Would say this is very interesting survey on this topic
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Would say this is very interesting survey on this topic
kjbstudyproject.com
Did the Church of England makers of the KJV arbitrarily and intentionally change the meaning of certain Bible texts in the pre-1611 English Bibles to make them more favorable to Church of England episcopal church government? Did the makers of the KJV remove vital words or phrases at Acts 14:23 that relate to the doctrine of church government?And you should be thrilled to hear of those that arbitrarily change the meaning of certain Bible texts, removes vital words and phrases from certain passages, and diminish the Authority of the Bible.
The serious problem and alarming inadequacy with KJV-only articles and books is their dependance upon fallacies and their use of double standards as they fail to apply their exact same standards or measures that they use to accuse post-1611 English Bibles to the KJV itself.Then you should be Praising God Almighty for innumerable articles and books on any number of 'versions of the Bible' which contain glaring and alarming inadequacies and that weaken, change, or delete certain Doctrines of the Word of God
"H" is a strange initial letter. I can remember when British people used to say, "an hotel," whereas now, almost everybody says "a hotel." I just did a search, and found that the KJV used "a holy" 57 times, and "an holy" 40 times.Sorry to be pedantic, but you meant "starting with a vowel," I think. The unique thing about the KJV is that it also puts an "an" before a word beginning with "h" as in 'a just man and an holy.' What an horrible thing to do!Actually, it's just what people used to do in the 17th Century.
Definitely the work of a committee.The KJV has "an house" 72 times, and "a house" 6 times.
It's still done occasionally in the American tongue,Sorry to be pedantic, but you meant "starting with a vowel," I think. The unique thing about the KJV is that it also puts an "an" before a word beginning with "h" as in 'a just man and an holy.' What an horrible thing to do!Actually, it's just what people used to do in the 17th Century.
You want to check them against complete manuscripts, like the King James Version, and see what we already knew God said, before someone sold the idea that the collections of manuscripts they and so many others used through the centuries were corrupted and needed to be dismissed and ignored and replaced exclusively with some of the most tampered with and suspect documents in religion.I'd check any Reader's Digest wannabe abridgements that have removed generous portions of THE WORD OF GOD
No, the Holy Spirit did not Lead gentlemen to conduct their translations under the lie that the collections of manuscripts the King James translators and so many others used through the centuries were corrupted and needed to be dismissed and ignored and mostly replaced exclusively AND MODERNIZED with the Roman Catholic documents resurfaced from the dark underground after hundreds of years of non-use (if they're that old).as if we're supposed to believe the Holy Spirit Led them to play god.
"The Spirit Who Spoke in Ancient Days to and through the Prophets and Apostles still Speaks to us through the Written Record of that Revelation, saying, 'Hear, and your soul shall Live.' In the Bible, therefore, we find not only what the Spirit said to the churches of the first century, but what He is still saying to those of the twentieth (& twenty-first). But what He says to us is in Perfect Harmony with what He said to them.WHEN JESUS SAID THEY "ARE SPIRIT AND LIFE"
I know you are not defending limiting the Word of God, and when I said that they are 'Reader's Digest wannabe abridgements that have removed generous portions of THE WORD OF GOD', that I am not somehow suggesting that there needs to be dozens of more books and chapters added to any complete copies of the Bible."Bring back the 88 book Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Bible!" ... is that what you meant?
The King James Version is not a manuscript. The KJV is one English Bible translation in the same sense (univocally) as the pre-1611 English Bibles are English Bible translations. Do you try to sell people on the non-true claims for the KJV?You want to check them against complete manuscripts, like the King James Version, and see what we already knew God said,
Oh yeah, this is where I told everyone in my post somewhere to remind me of how some people are utterly dependent on labeling anyone that sees even '1 Problem' with any one of the 'modern translations' as KJV-Only.Do you try an inexcusable, irresponsible hack job as you throw out misleading and incorrect accusations against believers who disagree with human, non-scriptural KJV-only reasoning/teaching?
This is dishonest to make this general declaration of anybody that 'accepts or makes some type of exclusive claims for only one English Bible translation—the KJV', because you actually really do always demand that anyone who sees the '1000 Problems' in every one of the 'modern translations' is a Quack, like your most beloved person ever in the World, Peter Ruckman.The accurate term KJV-only is used by Bible believers to define and describe any view that accepts or makes some type of exclusive claims for only one English Bible translation—the KJV.
At least you proved that all that is not really any 'Problem', if anybody was talking about making "a" to "an" and "an" to "a" in that article.Later KJV editors changed “a hundred” (Exod. 38:9, Jud. 20:10, 1 Kings 7:2) to “an hundred” while they kept “a hundred” once (Isa. 37:36). They revised “a house” (1 Chron. 17:5) to “an house” while “a house” was left at other verses (Exod. 12:30, Lev. 14:34, etc.). They changed “a hill” (Isa. 30:17) to “an hill” while “a hill” was kept once (Josh. 24:33). Later editors also left the inconsistencies of “an hairy” (Gen. 25:25) and “a hairy” (Gen. 27:11), “a harp” (1 Sam. 10:5) and “an harp” (1 Sam. 16:16, 23), “a heap” (Isa. 17:11) and “an heap” (Isa. 25:2), “an hammer” (Jud. 4:21) and “a hammer” (Jer. 23:29), “an highway” (Isa. 11:16) and “a highway” (Isa. 19:23), “an holy” (Exod. 19:6) and “a holy” (Isa. 30:29), and “an house“ (Mark 3:19) and “a house“ (Mark 3:25).