BETHABARA: Difference between revisions

From Book of Mormon Onomasticon
Jump to navigationJump to search
mNo edit summary
mNo edit summary
Line 20: Line 20:
[[Bethabara / Bethebara Variant|bathebara]], [[Bethabara / Bethebara Variant|Bethebara]], [[Bethabara / Bethebara Variant|Bethabary]]
[[Bethabara / Bethebara Variant|bathebara]], [[Bethabara / Bethebara Variant|Bethebara]], [[Bethabara / Bethebara Variant|Bethabary]]


'''[[Deseret Alphabet]]:''' π’π‡π›πˆπ’ππ‘πˆ
'''[[Deseret Alphabet]]:''' π’π‡π›πˆπ’ππ‘πˆ (bΙ›ΞΈΓ¦beΙͺrΓ¦)


'''Notes'''
'''Notes'''

Revision as of 10:17, 7 June 2013

Biblical GN 1. The place where JOHN baptized CHRIST (1 Nephi 10:9)

Etymology

BETHABARA represents the Hebrew bet 'abarah, literally "house of the ford," hence "place of crossing," a conjectural rendering of the Greek BETHABARA of John 1:28.

The Book of Mormon uses the same phraseology as the King James Bible: "These things were done in Bethabara beyond Jordan, where John was baptizing." (John 1:28). "And my father said he should baptize in Bethabara, beyond Jordan; and he also said he should baptize with water; even that he should baptize the Messiah with water." (1 Nephi 10:9). Indeed, the Book of Mormon text says nothing that the Bible text does not say.

The original printer's manuscript read "Bethebara," but the 1830 edition reads "Bethabara." [1] Indeed, "Bethebara," which appears as the earliest of Book of Mormon spellings, is attested at John 1:28 in manuscripts 13 and 828 as "Bethebara,"[2] and may thus reflect an acceptable, if not preferred, reading at 1 Nephi 10:9 and John 1:28.

See also Bethabara / Bethebara Variant

Variants

bathebara, Bethebara, Bethabary

Deseret Alphabet: π’π‡π›πˆπ’ππ‘πˆ (bΙ›ΞΈΓ¦beΙͺrΓ¦)

Notes


  1. ↑ Royal Skousen, Analysis of Textual Variants of the Book of Mormon (Provo, UT: Foundation for Ancient Research and Mormon Studies/BYU PRess, 2004), 1:202-03. Skousen prefers the reading of the 1830 edition to the original and printer's manuscript.
  2. ↑ The Greek New Testament, 4th edition, ad loc.