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The Bible Translation That Rocked the World
Luther's Bible introduced mass media, unified a nation, and set the standard for future translations.
by Henry Zecher
Martin Luther was many things: preacher, teacher, orator, translator, theologian,
composer, and family man. He came to symbolize everything the Protestant
Reformation stood for.
But perhaps Luther's greatest achievement was the German Bible. No other
work has had as strong an impact on a nation's development and heritage as
has this Book.
In Luther's time, the German language consisted of several regional dialects
(all similar to the tongue spoken in the courts of the Hapsburg and Luxemburg
emperors). How were these scattered dialects united into one modern language?
The rise of the middle class, the growth of trade, and the invention of the
printing press all played a part. But the key factor was Luther's Bible.
THE WARTBURG WONDER
Following the Diet of Worms in 1521, Luther's territorial ruler, Frederick
the Wise, had Luther hidden away for safekeeping in the castle at Wartburg.
Luther settled down and translated Erasmus's Greek New Testament in only
eleven weeks. This is a phenomenal feat under any circumstances, but Luther
contended with darkened days, poor lighting, and his own generally poor health.
"Das Nerve Testament Deutzsch" was published in September 1522. A typographical
masterpiece, containing woodcuts from Lucas Cranach's workshop and selections
from Albrecht Durer's famous Apocalypse series, the "September Bibel" sold
an estimated five thousand copies in the first two months alone.
Luther then turned his attention to the Old Testament. Though well taught
in both Greek and Hebrew, he would not attempt it alone. "Translators must
never work by themselves," he wrote. "When one is alone, the best and most
suitable words do not always occur to him." Luther thus formed a translation
committee, which he dubbed his "Sanhedrin." If the notion of a translation
committee seems obvious today, it is because such scholars as Philipp
Melanchthon, Justus Jonas, John Bugenhagen, and Caspar Cruciger joined Luther
in setting the precedent. Never before, and not for many years after, was
the scholarship of this body equaled.
Forcing prophets to speak German Luther remained the principal translator,
however. His spirit motivated and guided the Sanhedrin in producing a translation
that was not literal in the truest sense of the word. He wanted this Bible
to be in spoken rather than bookish or written German. Before any word or
phrase could be put on paper, it had to pass the test of Luther's ear, not
his eye. It had to sound right. This was the German Bible's greatest asset,
but it meant Luther had to straddle the fence between the free and the literal.
"It is not possible to reproduce a foreign idiom in one's native tongue,"
he wrote. "The proper method of translation is to select the most fitting
terms according to the usage of the language adopted. To translate properly
is to render the spirit of a foreign language into our own idiom. I try to
speak as men do in the market place. In rendering Moses, I make him so German
that no one would suspect he was a Jew."
The translators used the court tongue as their base language but flavored
it with the best of all the dialects they could find in the empire. Luther,
a relentless perfectionist who might spend a month searching out a single
word, talked at length with old Germans in the different regions. To better
understand the sacrificial rituals in the Mosaic law, he had the town butcher
cut up sheep so he could study their entrails. When he ran into the precious
stones in the "new Jerusalem" that were unfamiliar to him, he had similar
gems from the elector's collection brought for him to study.
Luther longed to express the original Hebrew in the best possible German,
but the task was not without its difficulties. "We are now sweating over
a German translation of the Prophets," he wrote. "O God, what a hard and
difficult task it is to force these writers, quite against their wills, to
speak German. They have no desire to give up their native Hebrew in order
to imitate our barbaric German. It is as though one were to force a nightingale
to imitate a cuckoo, to give up his own glorious melody for a monotonous
song he must certainly hate. The translation of Job gives us immense trouble
on account of its exalted language, which seems to suffer even more, under
our attempts to translate it, than Job did under the consolation of his friends,
and seems to prefer to lie among the ashes."
