort Print editions. (You may have noted this in a previous video.) Like you, I cannot tolerate red letters, although I didn't have a problem with them when I was younger. I'm not sure that blue would be workable either, although it might be a little more tolerable than red.
@magicsysrq8453
@magicsysrq8453 8 месяцев назад
You are right about the NKJV footnotes. The full set uses abbreviations heavily and having access to the Special Abbreviations page is necessary to understand those. Unfortunately, several NKJV editions that have come out in recent years with full notes (ie. Single-column ref. Bible) have skipped that page entirely which is a shame. A good edition that has it is the large print Verse-by-verse Maclaren. That one has the full set of Thomas Nelson cross-references also. This blue-letter thinline Maclaren has a reduced set of notes which does away with abbreviations entirely so it has no Special Abbreviations page. It also trims the translator's preface. I also have the compact Maclaren, which interestingly has the full preface and includes the Special Abbreviations page but comes with the reduced set of notes with no abbreviations. So that's an example where they provide the Special Abbreviation page unnecessarily. I guess we are dealing with a publisher that produces so many editions now that these seemingly small details are becoming very hit-and-miss. It's a shame because the NKJV has the best text critical notes in the market. In my opinion, they should never be trimmed or drowned in a sea of 42K or 72K cross-references at the bottom of the page.
@timb8970
@timb8970 6 месяцев назад
Very impressive breakdown.
@larrym.johnson9219
@larrym.johnson9219 Год назад
Thank for your review!🔥🤟
@RGrantJones
@RGrantJones Год назад
Thanks for commenting, Larrym.!
@JeffBurden
@JeffBurden Год назад
Another great video RGJ!
@RGrantJones
@RGrantJones Год назад
Thanks for the encouragement, Jeff!
@PrentissYeates
@PrentissYeates Год назад
I’d aim for a either a very dark navy blue or very dark purple. Or just dark black letter. But it is quite nice- thank you Dr. Jones.
@RGrantJones
@RGrantJones Год назад
Thanks for commenting, Prentiss!
@legacyandlegend
@legacyandlegend Год назад
I like the nkjv. It's a good translation. I only wish the nkjv had a translation of the apocrypha. Weird how the kjv did, but they never did for the nkjv.
@RGrantJones
@RGrantJones Год назад
I agree - I wish there were an NKJV apocrypha. I think it would be easy to produce, since it's simply a matter of modernizing the KJV apocrypha. Thanks for commenting, legacyandlegend.
@markwrenn8569
@markwrenn8569 Год назад
I bet the reason why there's no NKJV translation of the Apocrypha is because it's mainly used by American Evangelical Protestants, who don't consider the Apocrypha as “proper” books of the Bible (they consider only the books of the Hebrew Bible (the Old Testament to Christians) and the New Testament as canonical). I also note from the close-up at 4:10 that the NKJV uses what's called “reverential capitalization” (the practice of writing personal pronouns referring to God or Jesus with a capital letter, regardless of their actual position in a sentence). This is something that always jars with me, as it doesn't feel natural English to me
@RGrantJones
@RGrantJones Год назад
@@markwrenn8569 - I don't doubt you're right. If the publisher thought there was profit to be made from printing the NKJV with the Apocrypha, they would do so. Thanks for commenting!
@mrjustadude1
@mrjustadude1 5 месяцев назад
I own this bible and like it quite a bit. I prefer the blue to red, i think i would have preferred it in black, but it is still one of my favorites.
@arthurbrugge2457
@arthurbrugge2457 Год назад
Thank you for the video. I always appreciate your detailed overviews of this or that Bible. One question which may seem odd: did you enjoy your education in the natural sciences? I do not have a doctorate, but managed a masters in petroleum engineering. That was more than enough for me. But I noticed that many of my peers in this study had no interest or love for the subjects we laboured over. Which is why I ask you about your experiences in this same field. I do not wish to pry into sensitive matters, so feel free to ignore my question if it is too personal🙂 Anyway, thank you for the detailed work on these Bibles. I have learned quite a bit from your videos over the years.
@RGrantJones
@RGrantJones Год назад
Thanks for the encouraging comment, and for the question, Arthur! Yes, I'm very happy with the education I had in physics. It still interests me, and it has kept me gainfully employed for several decades now. In retrospect, I think my talent set would have been a better fit to medicine; but I had essentially zero people skills in my college years, so I doubt that would have worked out.
@tjmaverick1765
@tjmaverick1765 Год назад
Excellent review as always! Any chance you'd do more translation comparisons in the future?
@RGrantJones
@RGrantJones Год назад
Thanks for the kind comment, TJ! Yes, I hope to do more translation comparisons.
@marcjacobs2747
@marcjacobs2747 Год назад
wait...where's your watch?! :-)
@SoldierofChrist9
@SoldierofChrist9 Год назад
I really like the blue lettering... hope they distribute the KJV soon.
@RGrantJones
@RGrantJones Год назад
Thanks for commenting, Confederate Berean!
@lemmingfiftyone
@lemmingfiftyone Год назад
I've no preference between black/blue/red for the words of Christ. But I think one purpose of using color is to quickly pick out those verses when paging through. This edition kind of loses that by also using blue for the subject headings and chapter numbers. "... (page) (page) (page) ah here ... oh, no, that's a heading (page) (page)..."
@robbyclark6915
@robbyclark6915 9 месяцев назад
I’m typically not drawn to the blue bibles or blue accents and such, but watching this video, I’m becoming a fan. I love the NKJV second only to the KJV, but I just can’t get myself to spend premium bible money on anything except the traditional KJV translation. Then again, I don’t even own a premium KJV bible lol. Just several different CBP variations. My favorite being the turquoise. That’s about to change though. Probably going for a Cambridge Topaz in green goatskin since they don’t offer a brown, or maybe a traditional Concord in that beautiful brown, mahogany calfskin, full yapp, which is an EB exclusive. It’s just getting harder and harder to read the smaller fonts. Love the reviews btw!
