Right, and THANK YOU for taking the time to dig that up. I'm trying to find out if that prelate was Geroge Abbot, who succeeded Richard Bancroft, who died in 1610.You may have forgotten but @Logos1560 had shared that it was not one of the KJV translators, but one man, the prelate, that had done 14 alternate changes outside of the KJV translators had done after finishing the work of the KJV; that the prelate had changed what the KJV translators had it as Passover in Acts 12:4 but changed it back to Easter.. So the goof was not on all those KJV translators, but on the prelate, one political religious man. This explains a lot when Passover is in the rest of the N.T.
Tyndale wasn't happy about that, as he knew Easter & passover are different; thus he coined 'passover'. Before that, he followed then-common English tradition of using Easter for both observances.Plus you keep calling it a goof when Tyndale's Bible had it as Easter in the entire New Testament for that word for Passover in the Old Testament. So in Tyndale's usage, Easter is referring to what he had first translated as Passover in the Old Testament.
Actually, it IS. Apparently, the prelate made it. But, regardless of WHO made it, it's still in the KJV, & is incorrect.Easter is the Passover. Just because believers dropped Easter out of use does not change the fact that Tyndale used it in referring to the Jewish festivity in the N.T. of what he had applied his usage of Passover to mean in the O.T. So regardless of the prelate , it was never a goof in the first place.
"Unclean" means anything impure, defiled, or non-kosher, as well as something or someone in need of washing.It's the same as uncleanness as a work of the flesh. Believers & churches avoid referring masturbation to it, but just because they dropped the meaning of uncleanness, & hardly address it, it does not change the fact that the modern use of masturbation is referring to, but not limiting the application of uncleanness in the Bible, but masturbation is also uncleanness.
The only Biblical reference to masturbation is when Onan, Judah's son, "spilled his seed on the ground" rather than impregnate his dead brother's wife.