BSI AP Auxiliary | |
Formation | 1951 |
---|---|
Founded at | Secunderabad |
Type | Bible Society |
Legal status | Charitable trust |
Purpose | Literary |
Headquarters | Bangalore |
Location | |
Region
|
Andhra Pradesh |
Services | Raising contribution, translating, printing, distribution |
Official language
|
Lambadi, Telugu and Urdu |
Secretary General
|
Rev. B. Samuel Rajasekhar |
President
|
Medidi Johnson |
Main organ
|
The Bible Society of India Trust Association |
Parent organization
|
Bible Society of India |
Subsidiaries | 1 (Visakhapatnam) |
Affiliations | United Bible Societies |
Budget (2014)
|
Rs.1.10,00,000.00 |
Slogan | Applying God's word in the world |
Website | http://www.bsind.org/andhra_pradesh.html |
Formerly called
|
Book Depot of the Tamil Nadu Auxiliary |
The Bible Society of India Andhra Pradesh Auxiliary is located in Guntur.
From 1951 through 2016, the Andhra Pradesh Auxiliary was housed at the Bible House on Rashtrapathi Road in Secunderabad until it was moved to Guntur. This Auxiliary translated the Telugu and Lambadi versions of the Bible.
In the Annual report of the British & Foreign Bible Society John Hay had undertaken the revision of the Telugu Bible (of Lyman Jewett?). In the same report, mention was made of the Secunderabad Branch.
In 1953, the Telugu Bible was revised from earlier version which had been translated by John Hay, Edward Pritchett, John Smith Wardlaw (1813-), James William Gordon, John Redmond Bacon and Dhanavada Anantam.
Rev. A. B. Masilamani who majored in Greek at Serampore College was Auxiliary Secretary as well part of the Translation Team providing stylistic corrections in Telugu. Modern translations of the Telugu Bible in common language were taken up by Rev. G. Babu Rao, and Victor Premasagar, both of whom were Scholars of Biblical Hebrew and Biblical Greek as well as colleagues at the Protestant Regional Theologiate in Secunderabad.
During the Auxiliary Secretaryship of Rev. B. G. Prasada Rao, a team consisting of Rev. Suppogu Israel and Rev. G. Babu Rao began translating portions of the Bible into modern Telugu which included,