SaggyWoman
Active Member
You tell me?
Welcome to Baptist Board, a friendly forum to discuss the Baptist Faith in a friendly surrounding.
Your voice is missing! You will need to register to get access to all the features that our community has to offer.
We hope to see you as a part of our community soon and God Bless!
I am a fundamental independent Baptist Bible believer, and I am not KJV-only.
A clear indication that fundamental Baptists have lost their distinctions.
For decades KJVOism was unknown amongst fundamentalists. It was a non-issue. Almost 20 years ago a noted fundamentalist sat at my kitchen table and wept over the division he saw coming over this issue.
I too am a fundamental independent Baptist and am not KJVO.
[Greg] I am very strongly pro-KJV, but am not KJVO.
[James] Could you possibly list a few IFB preachers, churches, or schools that took a KJVO position before about 1970?
As to the poll question I would contend that the strictest KJVO views are not consistent with the IFB ethos. They demand that their brothers in Christ accept what is essentially an abiblical position. The Bible never addresses translations. Thereby they deny their brethren individual soul liberty.
Sure if you will list those who took an ANTI KJV stance before 1970. I'll just start with one, the obvious one..Ruckman (and I DO have an entire list of KJVO preachers before 1970). In fact, a researcher that despises Ruckman wrote an entire thesis just to prove that the KJVO did not originate with Ruckman.
I am a fundamental independent Baptist Bible believer, and I am not KJV-only.
I still have the KJV I used at TTU in the mid-70s (ouch). There are a plethora of my marginal notes where teachers or chapel speakers gave alternate translation. IMNSHO it was not until Dr Hyles turned KJVO that the idea took off in parts of IFB. I never really became aware of the concept until the early 90s even though the church I was in is a bastion of fundamentalism in North Alabama.
BJU was not KJVO. TTU (where I went) was not KJVO. Dr. Roberson stood in chapel and "commanded" it would not be an issue.
You can't get more Fundamentalist or more different than BJU and TTU.
And is this your commandment as well in your own church? Also I din not know that Tennessee Tech was a religious school.
How many different English versions were there before the English landed in America?
How many Protestants and Baptists accepted the RV or ASV?
I believe he meant Tennessee Temple University.
KJV defender D. A. Waite listed the KJV as being number 17 on his chronological list of complete English Bibles (Defending the KJB, p. 203).
KJV defender David Norris claimed: “between 1526 and 1611, nine English translations of Scripture of significance were made” (Big Picture, p. 333).
David Daniell asserted: “There were ten new English versions of the Bible or New Testament between Tyndale’s first New Testament in 1526 and the famous King James or Authorised Version of 1611, and all were influential” (Bible in English, p. 126).
Some examples may include the following: Tyndale's New Testament, Joyce's New Testament, Coverdale's Bible, Matthew's Bible, Coverdale's Latin-English New Testament (1538), Taverner's Bible (1539), the Great Bible, Coverdale’s revision of Tyndale’s (1549), Bishop Becke's Bible (1551), Richard Jugge's New Testament (1552), Whittingham's New Testament (1557), Geneva Bible, Bishops' Bible, Lawrence Tompson's New Testament (1576), and KJV.
In addition, there was more than one edition of many of these Bibles with many changes and revisions in them. The 1539 edition of the Great Bible is different from the 1540 edition of the Great Bible. The 1568 edition of the Bishops' Bible is different from the 1569 edition and the 1572 edition.
I don't know, but it may be more than you assume. If I recall correctly, fundamentalist R. A. Torrey accepted or recommended the 1901 ASV. There were other Protestants and Baptists who accepted and even praised the 1901 ASV.
There were also other English Bibles before 1881. There were even some reprintings of some of the pre-1611 English Bibles [some in the 1700's and some again in the 1800's].
John Wesley's English translation of the Bible that differs from the KJV in many places and that had a number of renderings that would later be found in the 1881 Revised Version is said to have been popular in America [perhaps mostly among Methodists]. Wesley's New Testament was first printed in 1755.
A 1842 revision of the KJV by Baptists and other believers was used by a number of believers in America. It was popular enough to go through several editions. An edition printed in 1847 had on its binding "Baptist Bible". It is known for its use of "immerse" rather than "baptize," but it had many other translational differences and corrections if compared to the KJV.
There was the 1866 American Bible Union Version. Some of its translators were Baptists.
There was the 1912 Improved Edition published by the American Baptist Publication Society, that may have took over some of the translating work done by the American Bible Union.
There was the 1885 English translation of John Nelson Darby that was likely used by a number of Plymouth Brethren.