Passage
Exodus 21.1
Book: Exodus · NASB95
Immediate context (±2 verses)
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ASV (ASV)
"1. Now these are the ordinances which thou shalt set before them."
"2. If thou buy a Hebrew servant, six years he shall serve: and in the seventh he shall go out free for nothing. 3. If he come in by himself, he shall go out by himself: if he be married, then his wife shall go out with him." (Exodus 21:1-3, ASV)
WEB (WEB)
"1. “Now these are the ordinances which you shall set before them."
"2. “If you buy a Hebrew servant, he shall serve six years and in the seventh he shall go out free without paying anything. 3. If he comes in by himself, he shall go out by himself. If he is married, then his wife shall go out with him." (Exodus 21:1-3, WEB)
KJV (KJV)
"1. Now these are the judgments which thou shalt set before them."
"2. If thou buy an Hebrew servant, six years he shall serve: and in the seventh he shall go out free for nothing. 3. If he came in by himself, he shall go out by himself: if he were married, then his wife shall go out with him. by himself: Heb. with his body" (Exodus 21:1-3, KJV)
YLT (YLT)
"1. 'And these [are] the judgments which thou dost set before them:"
"2. 'When thou buyest a Hebrew servant, six years he doth serve, and in the seventh he goeth out as a freeman for nought; 3. if by himself he cometh in, by himself he goeth out; if he [is] owner of a wife, then his wife hath gone out with him;" (Exodus 21:1-3, YLT)
Setting
- Speaker: TBD
- Audience: TBD
- Location: TBD
- Time period: TBD
Theological reading
Patristic / early-church-father exegesis, to be added.
Key words
Theologically-loaded Greek or Hebrew words in this verse may have entries in the lexicon. Curated to roughly 100 contested terms across the corpus, not every word; see Lexicon Roadmap.
- TBD
- TBD
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Quoted in
Scripture quotations taken from the New American Standard Bible® (NASB), Copyright © 1960, 1971, 1977, 1995 by The Lockman Foundation. Used by permission. All rights reserved. www.lockman.org
Why these four translations
ris3n chose ASV, WEB, KJV, and YLT for two reasons together. They are the most literal English translations available (formal-equivalence: word-for-word renderings that preserve the Hebrew and Greek grammar rather than smoothing it into modern dynamic-equivalence idiom). And they are in the public domain in the United States, which means fair-use quotation at any length requires no publisher license. Modern licensed translations (NASB95, ESV, NIV) restrict volume of quotation under their copyright terms, so they are not used at stub-level coverage here. NASB95 appears only on hand-curated rich passage hubs under Lockman Foundation's fair-use allowance.
The four:
- ASV (American Standard Version, 1901). The basis of the modern critical-text English tradition.
- WEB (World English Bible, contemporary). Public-domain revision in the ASV line, in current English.
- KJV (King James Version, 1611). Reformation-era, Textus Receptus base.
- YLT (Young's Literal Translation, Robert Young, 1862). Hyper-literal preservation of Hebrew and Greek grammar; useful for word-study work even where English reads stiff.
See Bibles for the full per-translation history, translators, textual basis, strengths, and weaknesses.