I know you're a moderator, but is not that a derogatory statement about a version of the Bible? I thought that was against forum rules?
It appears to be a personal opinion.
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I know you're a moderator, but is not that a derogatory statement about a version of the Bible? I thought that was against forum rules?
There are other sources of Divine Revelation than the Bible. We see General Revelation all around us. "The Heavens declare the Glory of God and the firmament showeth forth His handiwork." However, that General Revelation tells us of the existence of God but not what he desires from us. For that we need Specific Revelation, God's Self Revelation to us which tells us Who He is and what He wants.
General Revelation can teach us the existence of God. That is creation.
Specific or Special Revelation is necessary for salvation. That is the Bible.
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Without the Bible, man would deduce that some "Higher Intelligence" created all matter & energy, but he wouldn't know who that "intelligence" is.
All I know is that if the KJT is the only translation a man can trust he should use it.
If a man can trust other sound translations than he ought to use those as well.
Can't argue with that. Someone will probably try to, though!
You can trust anything or anybody, ask Bernie Madoff. Trusting any translation does not make that translation reliable.
You cannot get past the KJV's poor translation of 1 Tim. 6:10, let alone any other goofs in it.
I couldn't help but notice Cranston did not reply to my comments on the verse.I happen think that the KJV translators got that particular verse (almost) right, the expression being hyperbolic and in context with the preceding verses. The NET is among the few modern version, IMO, that have rendered it correctly, the rest having taken it upon themselves (following some pretty prestigious examples, such as Luther, to be sure) to correct the apostle's wording.
See I told you, C4K! I could feel it in my bones.:laugh:
That applies to the KJV also, since it is a translation.
Rippon you are absolutely right. I have to disagree with C4K on this particular issue because it is just not correct. It is not a matter that the early versions of the KJV were accurate and I am talking about the 1769 version later; but, is it accurate today?That statement would have been true from 1611 to the 1880's, by not since then.
No. It is based on the Alexandrian textform.Isn't the net Bible also based on the Byzantine textform?
Don't be too quick to discount the eye of the needle being a small opening adjacent to the main gate. Remember Emperor Hadrian destroyed Jerusalem, including much of the city wall, in the 2nd century AD. See the following:I listened to a KJVO pastor at my daughter's church, whom I love dearly, but disagree on his theology and we both know that we must agree to disagree because both of us are strong in our beliefs. But, he actually said that the meaning of the Greek for the eye-of-the-needle is a smaller gate built into the bigger gate to let the sheep pass through. This old fable has nothing to do with the KJV, but he was using it as an issue that in the KJV that's what it means and in the Modern versions it means a real needle. Sorry, but there has never been any evidence for that story to be truthful and I've been to Israel and asked archeologists there specifically about that story and they say there is nothing to it. (These are Christians I talked with---see there are a lot of athiests in Israel among the Jews, Arabs and other groups who are in the Israeli military.) Israel is not the holy land people think they are going to find, unless Catholic shrines stuck on everything counts. Israel is known as a party country with little regard to any religion; in reality.
It is possible that #2 above is the remains of the "eye of the needle" Jesus was talking about.I always wondered about that phrase in the Gospels ... until I happened to hear of a place quite near to the Holy Sepulcher ... a place called: The Russian Excavations, or St. Alexander's Chapel in honor of St. Alexander Nevsky.
The name Russian Excavations comes from the archeological excavations carried out in 1883 by Archimandrite Antonin Kapoustin, Chief of the Russian Ecclesiastical Mission in Jerusalem. He was a talented, but amateur archeologist. The area excavated was within the headquarters built by the Orthodox Palestine Society.
In the late 1880's there were so many Russian pilgrims walking all the way to the Holy Land, that the Czar received permission to buy this area and create a hostel for the Russian "Orthodox" Pilgrims. A place where they could rest, be understood and cared for by their own people. It used the name "Palestine" because that was the official name of this country at the time. And it was to be a "Society" so that it would be autonomous from the official Russian Orthodox Church. (At present, the president of this society, here and abroad, is His Eminence Bishop Anthony Grabbe.)
