Originally posted by HomeBound:
Then your experience is really limited.
I don't really think so. I have known many KJVO's of many different stripes from every corner of the country and have lived in several areas of the country myself.
What is "etc." is that all the word of God is, a "etc?" Why don't you list all of them for us.?
I haven't investigated all of them so for me to attempt a comprehensive list about things I don't really know about would be ignorant- although I have noted that lists developed in this way receive favor among KJVO's.
</font><blockquote>quote:</font><hr />So is the supposition that any translation has ever been perfectly worded with God chosen words.
Sorry but I did not say this.</font>[/QUOTE] OK then, do you believe that some of the KJV words are not perfect or that 17th century Anglicans somehow got it perfect without God's direct intervention?
</font><blockquote>quote:</font><hr /> Why do you follow them in their insistence that the Bible be withheld from modern English speakers?
What are you talking about? Noone is witholding the Bible from any one.</font>[/QUOTE] Anyone who says that it is wrong for someone to have an accurate Bible translation in a form that they can understand is withholding the Bible from them. Many English speakers today cannot clearly understand Jacobean English. Folks who speak English as a second language are at an even greater disadvantage. People who do not speak English are hopeless.
Many readers today think they know what is being said when the KJV uses words like "let, prevent, communicate, conversation, and perfect" when in fact they don't.
Yes. KJVO employs double standards constantly. If I remember correctly, you have been confronted personally about it.
and you say "prove all things," what are you proving them by?
First, by the what the Bible says and reveals. It does not say nor imply KJVOnlyism so I do not believe it.
Second, by a reasonable collation of the available facts. On this account, KJVOnlyism fails over and over. The history of the TR and KJV, the words of the translators, the facts about textual transmission,... all line up against KJVOnlyism.
</font><blockquote>quote:</font><hr />What He does not say is that the KJV is the singular manifestation of that preservation.
Nor does it say the NIV, NKJV, NASB, Greek, Hebrew, or anything else. This is were believe come in.</font>[/QUOTE] Not entirely. The KJV demonstrates internally that Jesus used an OT that was a different version from that used by the KJV translators.
On that part where belief comes in, I ask myself "Belief in what?" Emotion/tradition based opinions that is inconsistent with scripture and history or an explaination of the facts that is consistent with both scripture and history.
</font><blockquote>quote:</font><hr /> In fact, for most of Christian history there were no printing presses and ALL Bibles were different from each other as a result of hand copying errors. KJVO's demand something that God did not see fit to give His people in the previous 1600 years.
I don't know about these things, except that in 1611 God saw fit to inspire and preserve his word in the King James Bible. </font>[/QUOTE]So since you don't know (but probably suspect that what I wrote destroys the very foundation of KJVOnlyism), you will simply close your eyes to very relevant facts? Nowhere in the KJV will you find an admonition to ignore the truth if you don't want to believe it.
What I stated above is truth. And it is truth that KJVOnlyism cannot reconcile.