So then, by your conjecture since the AV1611 clearly condemns unrighteous anger, lying, covetousness, envy, and stealing we can conclude that King James didn't commit these sins also?
KJV-only author David Cloud admitted that King James “was a profligate, conniving, deceitful man” (
Faith, p. 586). Ashley observed: "James was a congenital, if perhaps unconscious liar: he did not regard truthfulness as a necessary royal attribute" (
Stuarts in Love, p. 103). Fraser maintained: “James was already a practiced deceiver by the time he reached his teens” (
Mary Queen of Scots, p. 457). W. H. Stowell noted that James was "a great dissembler, a greater liar" and that he was "unscrupulous in breaking his promises" (
History of the Puritans, pp. 230, 246). Sir Walter Scott pointed out that James "had been early imbued with the principle that the power of dissembling was essential to the art of reigning" (
Scotland, II, p. 138). W. M. Hetherington wrote: "The policy of principle he knew not, because he was himself unprincipled; but the policy of falsehood, cunning, and sycophancy, he well understood and practised" (
History of the Church of Scotland, p. 203). Hetherington also noted that James "had repeatedly broken his most solemn pledges, and brought his word into such suspicion, that the more earnestly he protested, the less he was believed" (
Ibid., p. 175). Gardiner wrote: "No one could be sure that what James said one day he would not unsay the next" (
History of England, III, p. 347).
One biography listed the following as the lesser faults of James: "the too-familiar manners, the bawdy talk, the blasphemy that came too readily to his tongue, [and] the habit of heavy drinking" (
Making of a King, p. 15). Riggs cited King James's own physician, Theodore Mayerne, as noting that his Majesty "errs as to quality, quantity, frequency, time, and order" in his drinking (
Ben Jonson, p. 253). Scott declared: "His language was so filthy English historians still refuse to cite it" (
Great Christian Revolution, p. 136). Eadie observed that the common talk of King James "was a continuous infringement of the Third Commandment" (
English Bible, II, p. 163). E. S. Turner noted that James was "a prodigious swearer" (
Court of St. James's, p. 120). J. B. Marsden described James I as “an habitual swearer, a drunkard, and a liar” (
History, p. 380). Akrigg confirmed that "King James was notorious for his profanity" (
Jacobean Pageant, p. 131). John Jesse referred to “his reputation for profane swearing” (
Memoirs, I, p. 51). Neal stated: "Upon his accession to the English crown, he threw off the mask, and by degrees gave himself up to luxury and ease, and all kinds of licentiousness. His language was obscene, and his actions very often lewd and indecent" (
History of the Puritans, p. 277).