Crossway

Christian publishing company From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Crossway (previously known by its parent ministry Good News Publishers) is a not-for-profit evangelical Christian publishing ministry headquartered in Wheaton, Illinois.[2] Clyde and Muriel Dennis founded Good News Publishers in 1938, working out of their home in Minneapolis, Minnesota.[1]

Quick Facts Founded, Founder ...
Crossway
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Founded1938[a]
1978
FounderClyde and Muriel Dennis[b]
Lane and Ebeth Dennis
Country of originUnited States
Headquarters locationWheaton, Illinois
Key peopleJosh Dennis
(President and CEO)
Publication typesChristian books, ESV Bibles, tracts
Official websitewww.crossway.org
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Crossway is best known for publishing the English Standard Version (ESV) Bible, along with evangelical Christian books. It claims to have distributed more than 290 million ESV Bibles and 1 billion tracts.[3]

Crossway

In late 1978, Good News Publishers began expanding its reach by establishing Crossway, a publishing division.[4] Beginning under the leadership of Lane T. Dennis (Clyde and Muriel's son), Crossway claims that it has published more than 1,500 titles, including books "by Francis A. Schaeffer, Martyn Lloyd-Jones, John Piper, John MacArthur, Paul David Tripp, Jen Wilkin, J. I. Packer, Chuck Colson, Frank Peretti, Max Lucado, Joni Eareckson Tada, and D. A. Carson."[1]

In 2012, Good News Publishers and the American Tract Society entered into a joint publishing agreement regarding publication and distribution of gospel tracts throughout North America.[5]

ESV Bible translation

In 2001, Crossway published the ESV translation of the Bible.[6] The ESV translation committee describes the ESV as a translation that is "essentially literal", following a "word-for-word" philosophy.[7]

According to Crossway, the publishing team behind the ESV "has included more than a hundred people."[7]

In 2008, Crossway published the ESV Study Bible.[8]

In 2016, Crossway made headlines after announcing that the ESV text would be "unchanged forever, in perpetuity" as a "permanent text" edition.[9] After public discourse about the policy, Crossway announced that it would reverse the decision.[10]

Notes

  1. Good News Publishers, Crossway's parent ministry, began this year.
  2. Good News Publishers started as a tract-based ministry in the late 1930s during the Great Depression.[1]

References

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