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Major Priorities in Eradicating Bible Poverty #2

Author: Ntobha Mba
Date: 12.05.2010
Category: Unreached People Groups, Orality, Scripture

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Why do more than one billion people not have adequate Scriptures in their language?

Here is a second question regarding Scripture in Mission. The first question focused on those who have Scriptures available but do not demonstrate the changed lives we would expect. In this second question we focus on those without any Scripture or without sufficient Scripture in their languages.

Some of the related questions to this second question include:  Are the Scriptures only for those who speak major languages? Is God able to speak and understand any human language or only the major languages? What hinders churches around the world from providing the Scriptures for people who do not have them in their language? Why are only the largest languages so often treated as the important ones in the Church? Why do we ignore the needs of the “bottom billion”? Cannot the churches around the world partner together in new ways to make sure ALL people around the world have God’s words in the languages they understand the best?

We will begin with some statistics on languages. Approximately 6,900 languages are spoken in the world today[1]. About 6% of the world’s population or about 350 million people speak 94% of the world’s languages, all with fewer than one million speakers. Clearly these 350 million people speak the smaller languages of the world. By contrast, about 94% of the world’s population speaks only about 6% of the languages, 389 by count, all with one million speakers or more.  

Of the 6,900 languages, about 450[2] have a complete Bible. They represent about five billion people. These Bibles serve as a tremendous potential resource for evangelization and discipleship. One challenge for these languages concerns a lack of printed Bibles. Even though the complete Bible has been translated in these languages, millions of believers who speak them do not have access to a printed Bible. So, providing Bibles in these languages and engaging people with them so the Spirit can speak into their lives is a major challenge for the Church.

As we rejoice in the 450 complete Bibles translated into the languages of five billion people, a level of Bible translation never known before in the history of humankind, we are still faced with over a billion people who do not have the whole Bible available to them in their languages. These are not mere “dialects”. They are distinct languages. Of these languages, more than 2,200[3] likely have a need for translated Scriptures but they have no translation of Scripture and nothing is underway. Approximately another 2,000 languages have translation programs in progress. This is a point of celebration. At no time in Church history have so many languages simultaneously had active translation programs. Some of them are just in the beginning stages while others have nearly finished with meeting their current needs for Scriptures.

Another 1,510[4] languages have fewer than 1,000 speakers remaining. These are the very smallest languages. Some are nearly extinct and others are too poorly researched to know their number of speakers or what their needs are for the Scriptures. The remaining languages of the 6,850 either have sufficient Scriptures at this time or have not been researched sufficiently to determine their status.

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Keywords: Bible translation, translation need, majority languages, smaller languages, social attitudes, global, worldwide Church

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