The Passion Translation
AbbreviationTPT
LanguageEnglish
OT published2028 (projected)
NT published2011
AuthorshipBrian Simmons
Textual basisMasoretic Text, Novum Testamentum Graece
Translation typeDynamic equivalence
PublisherBroadstreet Publishing
Websitethepassiontranslation.com
When God created the heavens and the earth, the earth was completely formless and empty, with nothing but darkness draped over the deep. God’s Spirit swept over the face of the waters. And then God announced: “Let there be light,” and light burst forth.
For here is the way God loved the world—he gave his only, unique Son as a gift. So now everyone who believes in him will never perish but experience everlasting life.

The Passion Translation (TPT) is a modern English translation of the New Testament, and of an increasing number of books from the Hebrew Bible.The term 'translation' is misleading; it is more aptly described as a paraphrase influenced by the interpreter's personal understanding of the New Testament and Hebrew Bible. The entire TPT Bible is slated for completion in 2028. It was first published in 2011 by 5 Fold Media, although the current publisher is Broadstreet Publishing. The lead translator is Brian Simmons.[1]

TPT is available through many online sites (including Bible.com).[2] In January 2022 The Passion Translation was removed from Bible Gateway amid controversy.

History

Simmons’ Vision

During a television interview [no source given] in 2015, Brian Simmons shared that in 2009 Jesus visited his room in a vision and called him to write a new translation of the Bible. According to the publisher's website, Brian's vision for the project is that people would read it and grow closer to Jesus.

Translation and release

The Passion Translation was primarily the work of one author, Simmons.[1] Although Simmons claims that a team of “respected editors and scholars” reviewed his translations and footnotes, no names were given. For the translation, Simmons claims to have assisted in the Paya-Kuna New Tribes Mission, in which, according to him, he was a translator. Some who worked on the Paya-Kuna translation have stated that Simmons was never a translator. They state he only assisted in reading the translation to the native people, and to provide feedback to the translators of how well the translation was understood by the intended audience.[1][3] The New Testament was published on October 31, 2017.[1]

2022 Removal from Bible Gateway

In January 2022, online Bible-reading site Bible Gateway removed TPT from their list of translations. From a screenshot of a deleted Facebook post, Simmons is originally seen to criticize the move, saying: “Cancel culture is alive in the church world” and asking followers to request the site restore the version.[4] Broadstreet Publishing, however, “accepts that Bible Gateway has the right to make decisions as they see fit with the platforms they manage,” they said in a statement. Bible Gateway, as of November 2023, has given Broadstreet Publishing no reason for this action.

Critical reception

The Passion Translation has received some positive and many critical reviews. Pastor Bill Johnson of Bethel Church in Redding, California, praised the translation as "One of the greatest things to happen with Bible translation in my lifetime."[5] However, Andrew G. Shead, who worked on the NIV Bible, does not consider the Passion Translation to be a Bible and stated:[6]

any church that treats it as such and receives it as canon will, by that very action, turn itself into an unorthodox sect. If the translation had been packaged as a commentary on Scripture I would not have needed to write this review; but to package it as Scripture is an offence against God. Every believer who is taught to treat it as the enscripturated words of God is in spiritual danger, not least because of the sentimentalised portrait of God that TPT Psalms sets out to paint. Simmons's caricature of God as 'the King who likes and enjoys you' ...eliminates all but one facet of God's feelings about us, and then gets that one wrong.

Banning Liebscher, founder of Jesus Culture, says: “In a world that is constantly shaking, The Passion Translation is making Scripture accessible to a generation whose lives long to be established on the truth of God’s Word. Young and old are experiencing the inevitable freedom that comes when you encounter the power found in God’s Word, and are being ignited with a passion for Jesus that will not be extinguished. My own personal devotion and study has been deeply impacted by The Passion Translation and I am grateful for what this work is adding to the body of Christ.”[citation needed]

Dr Andrew Wilson, a pastor in a New Frontiers International church in London, UK points out that The Passion Translation is "not really a translation" due to its lack of accuracy to the original. He points out specifically the verse Galatians 2:19, "hina theō zēsō," typically translated to "that I might live for God," which the TPT translates instead to "so that I can live for God in heaven’s freedom."

"It’s not a translation. It’s an interpolation, or a gloss, or (more bluntly) an addition."

Wilson goes on to mention Revelation 22:18, which reads "I warn everyone who hears the words of the prophecy of this book: if anyone adds to them, God will add to him the plagues described in this book...". Wilson concludes by stating that while the TPT is not necessarily bad, it should not be regarded as scripture.[7]

References

  1. ^ a b c d "Important facts about The Passion Translation". Holly Pivec. Retrieved 2022-12-07.
  2. ^ Shellnutt, Kate (9 February 2022). "Bible Gateway Removes The Passion Translation". News & Reporting. Retrieved 2022-12-07.
  3. ^ "A Critique of The Passion Translation – Larry G. Overton". www.larryoverton.com. Retrieved 2023-11-28.
  4. ^ Sandeman, John (2022-02-07). "Bible Gateway removes The Passion Translation". Eternity News. Retrieved 2022-12-09.
  5. ^ "The Passion Translation". The Passion Translation. Retrieved 2022-12-08.
  6. ^ Andrew G. Shead, "Burning Scripture with Passion: A Review of the Psalms (The Passion Translation)," Themelios 43, no. 1 (2018): 70.
  7. ^ "What's Wrong With The Passion "Translation"?". What You Think Matters. 2023-11-28. Retrieved 2023-11-28.