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KJVO Lies

DeclareHim

New Member
In the article that I copied before Al says that ALL ALL ALL MV's use the Westcott and Hort Greek text this is a sentiment I have heard many KJVO people say this is a LIE. There are many MV'S that don't use Westcott and Hort Greek NT text.
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Taufgesinnter

New Member
Of course. Very few use Westcott & Hort's text--practically none. It's been superseded by fresher manuscript discoveries accumulating over a century.
 

Askjo

New Member
Originally posted by DeclareHim:
In the article that I copied before Al says that ALL ALL ALL MV's use the Westcott and Hort Greek text this is a sentiment I have heard many KJVO people say this is a LIE. There are many MV'S that don't use Westcott and Hort Greek NT text.
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1. Eclectic texts followed UBS and Nestle/Aland texts.

2. UBS followed Nestle/Aland text.

3. Nestle/Aland text followed Nestle text.

4. Nestle text followed the W/H text.

These 4 Greek texts are gone back to the W/H text.

TEV, NIV and JB followed Eclectic text gone back to the W/H text.

LB and NASB followed ASV. ASV followed RV. RV followed the W/H text.

The JW Bible followed the W/H text.

Modern versions and the cult JW bible are gone back to the W/H text.
 

Ed Edwards

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Originally posted by DeclareHim:
In the article that I copied before Al says that ALL ALL ALL MV's use the Westcott and Hort Greek text this is a sentiment I have heard many KJVO people say this is a LIE. There are many MV'S that don't use Westcott and Hort Greek NT text.
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Amen, Brother DeclareHim -- Preach it.

Already we have a KJVO condemning the
non-Westcott/Hort translations along
with the Westcott/Hort translations.

What is really wierd is over on the Chick
Comic pages when they condemn the
KJV1611 and KJV1873
in praise of the KJV1769.
I wonder if the KJV1873 was 'contaminated'
by Hort/Westcott?

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HankD

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
Just as there are many "TR"'s which follow the Byzantine text types and have differences, there are many "eclectic" texts which follow the Alexandrian text types (particularly Aleph and B) and have differences.

When askjo says a W&H Bible I'll second-guess him and say that he means a Bible which follows the W&H theory (roughly-older reading best, shorter best, more difficult best, Aleph/B), but not necessarily the text that they themselves produced in accord with that theory).

Generally speaking, the Burgon theory weighs the Traditional Text and Church Fathers over "oldest".

All MV's (in my experience) are a combination of both text types unless they are specifically noted as TR types such as the NKJV.

This is my understanding and yes, this is a bit of an over simplification.

HankD
 

Ransom

Active Member
Craigbythesea asked:

Can you please explain to me what you mean in this post? I don't understand it at all.

He means that if you let the KJV-onlyists define what the "W/H text" is, then all modern Bible versions use the "W/H text."

Or, put another way, the KJV-only inmates are demanding to run the asylum again.
 

DeclareHim

New Member
Sure most MV's are translated from Alexandrian texts. KJVO say that ALL Alexandrian mss are W/H text why? Because W/H was an Alexandrian mss. Pure hypocrisy.
 

Askjo

New Member
Originally posted by DeclareHim:
Sure most MV's are translated from Alexandrian texts. KJVO say that ALL Alexandrian mss are W/H text why? Because W/H was an Alexandrian mss. Pure hypocrisy.
Modern versions derived from the W/H text. The W/H text derived from Alexandrian mss.
 

gb93433

Active Member
Site Supporter
Originally posted by Askjo:
Modern versions derived from the W/H text. The W/H text derived from Alexandrian mss.
Man are you outdated. I was never taught such nonsense.
 

Lacy Evans

New Member
I personally am interested in knowing which MV was not influenced by Westcott & Hort's Text. Could somebody clue me in?

Lacy
 

NaasPreacher (C4K)

Well-Known Member
You have brought a measure of logic back into the argument Bro Lacy - the key here is your word "influence" as opposed the the previous phrase used "based on" or "derived from."
 
I think the point of Askjo's thread was that they MVs can be traced, indirectly possibly, back to W/H.
According to this statement they can:


In the introduction to the 24th edition of the Nestle’s Greek New Testament, editors Erwin Nestle and Kurt Aland make the following admission:

"Thus the text, built up on the work of the 19th century , has remained as a whole unchanged, particularly since the research of recent years has not yet led to the establishment of a generally acknowledged N.T. text" (Erwin Nestle and Kurt Aland, Novum Testamentum Graece, 24th edition, 1960, p. 62). (Emphasis mine).
 

HankD

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
I am sure that not all MV are based on WH, but am pretty sure all have been influenced by WH.
I already said the first part of this statement, the NKJV, and the KJV21 for another.

Also I was referring to the difference between the words "influenced by" and "derived from" as being "semantics".

The differences between the accepted texts (TR,W&H) when all the shouting is over is about 3% of the mass of words in the original lauguage texts.

In addition new discoveries such as the Dead Sea Scrolls and the Papyri (especially 66 and 75) have dilluted the issue by showing that examples of both types of readings existed prior to Aleph and B.

HankD
 

gb93433

Active Member
Site Supporter
Originally posted by C4K:
I think the point of Askjo's thread was that they MVs can be traced, indirectly possibly, back to W/H.
Which one of the 35 TR texts do the KJVO's trace their KJV back to?
 

Askjo

New Member
Originally posted by Anti-Alexandrian:
</font><blockquote>quote:</font><hr /> I think the point of Askjo's thread was that they MVs can be traced, indirectly possibly, back to W/H.
According to this statement they can:


In the introduction to the 24th edition of the Nestle’s Greek New Testament, editors Erwin Nestle and Kurt Aland make the following admission:

"Thus the text, built up on the work of the 19th century , has remained as a whole unchanged, particularly since the research of recent years has not yet led to the establishment of a generally acknowledged N.T. text" (Erwin Nestle and Kurt Aland, Novum Testamentum Graece, 24th edition, 1960, p. 62). (Emphasis mine).
</font>[/QUOTE]Absolutely yes!
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