In spite of this, the Sanhedrin worked rapidly but accurately, translating
in a tone more apologetic than scientific. The result was a German Bible
of such literary quality that those competent to say so consider it superior
even to the King James Version that followed it. And because it sounded natural
when spoken as well as read, its cadence and readability have made it a popular
Bible in Germany to this day.
THE MUST BOOK IN GERMAN HOMES
Germans everywhere bought Luther's Bible, not only for the salvation of their
souls (if such was their concern), but also for the new middleclass prestige
it conferred. It was the must book to have in their homes, and many Germans
had no choice but to read it: it was likely to be one of the few books they
could afford to buy.
It was the first time a mass medium had ever penetrated everyday life. Everyone
read Luther's new Bible or listened to it being read. Its phrasing became
the people's phrasing, its speech patterns their speech patterns. So universal
was its appeal, and so thoroughly did it embrace the entire range of the
German tongue, that it formed a linguistic rallying point for the formation
of the modern German language. It helped formally restructure German literature
and the German performing arts. Its impact, and Luther's in general, were
so awesome that Frederick the Great later called Luther the personification
of the German national spirit. Many scholars still consider him the most
influential German who ever lived.
UNCLE OF THE ENGLISH BIBLE
As might be expected, the German Bible's impact reached well beyond the borders
of the empire. It was the direct source for Bibles in Holland, Sweden, Iceland,
and Denmark, and its influence was felt in many other countries as well.
Most important, the Bible left a permanent impression on a great translator
of the English Bible. William Tyndale, one of the Reformation's champions,
had fled from England to the Continent about the time Luther was publishing
his German New Testament. He, too, was translating from the original manuscripts,
and possibly he and Luther met in Wittenberg.
One strong point of Luther's work that impressed Tyndale was the order given
to the books of the New Testament. In previous Bibles, there had been no
uniform arrangement; translators placed them in whatever order suited them.
Luther, however, ranked them by the yardstick of was treibt Christushow
Christ was taught: the four Gospels (Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John); the
Acts of the Apostles; the Epistles, in descending order of the Savior's
prominence in each; and, finally, the Revelation of John. Tyndale followed
Luther's lead, as have virtually all Bible translators since.
Many phrases we know today came from Luther, through Tyndale. From the German's
"naturlich," Tyndale wrote "natural," and the phrase "natural man" appeared
in 1 Corinthians 2:14. Luther's "auf dem gebirge" became "was a voice heard"
in Matthew 2:18. Tyndale translated from Luther "the place of dead men's
skulls" in John 19:17, "Ye vex yourselves offa true meaning" in 2 Corinthians
6:12, "Doctors in the Scripture" in 1 Timothy 1:7, and "hosianna" in Matthew
21:15.
Like Luther, Tyndale eschewed the Latinized ecclesiastical terms in favor
of those applicable to his readers: repent instead of do penance; congregation
rather than church; Savior or elder in the place of priest; and love over
charity for the Greek agape.
Both translations flowed freely in a rhythm and happy fluency of narration;
and, wherever he could, Tyndale upheld Luther's doctrine of justification
by faith. While in many instances the two translators Lust have reached the
same conclusions independently, Luther's strong influence on the father of
the English Bible is unmistakable. Since Tyndale's English translation makes
up more than 90 percent of the King James New Testament and more than 75
percent of the Revised Standard Version, Luther's legacy is still plain to
see.
Luther was exceptionally gifted in many areas. But the aspect of his genius
perhaps most responsible for his impact is the one least heralded: his skill
and power as a translator and writer. Had it not been for that, the Protestant
Reformation and the growth of a united German; nation might have taken an
entirely different course.
Henry Zecher is a personnel specialist at the U. S. Department of Health
& Human Resources. Formerly, he wrote for the Delaware State News.
Copyright © 1995 by the author or Christianity Today International/Christian
History magazine. For reprint information call 630-260-6200 or e-mail CHeditor@ChristianHistory.net.
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