@seanwalsh6649
@seanwalsh6649 4 месяца назад
This is not a premium Bible.
@Airik1111bibles
@Airik1111bibles Год назад
I cant handle the bedazzled art gilding , but thats just me. I cant get used too the bottom of the page refrence layout, ive tried but it just bugs me. Thats why I like my old open bible with lazy after verse refrences . 😁
@RGrantJones
@RGrantJones Год назад
After-verse references are the easiest - and, following those, beside-column references just at the verses they connect to. Thanks for commenting, Airik1111!
@henkdevries1507
@henkdevries1507 Год назад
Thanks. Can you tell us something about the book visible on the desk that has “Prayer (1867)” on it?
@RGrantJones
@RGrantJones Год назад
Yes. In fact, I plan to do a short video about it within a few weeks. It's a reproduction of an 1867 printing of John Cosin's 1627 "A Collection of Private Devotions: In the Practice of the Ancient Church, Called the Hours of Prayer." Thanks for the question!
@dcalflorian
@dcalflorian Год назад
Good review! I know you don't care for the red lettering. Is blue tolerable? I would much rather just have large lettering that was easier to read. What do you think? Thank you.
@RGrantJones
@RGrantJones Год назад
Thanks for the question, Dave. I'm trying to make up my mind about blue letters. I prefer black, but dark blue and dark red seem about the same to me. They both cause me some eye strain, but it's not as severe as what I get from faintly printed red or pink letters.
@danivuk2036
@danivuk2036 Год назад
do not know about that blue, brother Jones.
@RGrantJones
@RGrantJones Год назад
I'm on the fence too, but I will say that it beats bright pink. Thanks for commenting, Dani!
@jazzmonk5670
@jazzmonk5670 Год назад
Blue letter/red letter are marketing tricks.
@djpodesta
@djpodesta Год назад
Hello Mr Grant Jones. I have a question for you about bible translations. Nothing too difficult of course… Just your opinion. Which version do you find to be the most Theologically neutral, yet maintains scholarly consistency to the original languages; whether it is word for word or thought for thought… either is ok. Thanks for any opinion that you may be able to share. Best regards. David
@RGrantJones
@RGrantJones Год назад
David - it seems to me most of the major translations these days strive for theological neutrality. You can see the way Catholic translations have moved in that direction in the Confraternity New Testament video I posted a week or so ago. The NIV shows some bias in favor of Evangelical understandings, I think. It would be an interesting project to select a set of verses that have been translated in biased ways, and then score a group of translations against that set. That way, one could possibly get an objective sense for bias in modern translations - which I have no strong opinion about at the moment.
@djpodesta
@djpodesta Год назад
@@RGrantJones I agree with you about the NIV. I have used that translation all my life, but now that my eyes have been opened to subtle biases… I am a little disappointed in myself. I have all the main translations, NIV, NKJV, KJV, NASB and ESV… but since I saw your video about the RSV, I have been thinking about switching to either the RSV (for our era English) or the NRSV… but (again) I think that I am beginning to ‘over think’ things.
@djpodesta
@djpodesta Год назад
@@RGrantJones I should have mentioned that I first went with the NIV for its International English back in the 1980s… being Australian, I found its sentence structure the most intelligible out of the few versions that we had on offer… and I guess that its familiarity stuck with me. :)
@Matthew1618-vh5en
@Matthew1618-vh5en Год назад
Thanks for being honest about the crusty pages ♥️. Is the air gone out yet ?
@RGrantJones
@RGrantJones Год назад
Sorry, Matthew 16:18, but I don't understand the question.
@hassanmirza2392
@hassanmirza2392 Год назад
Thanks to your channel I know a lot of English Bible translation. My understanding is that the broadest, and most fair ones are NRSV and ESV, hence more useful for academic study and comparison. Both also have all 18 Apocrypha books. But others such as KJV, NIV, NKJV, NJB etc are narrower and denomination oriented.
@RGrantJones
@RGrantJones Год назад
Thanks for commenting, Hassan. I'm not sure your characterization as "narrower and denomination oriented" is accurate, except in the case of the NJB. People in a wide range of denominations use the KJV, NIV, and NKJV.
@hassanmirza2392
@hassanmirza2392 Год назад
@@RGrantJones I mean these are protestant translations, but not accepted by Catholics and Orthodox. I might be wrong as my info is limited. I have read that English speaking universities prefer NRSV for teaching and more conservative seminaries use ESV.
@RGrantJones
@RGrantJones Год назад
@@hassanmirza2392 - Many Catholics and Orthodox, in my experience, like the KJV, particularly the editions that include the apocrypha. Editions of the RSV and NRSV that include a large number of additional books, like the New Oxford Annotated Bibles, are widely used by Protestants and Catholics, and I've known Orthodox who used the RSV NOAB. But conservative Protestants tend to avoid both the RSV and NRSV.
@hassanmirza2392
@hassanmirza2392 Год назад
@@RGrantJones Yes, RSV, NRSV, ESV have complete canonical books, so other denominations will prefer it. I was talking about the rest of many protestant translations. For academic study NRSV and ESV are desirable.
@jazzmonk5670
@jazzmonk5670 Год назад
👍🏾👍🏾 on the review, 👎🏾👎🏾on the blue letter (👎🏾👎🏾on red/blue letter bibles).
@RGrantJones
@RGrantJones Год назад
Thanks for the kind comment, JazzMonk!
@LarryStallings-dk4rr
@LarryStallings-dk4rr Год назад
this is a 10 point font, this is not large print
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