From: Aydin, Edip
[mailto:edip.aydin@...]
Sent: Thursday, February 15, 2007
9:58 AM
To: George Kiraz
Subject: FW: Dr. Bruce Manning
Metzger
To the Seminary Community,
Dear Friends,
It is with great sadness that I share the news of the death of Dr.
Bruce Manning Metzger, New Testament professor emeritus at Princeton Theological
Seminary and, I believe, the greatest American New Testament critic and
biblical translator of the twentieth century, died February 13, 2007, at his
home in
Bruce Metzger was born in
An absolutely preeminent
New Testament scholar, Metzger was known internationally for his work in
biblical translation and the history of the Bible’s versions and
canonization. He was one of the world leaders in textual study of the New
Testament, the Apocrypha and the Pseudepigrapha. He served as Chair of the
Committee on Translation of the American Bible Society 1964-70, and as Chair of
the Committee of Translators for the New
Revised Standard Version of the Bible 1977-90. The impact of this
work is incalculable and Bruce Metzger saw it through the press almost
single-handedly. The NRSV, published in 1990, made changes to the RSV in
paragraph structure and construction, eliminated archaisms while retaining the
Tyndale-King James tradition, polished renderings in the interest of accuracy,
clarity, and felicity of English expression, and eliminated masculine language
referring to people, insofar as this did not distort historical accuracy. In
1993 Bruce Metzger presented a copy of the NRSV, Catholic Edition, to Pope John
Paul II at the
Bruce Metzger cared about
and provided for his students. Generations have been grateful for his Lists of Words Occurring Frequently in the Coptic New
Testament, and his Lexical Aids
for Students of New Testament Greek (first published in 1946) became
a standard study tool. He edited The Oxford
Annotated Bible in 1962, and in 1966, along with Kurt Aland, Matthew
Black and Allen Wikgren, edited the United Bible Societies’ edition of
the Greek New Testament. This text, especially adapted to meet the needs of
Bible translators, with its beautiful original font and indication of the
relative degree of certainty for each variant adopted in the text, proved to be
an enduring landmark. The editors were later joined by Carlo Martini (the
Cardinal Archbishop of
There were other honors.
In 1994, Bruce Metzger was awarded the Burkitt Medal for Biblical Studies by
The British Academy in
There were many other
books, among which the classic studies The
Text of the New Testament, its Transmission, Corruption and Restoration
(1964, and translated into German, Japanese, Korean, Chinese, Italian and
Russian) and The Early Versions of the New
Testament, their Origin, Transmission, and Limitations (1977) have
been particularly influential. Bruce Metzger’s last publication before
his death was Apostolic Letters of Faith,
Hope, and Love: Galatians, 1 Peter, and I John (2006).
Bruce Metzger cared
passionately about the Bible, and in 1982 became the general editor of the Reader’s Digest Condensed Bible. He
lectured throughout the nation and the world, in North and South America,
Europe,
A Bible autographed by
Bruce Metzger is sealed in the time capsule embedded in the corner of Scheide
Hall.
Despite all his
distinctions, Bruce Metzger never lost his modesty, or his courteous welcome,
genuine interest in and encouragement for much younger scholars. He was a warm
and supportive colleague within the Seminary and beloved by many scholars and
lay people here in
Bruce Metzger is survived
by his wife Isobel and his sons John Mackay Metzger and James Bruce Metzger. There
will be a memorial service to give thanks for Bruce Metzger’s life on
Tuesday, 20th February at 2.00pm in Nassau Presbyterian Church.
Iain Torrance