Selected Product: | Tanakh: The Holy Scriptures--The New JPS Translation According to the Traditional Hebrew Text Paperback Edition: 1st Special Author: JPS Publisher: Jewish Publication Society of America Release Date: 1985-11 ISBN-10: 0827603665 ISBN-13: 9780827603660 List Price: $22.00 Average Customer Rating: | | Everyman's Talmud: The Major Teachings of the Rabbinic Sages ISBN-10: 0805210326 ISBN-13: 9780805210323 List Price:$18.00 Back To The Sources: Reading the Classic Jewish Texts ISBN-10: 0671605968 ISBN-13: 9780671605964 List Price:$16.00 Jewish Holidays ISBN-10: 0062720082 ISBN-13: 9780062720085 List Price:$25.95 Living Judaism: The Complete Guide to Jewish Belief, Tradition, and Practice ISBN-10: 0060621796 ISBN-13: 9780060621797 List Price:$20.00 |
To use our price comparison to get the cheapest price, please click on the "Find the Cheapest Price" button located above for Tanakh: The Holy Scriptures--The New JPS Translation According to the Traditional Hebrew Text by JPS (ISBN-10: 0827603665, ISBN-13: 9780827603660). At this time we have not yet written a review for Tanakh: The Holy Scriptures--The New JPS Translation According to the Traditional Hebrew Text by JPS (ISBN-10: 0827603665, ISBN-13: 9780827603660). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews. Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com Regarded throughout the English speaking world as the standard English translation of the Holy Scriptures, the Tanakh has been acclaimed by scholars, Rabbis, Jews and Christians alike. Take care | Customer Rating: | | This is not a full sized book and it's made from that onion-skin type biblical paper...and the covers are VERY weak cardstock. The book bows when I pick it up. I'm very unhappy. Had I known this about this particular edition I'd have gotten the hardbound one. This book is a keeper, meant to be read and dog earred etc...but I don't know that this one will be able to stand up to such use. I'm in the process of trying to reinforce and laminate the covers so at least they will be more sturdy. If this book is not that important to you, then it will be OK. But if you mean to use this book a lot, pay the extra for the better quality book. I wish I had. | Fascinating to read when you have only had a Christian bias up until now | Customer Rating: | Let's get one thing out of the way. All Bible translations have a bias. The Bible: Authorized King James Version (Oxford World's Classics) was a protestant document through and through. While many claim to be easier to understand, most of them sacrifice ambiguity and humor in the interest of "clarity". The worst offenders change the Bible stories altogether.
This particular version of the Bible is Jewish. Note the name as Tanakh and not "Old Testament" since in Judaism there is no "New Testament". The stories are arranged by the title - Torah - Nevuvim - Khethovim - or Torah, Prophets and Wisdom literature (Job, Ruth, Song of Songs, etc.) One can quibble with this translation losing some of poetry (unlike The Five Books of Moses: Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, Deuteronomy (The Schocken Bible, Volume 1) which strives to preserve the poetic verses and repetitive words so that English readers can get a true taste of the Torah as it sounds to a native Hebrew speaker) but this is a fine translation full of passion and storytelling.
Of course, my personal bias in favor of this translation began when I read it for class and fell in love with stories that I once thought of as only prologues to Christianity. Gone are the "proof texts" that litter many a Christian missionary reading. Isaiah is looking at a young woman and not a virgin about to give birth. Psalm 22 is talking about lions not the crucifixion of Jesus. But what makes this more interesting is how fun some of the stories are, particularly Samuel (the story of David) which is ultimately tragic but has some hilarious bits along the way including the Philistines being stricken with hemorrhoids in chapter 5 and making golden rat and hemorrhoid statues to honor the G-d of Israel. Most other translations wimp out and say that they died of "the plague". Sure, it's immature to look through a Bible for scatological humor, but if it's there, it's there. And it makes God Knows seem a lot less blasphemous in comparison.
In many ways, this is the redheaded step child of Bible translations. Artscroll has been cornering the market on translations and they like to use Rashi commentary in place of translation (which means a thoroughly awful castrated version of Song of Songs) and others prefer King James for poetry, but I still find this one to be my favorite. Maybe because of some of the weaknesses or maybe because in a field ripe with biases and agenda, this one tries to be non-biased as it can be. | Wonderful translation | Customer Rating: | This has been a most welcome and very handy source for us whenever we seek English translations of Jewish sacred texts.
We also own the Stone edition of the Tanach: The Torah, Prophets, Writings, including all 24 books of the so-called "Old Testament," in Hebrew and English, with commentary. We also own The Torah: A Modern Commentary, which includes only Torah, better known as the Five Books of Moses, along with the readings' assignments to the Jewish holidays.
But this edition is by far the most used in our household, and we recommend it highly, to Jewish and Christian readers alike. | Highly recommended... | Customer Rating: | | I think this is a truly beautiful translation. I was also very happy with the quality of the book itself. Well worth every penny. | Tanakh - English translation | Customer Rating: | | This is a readable translation of Hebrew scriptures. It is easily understood in distinction to the KJV, but without the English poetry. It is far more authorative than KJV. The paperback version (mine) is easily held and convenient to read. |
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