NIV
New International Version · 1978 (rev. 2011)
There came a man who was sent from God; his name was John.
13 words · Balance of accuracy and readability
Read this verse in 6 Bible translations — from word-for-word to thought-for-thought.
New International Version · 1978 (rev. 2011)
There came a man who was sent from God; his name was John.
13 words · Balance of accuracy and readability
King James Version · 1611
There was a man sent from God, whose name was John.
11 words · Formal / word-for-word
English Standard Version · 2001 (rev. 2016)
There was a man sent from God, whose name was John.
11 words · Essentially literal
New Living Translation · 1996 (rev. 2015)
God sent a man, John the Baptist,
7 words · Thought-for-thought clarity
The Message · 2002
There once was a man, his name John, sent by God
11 words · Contemporary paraphrase
New American Standard Bible · 1971 (rev. 2020)
There came a man sent from God, whose name was John.
11 words · Most literal English translation
Bible Verse Randomizer offers John 1:6 in 6 translations: New International Version, King James Version, English Standard Version, New Living Translation, The Message, New American Standard Bible. Each uses a different translation philosophy — from word-for-word (KJV, ESV, NASB) to thought-for-thought (NIV, NLT) to paraphrase (MSG).
No single translation is "best" — it depends on your purpose. For deep study, use the ESV or NASB (word-for-word). For devotional reading, the NIV balances accuracy and readability. The NLT and MSG are excellent for understanding the general meaning in modern English. Comparing multiple translations helps grasp the full richness of the text.
Literal (formal equivalence) translations like KJV, ESV, and NASB translate word-for-word from the original Hebrew/Greek. Dynamic equivalence translations like NIV and NLT translate thought-for-thought for clarity. The MSG is a paraphrase that captures the spirit in contemporary language. Each approach has strengths — that's why comparing translations is valuable.