Translating Together
Last year, Robert Briggs of the American Bible Society (ABS) got a glimpse of the dramatic changes that are hurtling translations toward completion.
During a trip up the Amazon to the Saramakan tribal community, he met an SIL translator who worked 25 years on the translation that was later published by the Bible Society of Suriname. Today that translation is available in print and audio. Briggs sees a day when it can be delivered to mobile phones via a new ABS partnership with Wycliffe and Biblica.
“It’s remarkable,” says Briggs, ABS executive vice president of Global Scripture Ministries. “Even though we couldn’t get to this village except through a dugout canoe, I looked around and saw people using cell phones, even in this environment.”
This doesn’t mean that technology has all the answers. ABS still needs an average of 12 years to complete a translation. It will take at least 15 years to complete work on 600 active projects in some 200 countries that the New York-based agency and its 147 United Bible Society partners have started.
During the 14 years Robin Rempel has been with Wycliffe in Kenya and Uganda the pace has remained steady—an average of 15 years to complete several New Testaments, she says.
She notes, however, that “in the long run, it is much more cost-effective and sustainable to build the capacity of mother-tongue speakers to do the work. The translators never have to take a furlough or leave to get their children educated or to care for elderly parents back in their countries.”
This approach has helped the Seed Company propel Wycliffe toward completing its 700th translation in 2011. Relying on nationals has shaved more than 50 percent off completion times since 1993, though the work isn’t totally void of Western involvement.
“Our national colleagues feel very empowered with this model,” the Seed Company’s Jones says. “We see a lot of … projects … increasingly using local people in strong leadership roles.”
Besides the increases in translation efficiency, agencies that once competed with one another are now working together, which is having a major impact on translation progress.
“I see God behind this great Bible-translation movement,” says Greg Pruett, president of Dallas-based Pioneer Bible Translators. “We’re cooperating more now than we ever have. I see that as a great move of the Holy Spirit.”
This groundswell stimulated the formation last year of the nation’s first doctoral program in Bible translation at Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary in South Hamilton, Mass. Program mentor Roy Ciampa credits this new academic emphasis to a demand for well-trained translation consultants in the developing world, heated debates over different approaches to translation in English-speaking contexts and a growing awareness that no single translation will accomplish everyone’s purposes.
More Mobile Than Ever
The partnership between ABS, Wycliffe and Biblica isn’t the only one focused on digital Bibles. The goal of one ministry, which asked not to be identified because it strives to reach areas hostile to Christianity, is to digitize content for computers, cell phones, cameras and portable projectors.
Thanks to technological developments, the organization can place hundreds of hours of video and audio files as well as multiple printed translations on a microchip the size of a fingernail. Users can place it on a computer without standard installation processes, which leaves no traces for the prying eyes of a police state.
“The world is getting cell phones,” a ministry spokesperson says. “The way the world is going to read the Bible in the next 10 years is on their cell phone.”
This reality is creating a shift in emphasis at Faith Comes By Hearing (FCBH), one of the leading distributors of audio New Testaments for the 50 percent of the world that is functionally illiterate. FCBH has produced dramatized Scripture recordings in 500 languages. With its numbers expanding amid faster translation processes, it hopes to release 1,500 more over the next five years.
Its leading tool has been the Proclaimer, a device the size of a small box that is powered by electricity, battery, solar or even hand-cranking. It is used by listening groups of up to 90 people. More than 59,000 devices were sent into the field last year (nearly 250,000 since 2006), but that figure pales against cell phone distribution.
In the three months after FCBH debuted its Bible.is app for the iPhone last July (followed by ones for the Android and Facebook), it recorded 5 million “touches” with an average listening time of 37 minutes. In addition, by texting “24253,” users can receive daily Scripture readings.
“As technology improves and becomes free, we’ll be able to push Scripture to people’s cell phones in rural areas,” says FCBH International Director Morgan Jackson.
Yet the remaining translations won’t come easily. Peterson points out that many translators face difficult, dangerous circumstances and must keep a low profile. Even more challenging is finding adequate assistance for them.
“We need to get people around them who can train them [and] be a colleague to make sure their translation is accurate and clear,” Peterson says. “We are finding there is a paucity around the world of people who are able to give that kind of help.”
Still, the variety of efforts underway show how God is raising up new resources to finish the job.
Ken Walker, a freelance writer based in Huntington, W.Va., is a regular contributor to Charisma.
Read testimonies of communities transformed by the Bible being translated into their native language at·translators.charismamag.com
How Can You Help?
Each of these ministries has unique ways of getting the Bible into the world. Here’s how you can partner with them.
- Wycliffe Bible Translators Enlist in prayer initiatives, offer feedback and learn how to participate in various areas of interest. Go to wycliffe.org or call 800-WYCLIFFE.
- The Seed Company Help unreached peoples receive the Scriptures. Go to oneverse.org. Prayer resources are also available at seedcompany.org.
- American Bible Society See the online catalog at gift.americanbible.org for projects under “Hope for the World.” To donate to Every Tribe Every Nation, call Teresa Harder at 484-654-3477.
- Pioneer Bible Translators Credit card donations can be made at pioneerbible.org.
- Faith Comes By Hearing Donations can be made at faithcomesbyhearing.com. Or go to militarybiblestick.com to donate toward Military BibleStick, a digital audio-player preloaded with the New Testament that the ministry ships to U.S. soldiers overseas.