Wuest Bible Translation (UHD)

Dr. Wuest intended this for , allowing them to see the grammatical and lexical details that standard translations often smooth over. 2. Key Features | Feature | Explanation | |---------|-------------| | Expanded Phrasing | One Greek word often becomes several English words. For example, Greek present-tense verbs are rendered “keeps on doing” rather than simply “does.” | | Grammatical Precision | The translation highlights Greek tenses: aorist (point action), present (continuous action), perfect (completed action with ongoing results), etc. | | Lexical Depth | Key Greek terms (e.g., charis – grace) are translated with their full semantic range: “grace, the unearned, unmerited, undeserved favor of God.” | | No Old Testament | Wuest only translated the New Testament. For the OT, he assumed readers would use other versions (e.g., KJV, ASV). | | Based on the Received Text | Wuest used the Textus Receptus (Majority Text) as his Greek base, similar to the King James Version. He did not adopt many of the later critical Greek texts (e.g., Nestle-Aland). | 3. Example Verses (Comparison) To illustrate Wuest’s approach, here are two verses compared with the ESV (standard translation) and the NASB (literal translation).

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1. Overview & Purpose Full Name: The Wuest Expanded Translation of the Greek New Testament (often shortened to Wuest’s Expanded Translation or simply Wuest). Author: Dr. Kenneth S. Wuest (1893–1962), a professor of New Testament Greek at the Moody Bible Institute in Chicago. Date Published: 1961 (New Testament only; no Old Testament translation exists). For the OT, he assumed readers would use other versions (e