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Itâs a Bible verse familiar to many Christiansâand even to many non-Christians who have seen John 3:16 on billboards and T-shirts or scrawled across eye black under football playersâ helmets.
But Terry Wildman hopes the new translation published Tuesday, Aug. 31, by InterVarsity Press, âFirst Nations Version: An Indigenous Translation of the New Testament,â will help Christians and Indigenous peoples read it again in a fresh way.
âThe Great Spirit loves this world of human beings so deeply he gave us his Sonâthe only Son who fully represents him. All who trust in him and his way will not come to a bad end, but will have the life of the world to come that never fades away, full of beauty and harmony,â reads the First Nations Version of the verse.
In the First Nations Version, âeternal life,â a concept unfamiliar in Native American cultures, becomes âthe life of the world to come that never fades away, full of beauty and harmony.â The Greek word âcosmos,â usually translated in English as âthe world,â had to be reconsidered, too: It doesnât mean the planet Earth but how the world works and how creation lives and functions together, said Wildman, the lead translator and project manager of the First Nations Version.
Theyâre phrases that resonated with Wildman, changing the way he read the Bible even as he translated it for Native American readers.
âWe believe itâs a gift not only to our Native people, (but) from our Native people to the dominant culture. We believe that thereâs a fresh way that people can experience the story again from a Native perspective,â he said.
The Start
The idea for an Indigenous Bible translation first came to Wildman nearly 20 years ago in the storeroom of the church he pastored on the Hopi Reservation in Arizona.
Wildman, who is Ojibwe and Yaqui, was excited to find a Hopi translation of the New Testament in storage. He wanted to hear how Scripture sounded in Hopi, how it translated back into English.
But, he said, while many Hopi elders still speak their native language and children now are learning it in schools, he couldnât find anyone able to read it. That is true for many Native American nations, he added, noting that at the same time Christian missionaries were translating the Bible into Native languages, they were also working with the boarding schools in the United States and Canada that punished students for speaking those languages.
It occurred to the pastor that âsince 90-plus percent of our Native people are not speaking their tribal language or reading their tribal language, we felt there needed to be a translation in English worded for Native people,â he said.
Wildman, a licensed local pastor in the United Methodist Church, has been working on translating the Bible into words and concepts familiar to many Native Americans ever since.
âThey Just Loved Listeningâ
He first began experimenting by rewording Scripture passages he was using in a prison ministry, giving them more of a âNative traditional sound,â he saidâa sound heâd learned by being around Native elders and reading books written in a more traditional style of English by Native Americans like Oglala Lakota spiritual leader Black Elk.
He and his wife, Darlene, who have a music ministry called RainSong, also recorded readings of those passages over music in an album called âThe Great Story from the Sacred Book.â It won a Native American Music Award in 2008 for best spoken-word album.
Wildman was encouraged by the reactions he received as he shared his rewordings across the country at tribal centers, Native American-led churches and powwows.
âThey just loved listening to it because it didnât have the church language. It didnât have the colonial language. It had more of a Native feel to itâas much as possible that you can put in English,â he said.
Many Native people asked what Bible he was reading from.
Young people have told him it sounds like one of their elders telling them a story. Elders have said it resonates with how they heard traditional stories from their parents and grandparents.
As others encouraged him to turn his rewordings into a full translation of the Bible, Wildman published a childrenâs book retelling the Christmas story, âBirth of the Chosen One,â and a harmonization of the four Gospels called âWhen the Great Spirit Walked among Us.â
Then, on April Foolâs Day 2015, he heard from the CEO of OneBook Canada, who suggested the Bible translation organization fund his work. The offer wasnât a prank, he said, it was âconfirmation from Creator that this was something he wanted.â
âEverybody hears English a little differently,â Wildman said.
âWe have all of these translations for that purpose to reach another generation, to reach a particular people group. But we had never had one for our Native people that has actually been translated into English.â
Decolonizing the Gospel
Wildman began by forming a translation council to guide the process, gathering men and women, young and old, from different Native cultures and church backgrounds. They started with a list of nearly 200 keywords Wycliffe Bible Translators said must be translated properly to get a good translation of Scripture.
With that foundation, Wildman got to work, sending drafts to the council for feedback. He looked up the original Greek text of the New Testament. He checked to see how other English translations rendered tricky passages. He consulted Dave Ohlson, a former Wycliffe translator who helped found OneBook Canada, part of the Wycliffe Global Alliance.
The Indigenous translation uses names for God common in many Native cultures, including âGreat Spiritâ or âCreator.â Names of biblical figures echo their original meanings in Greek and Hebrew: Jesus becomes âCreator Sets Freeâ and Abraham, âFather of Many Nations.â
âWe believe itâs very important that the gospel be kind of decolonized and told in a Native way, but being accurate to the meaning of the original language and understanding that itâs a different culture,â Wildman said.
Over the years, he and his council have published editions of the Gospel of Luke and Ephesians and a book called âWalking the Good Roadâ that included the four gospels alongside Acts and Ephesians.
Removing a Barrier
A number of ministries already have started using those translations, including Foursquare Native Ministries, Lutheran Indian Ministries, Montana Indian Ministries, Cru Nations, and Native InterVarsity, he said.
Native InterVarsity, where Wildman serves as director of spiritual growth and leadership, has distributed earlier editions of the First Nations Version at conferences and used the Indigenous translation in its Bible studies for Native college students for several years.
Megan Murdock Krischke, national director of Native InterVarsity, said students have been more engaged with the translation, hearing the Bible in a way theyâre used to stories being told.
âEven though itâs still English, it feels like itâs made by us for us. This is a version of Scripture that is for Native people, and itâs indigenized. Youâre not having to kind of sort through the ways other cultures talk about faith and spirituality,â said Krischke, who is Wyandotte and Cherokee.
âItâs one less barrier between Native people and being able to follow Jesus.â
Earlier this month, The Jesus Film Project also released a collection of short animated films called âRetelling the Good Story,â bringing to life the stories of Jesus, or Creator Sets Free, feeding the 5,000 and walking on water from the First Nations Version.
Wildman said the response from Native peoples and ministries to the First Nations Version has exceeded any expectations he had when he first began rewording Bible passages.
He hopes it can help break down barriers between Native and non-Native peoples, too. He pointed out the suspicion and misinformation many white Christians have passed down for generations, believing Native Americans worship the devil and their cultures are evil when they share a belief in a Creator, he said.
âWe hope that this will help non-Native people be more interested in our Native peopleâmaybe the history, understanding the need for further reconciliation and things like that,â Wildman said.
âWe hope that this will be part of creating a conversation that will help that process.â
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Emily McFarlan Miller