Originally posted by Bartholomew:
Well, it was (and still is) in the words themsleves - the information conveyed by the words.
Which is it? Depending on context, the same words can have a different meaning. And sometimes different words can have the same meaning. If you say the *meaning* is the final authority, you are beginning to agree with what I am saying. BTW, in the past I've had some KJV-onlyists say that "God never promised to preserve the 'meaning', only the 'words'." They have completely missed the point of scripture.
Well, I can only speak for myself, and I say "pre-mil". However, I am willing to change my mind if someone can show me why the words I believe really teach a-mill.
The purpose of me mentioning that was not to debate which view is correct - it was only an example of where two different KJV-only supporters, reading the same "final authority", come to conflicting conclusions. Pretend you had no knowledge of the millennium, and were neither premill or amill. Then you heard both proclaimed, each from a different KJV-only supporter, pointing at his KJV as his authority for his view. How would you determine which view is correct? You would probably look at the issue for yourself, and read the KJV for yourself. But how can you be sure that *your* understanding is better than someone else's? How do you know, when you reach one conclusion or another, that you have the "final authority" on the matter? Would not God's eternal truth be the final authority, regardless (and even despite) of what conclusion you personally reached?
I don't see why - people can disagree about what their autority means, surely? e.g. the law of the land is the final legal authority of waht is legal and illegal. However, judges can disagree about what exactly a law means. Surely the law isn't any less a final authority when judges disagree?
Which judge is correct? When they disagree, they both can't be. The final authority exists outside of the lawbooks, it is what ever is the truth, whatever meaning the lawbooks are trying to convey regardless of how clearly they convey it.
I see what you're saying, but I have one big problem with it: HOW DO I KNOW WHAT IS GOD'S TRUTH?
Like I previously mentioned, do not forget or underestimate the roll of the Holy Spirit. With a humble, open heart, and honest search for the truth, he will guide you there. You can read a version other than the KJV (ie. an "imperfect Bible") and be guided to the "final authority" if you follow the Holy Spirit's leading. Without following the Holy Spirit's leading, you could read the KJV (ie. a "perfect Bible") and end up in left field. The ink-on-paper is not the final authority. It is a witness, a means to find the final authority.
I used to be an Anglican. Now I'm a baptist. How do I know which position is true? How do I know I'm not being decieved? I used to think God's truth was one thing, now I think it's another.
I think on the basics, scripture is fairly clear, and even Baptists and Anglicans agree on the essentials. But I understand your point. I think the answer lies in your attitude - are you humble, open to learning, open to truth even if it means you must admit to yourself that you are wrong on some issue? Or are you belligerent, proud, unteachable and convinced you have no error? If the first, the Holy Spirit can work with you. If the second, you've shut the Holy Spirit out. But maybe even more importantly, I personally think one's attitude is more important to God than one's correctness. I don't know if you have kids, but I have four. I have found that when they argue about some rule in the house or something I've previously said, one or both can get hostile and aggressive about it. I've found that when one is technically correct but has a bad attitude ("No, Dad said no ice-cream before dinner!! You want ice-cream?!? You don't even listen to him, you probably don't even love him and you make him very mad!! (slap!)") while the other is technically wrong but humble and gracious ("I think Dad only meant that one day, not everyday. I only wanted a little, please don't yell."), when I break it up, I say to the first "Yes, you're not to have ice-cream before dinner, but there is no need to yell and slap! Go to your room until you can be nice!" while I say to the other "It's OK sweetie, but no ice-cream right now, just wait until later" and pat her on the head. Love covers a multitude of sins sort-of-thing (1 Pet 4:8)
The point? All will eventually be explicitly given the final authority, when the creator of that authority returns. But our attitudes in relation to the Father and to each other may just be more important than how many doctrinal arguments we've won (Matt 25:31-46). That's not to say doctrine is not important, it is. We just do our best, approach it with the right spirit, and let the Holy Spirit do his job.
But with your position, I can't see any final authority that I can appeal to. Acts 8:37 was one of the main reasons I got baptised. But now people say it's not part of the Bible. How do I know what they'll be saying tomorrow?
Imagine for the moment that there was only *one* translation available. And everyone was in 100% agreement about which manuscripts to use, and how to translate them. In otherwords, everyone was in total agreement that the only available Bible was perfect in all respects. People could point to it and say "Baptism is necessary for salvation", while others could say "Baptism is important, but you are saved before it and it is not a requirement." In other words, even if we all agreed on which Bible to use, we'd *still* have disagreements and issues about "final authority". That is because we, as fallible humans, have to filter that "final authority" through our fallible understandings and biases. You could use the Bible and believe one doctrine, and then a few years later, using the *same* Bible, change your mind about it. Pointing at the Bible doesn't solve the problem, because the "final authority" is higher than our personal interpretation of that final authority.
</font><blockquote>quote:</font><hr />You have probably seen me repeatedly ask "where was the word of God in 1605?" on this board. The point of the question is this: we all (I hope) believe that God's eternal truth, the "final authority", did not pop into existence in 1611.
I'm not saying it did, but conceivably, why could this not be possible?
</font>[/QUOTE]It is possible. But it has several major problems:
1. The KJV-only position is about *preservation*. By the very definition of the word, something that pops into existence is not preserving anything. Preservation is a continual, origin to completion, process.
2. We would have absolutely no way of knowing, and even if we could know, there would be no way to prove it or verify it. And the only way we could know it is through extra-Biblical information, which according to your current thinking, is outside of the "final authority" and thus already not trustworthy. As well, we would have no longer any way to argue against the Book of Mormon, or anyone else that claims reinspiration.
3. It implies that the passages that you would depend on for such a view were actually lies until it happened. KJV-onlyism falls into this trap already, saying Psal 12:6-7 is about the KJV. If it is about the perfection of the KJV, it must have been a lie when the perfect wasn't here yet.
4. It implies that somehow we are more special and more deserving of God's word than the Christians from 80% of church history.
Is it not possible that one of those older Bibles was completely true, and included all the scripture the people of that day needed? I mean, God gave plenty of prophecies in the past, and I bet many of them wrote them down. They would have been inspired messages, and yet God did not keep them all for us. Why? Becuase we didn't need them.
Is it not possible that some other version was totally true, and God's final authroty for that day and age, irrespective of whether it agrees with the AV?
What then of "final" authority? That is not "final", it is subject to the next revelation, the next Bible. If that possibility exists, then you must admit that maybe tomorrow God will produce a new Bible that people of the future, and not people of the present, need. The KJV is no longer a "final" authority, as it could be replaced. Not only that, but you would also have no way of knowing it didn't already happen - maybe the NIV is now the "final" authority, replacing the KJV just as the KJV was the "final" authority, replacing what was prior to it.
</font><blockquote>quote:</font><hr />The final authority is NOT a book, but is *God's eternal truth*. This final authority is revealed to us through Bibles and through the guiding of the Holy Spirit when reading those Bibles, and a perfect book need not exist in order for that final authority to exist, as was the case in 1605.
But I don't get how we can find this for sure.
</font>[/QUOTE]There ultimately comes a point where you have to put in some faith. If you could prove God, you no longer need faith.
What about places the NIV and AV contradict? How do we know which is God's truth?
We deal with that in *exactly* the same way we deal with contradicting interpretations from two people both reading the KJV, as discussed above.
But thanks very much for your help - it's greatly appreciated.
No problem. I hope this helps, and gives you and other honest seekers about version issues something to think about.
God bless,
Brian