http://www.logos.com/product/667/the-revised-standard-version-catholic-edition
http://www.logos.com/product/344/the-revised-standard-version-bible
Thanks.
The RSV Catholic Introduction provides several insights:
A newer revision has more Apocryphal texts => The New Revised Standard Version Bible along with Reverse Interlinear tagging in the Old and New Testament:
Logos has a NRSV pre-publication => English-Greek Reverse Interlinear of the NRSV Apocryphal Texts to complete Reverse Interlinear tagging: both the New Revised Standard Versionand the Septuagint with Logos Morphology are prerequisite resources for its use.
Keep Smiling [:)]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Revised_Standard_Version_Catholic_Edition
WILL GIVE YOU the most comprehensive list of changes. Although eventually an unmodified RSV was offered imprimatur (the original New Oxford Annotated Bible). But today all versions mark Catholic would be the one listed in the above WIKI….
-Dan
PS:several copies of C RSV had tables of the changes made. but the Logos C RSV do not have the table of changes.
Thanks for the information - very helpful.
The RSV Catholic Introduction provides several insights: (...) A newer revision has more Apocryphal texts => The New Revised Standard Version Bible along with Reverse Interlinear tagging in the Old and New Testament:
(...)
If one wants to be exact, I believe the NRSV is the newer revision of the RSV, while the never revision of the RSVCE is called the NRSVCE. The latter does not have RI tagging. None of the Catholic Bibles does.
The RSV Catholic Introduction provides several insights: (...) A newer revision has more Apocryphal texts => The New Revised Standard Version Bible along with Reverse Interlinear tagging in the Old and New Testament: If one wants to be exact, I believe the NRSV is the newer revision of the RSV, while the never revision of the RSVCE is called the NRSVCE. The latter does not have RI tagging. None of the Catholic Bibles does.
The NRSV does have an RI, and they are coming out with an RI for the NRSV Apocrypha.
You didn't read what I was saying. I was saying that the NRSVCE doesn't have an RI.
I believe fgh meant that the NRSVCE isn't an RI resource.
If one wants to be exact, I believe the NRSV is the newer revision of the RSV, while the never revision of the RSVCE is called the NRSVCE.
Mea culpa [:$] wikipedia => https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_Revised_Standard_Version_Catholic_Edition uses abbreviation NRSV-CE with copyright 1993 plus Angilicised edition in 1995
Searching Logos.com for NRSV shows Logos currently does not offer NRSV-CE
They do, actually, but they're hiding it in http://www.logos.com/product/8729/collegeville-catholic-reference-library-basic-scripture-edition-version-1#003 and http://www.logos.com/product/8731/collegeville-catholic-reference-library-full-edition-version-3#010.
Searching Logos.com for NRSV shows Logos currently does not offer NRSV-CE They do, actually, but they're hiding it in http://www.logos.com/product/8729/collegeville-catholic-reference-library-basic-scripture-edition-version-1#003 and http://www.logos.com/product/8731/collegeville-catholic-reference-library-full-edition-version-3#010.
Suggestion posted => Suggestion: New Revised Standard Version Catholic Edition
The new NRSV catholic edition HAS NO CHANGES, simply differing book order and fewer books. so the RI should be fine for catholics use and possibly even easily adapted to the catholic version. THE NRSV is the official translation used by the Catholic church in canada (mass readings have been altered to be less gender inclusive, but to the best of my knowledge no actual edition is published with the mass changes, (outside the missils / lectionaries).