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New Testament Scholar and Bible Translator Bruce Metzger Dies
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Thursday, 15 February 2007 12:00

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Dr. Bruce Manning Metzger, New Testament professor emeritus at Princeton Theological Seminary and one of the preeminent American New Testament critics and biblical translators of the twentieth century, died February 13, 2007 at the University Medical Center at Princeton, at the age of 93.

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Dr. Bruce Manning Metzger, New Testament professor emeritus at Princeton Theological Seminary and one of the preeminent American New Testament critics and biblical translators of the twentieth century, died February 13, 2007 at the University Medical Center at Princeton, at the age of 93.

He was born in Middletown, Pa., on February 9, 1914. After gaining a B.A. from Lebanon Valley College in 1935, he entered Princeton Theological Seminary, graduating with a Th.B. in 1938. So began a life-long association with Princeton Theological Seminary during which Bruce Metzger became not only a legend himself but also one of the school's greatest intellectual ornaments. He was ordained in the United Presbyterian Church (now the PC{USA]) in 1939. In 1944 he married Isobel Elizabeth, the elder daughter of John Alexander Mackay, the great third president of PTS. Metzger taught while he continued to study (Princeton University, M.A. [1940], Ph.D. [1942], Classics), serving as teaching fellow in New Testament Greek 1938--40 and as instructor in New Testament 1940--44. He was appointed assistant professor 1944--48; associate professor 1948--54 and professor 1954--84. He was named the George L. Collord Professor of New Testament Language and Literature in 1964. He retired in 1984 and was named professor emeritus.

A 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.

In 1993 Bruce Metzger presented a copy of the NRSV, Catholic Edition, to Pope John Paul II at the Vatican. Metzger was passionate about the significance of biblical translation for ecumenical dialogue. In1957 he served on the committee that translated the Apocrypha (the committee included the original RSV Committee plus Metzger, Floyd Filson, Robert Pfeiffer, and Allen Wikgren). In 1972 he chaired the sub-committee that translated 3 and 4 Maccabees and Psalm 151 for an expanded version of the Apocrypha. He personally presented this expanded version to His All Holiness Demetrios I in 1976. It was important to him that Roman Catholic, Greek Orthodox, and Protestant Christians be able to have recourse to a common biblical text as an instrument of unity.

Bruce Metzger 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.

A warm friendship grew between Metzger and Matthew Black, the doyen of Scottish text-critical scholars. The honorary degree of Doctor of Divinity from St Andrews University was bestowed on Bruce Metzger in 1964. 

There were other honors. In 1994, Bruce Metzger was awarded the Burkitt Medal for Biblical Studies by The British Academy in London (of which he had been a Corresponding Fellow since 1978). This is only awarded in recognition of a lifetime of distinguished biblical study. Bruce Metzger was elected president of Studiorum Novi Testamenti Societas (1971), the International Society of Biblical Literature (1971), and was the first president of the North American Patristic Society (1972). He was a member of the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton (1969 and 1974) and visiting fellow at Clare Hall, Cambridge (1974) and Wolfson College, Oxford (1979).

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).

Metzger was awarded honorary doctorates by Lebanon Valley College, Findlay College, St. Andrews University, the University of Münster, and Potchefstroom University in South Africa.

A Bible autographed by Bruce Metzger is sealed in the time capsule embedded in the corner of Princeton Seminary's Scheide Hall.

Princeton Seminary President Iain R. Torrance said that, "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 in Princeton and throughout the world."

Bruce Metzger is survived by his wife, Isobel, and sons John Mackay Metzger and James Bruce Metzger. A memorial service to give thanks for Bruce Metzger's life is planned February 20  at 2.00 p.m. in Nassau Church in Princeton, N.J.


 

Comments  

 
#4 David Medeiros 2007-02-18 12:00
I remember several things about Dr. Metzger with his humility and kindness coming immediately to mind. There was never any pretension about him. He was indeed gentle as others have said. This did not detract from his scholarly precision or faith. I recall that when he was to speak on his view of Scripture the buzz went about the campus and many showed who were not in his class. He was sure in whom he believed. There was no fashionable doubt in him. Nor was there the duplicity of a contemporary of his who told a class I was in that he signed the Princeton oath not believing in it after being told the oath had a history. That convenience would have been lost on Dr. Metzger. What you saw in Dr. Metzger was genuine. There was no second guessing with him.

I learned from him a love for the Scripture in all its complexity including Textual Criticism and in reaching beyond the NT to the world in which it was delivered. He reiterated in each class that the primary audience was the foundation for understanding the text. If I may paraphrase his approach in the terms of the real estate analogy, the three most important elements of understanding the text are context, context, and context.

God bless and comfort his wife and family and all those who mourn his death. I thank God for Bruce Manning Metzger.
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#3 Richard Hoffman 2007-02-16 12:00
I am deeply saddened to read of the death of 'St. Bruce'. I will forever remember the most important course I took at Princeton, Metzger's 'The Person and Work of Christ'. Each session was a two hour 'lecture', but in reality they were two hour sermons that inspired me to know and love Jesus Christ more deeply. Always known for pithy sayings (probably on one of his many index cards), I remember him saying, 'Jesus did not say he was the cake of life, but the Bread of Life'.
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#2 John Erthein 2007-02-15 12:00
I am deeply sorry to read of Dr. Metzger's passing. I remember him as a very down to earth, courteous man who still drove around campus in his late 80s, and who had time to sit and eat with students in the cafeteria and give presentations to student groups. In addition to his faithful scholarship, he made the world a better place by his kindliness and dignity. We are poorer for his passing.
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#1 Noel K. Anderson 2007-02-15 12:00
He held the door for students on the way in to lunch. His prayers brought tears to the eyes. Even at the height of expressing his most authoritative opinions, he spoke gently and kindly. Condescension was never seen of him; even when he was correcting error, one felt ennobled.
Not only was he one of the greatest of the greatest scholars of our time, but he was a complete exemplar of kindness and gentleness.

The world is a slightly darker place until we fill this void.

Praise God for the life and witness of Professor Metzger.

Hallelujah, Hallelujah!
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