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  1. David Lamb

    Romans 4:19

    I have just taken a look at the verse, and it certainly seems that the Greek has a word for "not". I have looked at several English translations, and they have "not" too. For example, the NKJV has: “And not being weak in faith, he did not consider his own body, already dead (since he was...
  2. David Lamb

    2 Kings 25:3 - inspired italic

    Have you got a quote from Gill where he refers to God as "it?"
  3. David Lamb

    Spirit or Ghost?

    I agree that phantoms are not real. I disagree with calling the Holy Spirit a "Ghost". As you say, phantoms are not real, and in English "ghost" means a phantom. One dictiary says: "A ghost is the spirit of a dead person that someone believes they can see or feel. ...the ghost of Marie...
  4. David Lamb

    2 Kings 25:3 - inspired italic

    Yes, that's the exception. But that doesn't make "ship" a grammatically feminine noun.
  5. David Lamb

    Spirit or Ghost?

    Yes, phantasma is "ghost" as in the way we use it today, a phantom. When you ask "Did the KJB put spirit in those words?" do you mean, "Did the KJB put spirit where the Greek has "phantasma?" Here is one of the verses that uses "phantasma": Mt 14:26 And when the disciples saw him walking on...
  6. David Lamb

    Spirit or Ghost?

    That doesn't make sense. If the Greek can't give it, and the KJV New Testament is translated from the Greek, how did the translators know which was which?
  7. David Lamb

    2 Kings 25:3 - inspired italic

    But Greek isn't English. Some languages make all their nouns masculine, feminine and neuter. For example, in Latin, the word for "table" is "mensa", which is a feminine noun. In French, the word for "car" is "voiture," which is a feminine noun, That doesn't mean that when translating into...
  8. David Lamb

    Spirit or Ghost?

    Because as I have just mentioned in an answer to another of your posts, when the ESV or the NKJV (for example) use the word "ghost", they do so to translate the Greek word phantasma, which does mean "ghost." Phantasma is never used for the Holy Spirit.
  9. David Lamb

    Spirit or Ghost?

    Yet in the original Greek of the New Testament, the words used are always the same p- hagios pneuma. The Greek word for "ghost" is phantasma. It does occur in the New Testament, for example when the disciples see Jesus walking on the water.
  10. David Lamb

    Spirit or Ghost?

    I have just checked in the ESV. It uses the word "ghost" three times: Isa 29:4 And you will be brought low; from the earth you shall speak, and from the dust your speech will be bowed down; your voice shall come from the ground like the voice of a ghost, and from the dust...
  11. David Lamb

    2 Kings 25:3 - inspired italic

    As the Old Testament was originally in Hebrew, if you say the Hebrew needed correcting by English translations made hundreds of years later, you must believe that God gave people a faulty bible to start with, and left them with it for hundreds of years.
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