Stephen's Textus Receptus (1550) With Morphology

How would someone rate this and I assume it is the TR which the KJV is based on? I don't use alot of Greek in my studies but I do prefer the TR, since I use the KJV.
Comments
-
RIchardKRoss said:
How would someone rate this and I assume it is the TR which the KJV is based on? I don't use alot of Greek in my studies but I do prefer the TR, since I use the KJV.
Hi Richard.
I believe the 1550 was the latest edition from Stephanus at the time the KJV translators began their work on the NT, but I also believe there are some differences reflected in the text of the KJV NT and the 1550 edition.
In 1881, F.H.A. Scrivener attempted to recreate the edition of the TR used by the KJV translators. In Logos4, the name of the resource is "The New Testament in Greek (Scrivener 1881)"; here's more info from our web site: http://www.logos.com/ebooks/details/SCRMORPH . This is also the Greek text that the KJV NT and NKJV NT (and RVR60 NT) are aligned with as reverse interlinears. If you use the KJV, and have a Logos 4 package that includes the reverse interlinear, then you've already got the reverse interlinear, and it is already aligned with the Greek Text (and Hebrew text for the OT). You can watch a video on reverse interlinears and some ways you can use them here: http://www.logos.com/videos .
Hope it helps.
Rick Brannan
Data Wrangler, Faithlife
My books in print0 -
Thanks, Rick.
I will take a look at the videos again. My L4 package is the Bible Study Library, but I do have other resources that I purchased when I had used Nelson's eBible. The resource I am looking to add, I would hope would sync up to the KJV. More research to do before purchasing.
0