Under layers of stone and dirt, left there after the destruction of the Church of the Holy Sepulcher in 1009 by Caliph Hakim in a maniac fit of anger, they listed as discovered the following:
1. Remnants of the Judgement Gate, built in the 1st century BC by King Herod the Great.
2. Remnants of an arch and two columns, built by the Roman Emperor Hadrian in the beginning of the 2nd century AD.
3. Remnants of the Basilica built by the Byzantine queen St. Helena at the beginning of the 4th century.
4. Remnants of a convent of the Chanoines (a holy order of monks who were servants at the Holy Sepulcher in the time of the Crusades).
Fr. James Heinsch ofm
Yes. Not in a single condensed point like what you just wrote, but He did promise to preserve His word.Winman said:God said he would preserve his pure word.
Again, yes.Winman said:I believe that, so the preserved and pure word of God must exist in the world.
Logical conclusion. Not quite right, but logical. God will take care of His word... we are to obey it.Wiman said:My task is to identify that preserved and pure word.
And then you jumped off the dock of logical thinking into the sea of complete personal preference. While they are not the same, no one has the authority or knowledge to be able to point their finger and say "This one is right" or "This one is wrong." The fact is that we just don't know and God isn't giving us any hints.Winman said:But I will never believe the Critical Text and Received Text the same and do not see how any intelligent person can. One has nearly 3000 less words in the Greek than the other. Either one added to God's word, or one diminished from it, but they are not the same.
Yes. Not in a single condensed point like what you just wrote, but He did promise to preserve His word.
Again, yes.
Logical conclusion. Not quite right, but logical. God will take care of His word... we are to obey it.
And then you jumped off the dock of logical thinking into the sea of complete personal preference. While they are not the same, no one has the authority or knowledge to be able to point their finger and say "This one is right" or "This one is wrong." The fact is that we just don't know and God isn't giving us any hints.
Honestly, I doubt either one is 100% correct, but that doesn't shake my faith in God, His word, or His promise to preserve it. God will do so regardless of man's attempts to help him along or man's efforts to push their own agenda/interpretations. We just won't know for sure until we get to heaven and then it won't mater because we will have the Word Himself.
Don't be too quick to discount the eye of the needle being a small opening adjacent to the main gate. Remember Emperor Hadrian destroyed Jerusalem, including much of the city wall, in the 2nd century AD. ... It is possible that #2 above is the remains of the "eye of the needle" Jesus was talking about.
Tractate Berakoth 55b, as translated by Maurice Simon, from Contents of the Soncino Babylonian Talmud, London, 1935.R. Samuel b. Nahmani said in the name of R. Jonathan: A man is shown in a dream only what is suggested by his own thoughts, as it says, As for thee, Oh King, thy thoughts came into thy mind upon thy bed. Or if you like, I can derive it from here: That thou mayest know the thoughts of the heart.
Raba said: This is proved by the fact that a man is never shown in a dream a date palm of gold, or an elephant going through the eye of a needle.
And it wasn't the KJV that did it. It was God and his word.None of the modern versions can compare with this. What great revivals have ever been attributed to the MVs? It was not the MVs that were taken to every continent and nearly every nation on earth.
No, the KJV was just the version that was out at the time.You think that a coincidence? I don't. So I believe history itself shows strong support for the KJB.
Of course the RT was out(1500's) before the CT(1800's). What can be proved is that manuscript evidence is typically older for the CT in the variants. That doesn't prove anything more than the majority does. There are many factors that have to be weighed in the picture.And you know, try as you might, you folks cannot prove that the RT did not exist before the CT. The RT has support from early church fathers and scriptures written in other languages that the CT cannot produce. It has a trail of continuity back to the first centuries well before the CT.