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Grace Baptist Church
3616 Broadwater Avenue
Billings, Montana
406-656-8333
info@gracebaptistbillings.org
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Algonquin Bible First Bible Printed in
America
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A leaf from John Eliot’s Algonquin
(Native American “Indian”
language) Bible. These leaves are 341
years old. Many people are shocked to
discover that the first Bible printed in
America was not English… or any
other European language. In fact, English
and European language Bibles would not be
printed in America until a century later!
Eliot’s Bible did much more than
bring the Gospel to the pagan natives who
were worshiping creation rather than the
Creator… it gave them literacy, as
they did not have a written language of
their own until this Bible was printed
for them.
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The main reason why there were no English
language Bibles printed in America until
the late 1700’s, is because they
were more cheaply and easily imported
from England up until the embargo of the
Revolutionary War. But the kind of Bible
John Eliot needed for his missionary
outreach to the native American
“Indians” was certainly not
to be found in England, or anywhere else.
It had to be created on the spot. Eliot
recognized that one of the main reasons
why the native Americans were considered
"primitive" by European settlers, is that
they did not have a written alphabet of
their own. They communicated almost
exclusively through spoken language, and
what little writing they did was in very
limited pictorial images, more like
Egyptian hieroglyphics than that of any
functional alphabetical language like
those of Europe or Asia or Africa.
Clearly the Word of God was something
these people needed if they were to stop
worshiping creation and false gods, and
learn to worship the true Creator…
but God’s Word could not
realistically be translated effectively
into their primitive pictorial drawings.
So Eliot found a wonderful solution: he
would give the native Americans the gift
of God’s Word and also give them
the gift of true literacy. He agreed to
learn their spoken language, and they
agreed to learn the Western world’s
phonetic alphabet (how to pronounce words
made up of character symbols like A, B,
C, D, E, etc.) Eliot then translated the
Bible into their native Algonquin tongue,
phonetically using our alphabet! This
way, the natives did not really even need
to learn how to speak English, and they
could still have a Bible that they could
READ. In fact, they could go on to use
their newly learned alphabet to write
other books of their own, if they so
desired, and build their culture as the
other nations of the world had done. What
a wonderful gift!
These Eliot Algonquin
“Indian” Language Bible
leaves remain one of the most rare and
historically important artifacts of our
American heritage. They are also among
the earliest of all American printings,
and the very first Bible printed in this
hemisphere. Leaves from the Eliot Bible
have sold for well over $3,000 each in
recent months.
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website of Grace Baptist Church, Billings,
Montana for information about the Church contact us.

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