#11094
Mentioned in 5 episodes

Geneva Bible

The Holy Scriptures Conteined in the Olde and Newe Testament
Book • 1557
The Geneva Bible was published in 1560 by Protestant scholars in exile from England.

It was the first English Bible to include numbered verses, extensive marginal notes, and summaries before each book.

The translation was influenced by John Calvin and other leading biblical scholars of the time.

It was dedicated to Queen Elizabeth I and became a popular Bible for family devotions, clergy, and lay people.

The Geneva Bible played a significant role in the Reformation and remained widely used even after the publication of the King James Version in 1611.

Mentioned by

Mentioned in 5 episodes

Mentioned as being based on the material translated by Tyndale.
The Underground Translator: William Tyndale (c. 1494–1536)
Mentioned as a version of the Bible used by some sects in Joseph Smith's time.
S5E38 Orson Hyde and the Prophecy of the Civil War Part 2
Mentioned as the 1560 English Bible translation that was influenced by Beza's annotations.
The First Calvinist: Theodore Beza (1519–1605)
Mentioned by
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Wes Huff
when gifting an authentic 1577 page from an early English Bible to Ruslan.
Mike Winger & Wes Huff Didn’t Hold Back at This Conference
Mentioned in relation to the discussion of the King James Bible translation.
Episode 181: Heaven and Earth
Mentioned by
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Timothy Easley
as the influential English Bible translation produced by Protestant exiles in Geneva.
CHT | S1E40: John Calvin and the Genevan Reformation
Mentioned by
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Timothy Easley
while explaining that exiled English reformers produced influential works in Geneva, including an English Bible favored by Puritans.
CHT | S1E44: Church of England, Puritans, KJV
Mentioned by
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Timothy Easley
as an English Bible translation produced by exiled English Protestants in Geneva and favored by many Puritans.
CHT | S1E44: Church of England, Puritans, KJV
Mentioned by
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Jess Zafarris
as a source for the idiom "by the skin of your teeth".
Who was the first to "paint the town red"? | IDIOM ORIGINS
Mentioned by
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Josh Traylor
as the preferred translation by Puritans during Milton's lifetime.
139 - Paradise Lost: The Theology of John Milton

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