Please remember that James R. White is a W/H man. I have a report that a man from Europe confronted James R. White and asked him some questions. James is incapable to answer them.

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Please remember that James R. White is a W/H man. I have a report that a man from Europe confronted James R. White and asked him some questions. James is incapable to answer them.
I heard that a man from America once had a brother who's step-son made Ruckman's sister's father-in-law's cousin's best-friend aunt very nervous.Originally posted by Askjo:
Please remember that James R. White is a W/H man. I have a report that a man from Europe confronted James R. White and asked him some questions. James is incapable to answer them.![]()
But you are simply wrong because if Psalm 12 is defined as the KJVO want to define it then there must of necessity have been and always must be an identifiable inerrant perfect and pure Word of God that can be "held in my hands" as we are constantly being told.Faulting a "KJVO" for not having an inerrant English translation prior to the KJV is a straw man argument - no matter that most KJVOs take the bait.)
So if it was inerrant then, why re-translate it?Originally posted by Cope:
It was whatever version God had preserved inerrant in order to keep his promise.
Cope [/QB]
The core of the question is: "how do you judge which Bible in any generation is the current manifestation of preservation?" What is your standard?Originally posted by Cope:
I do not see anything in the KJVO argument that demands a currently identifiable and inerrant Bible dating from (or before) 1605. The KJVO believes that God has promised to preserve his word inerrant, for his church, until his return. What in this necessitates that each successive generation need be able to identify the previous generations inerrant Bible?
Blind faith, no. We aren't asked by God to believe something for no reason at all... that's the reason He gave and preserved His Word.Perhaps you mean that faith is not enough?
The Bible says so. There is overwhelming evidence from a multitude of mss and witnesses to the Bible text that God's Word does say these things.But then on what basis do you believe that Abraham and Sarah conceived in old age, or that Jacob wrestled with an angel, or that Jesus walked on water?
Yes. The Bible is evidence for itself. The mss evidence is evidence for it. Archeology has testified to the accuracy of the Bible.Do you have physical evidence that can be handled, or do you believe it by faith?
Can you cite a single scripture that God will preserve to each generation a perfectly worded text? Can you cite a scripture that tells us what mechanism He would use for this type of preservation? Can you cite a scripture that says what type of people He would use for this miraculous preservation?I understand that you will take issue with the idea that God has promised to preserve his word inerrant (though I don't understand how you can call something containing error "God's word" - as God is he who does not err).
Because they must assume a standard of some sort. We want to know what that standard is. If that standard for evaluation points to the KJV and perfect word preservation is true then we should easily be able to identify at least some of the previous "perfect" Bibles.... then compare them to the KJV.What I do not understand is why you would hold the KJVO to a standard to which you do not yourself hold.
Why can't that be the NKJV today?... or the LITV, WEB, H&F Majority Text, NASB, NA27, etc? What means of evaluation did you use to determine KJVO that we can now use to evaluate these other versions?>>>>>
What was that identifiable inerrant perfect and pure Word of God which could be held in one's hands before 1605?
>>>>>
It was whatever version God had preserved inerrant in order to keep his promise.
Cope
So if it was inerrant then, why re-translate it? [/QB]</font>[/QUOTE]It was in a different language.Originally posted by ScottEmerson:
</font><blockquote>quote:</font><hr />Originally posted by Cope:
It was whatever version God had preserved inerrant in order to keep his promise.
Cope
It could not be identified? What about the Greek and Hebrew manuscripts from which the KJ scholars translated?I do not see anything in the KJVO argument that demands a currently identifiable and inerrant Bible dating from (or before) 1605. The KJVO believes that God has promised to preserve his word inerrant, for his church, until his return. What in this necessitates that each successive generation need be able to identify the previous generations inerrant Bible?
Strange that the KJ translators did not even once mention the name of this perfect and inerrant English translation (prior to their work) but they did speak of the manuscripts in the original language and the Septuagint which were instrumental in their work.2. Ofttimes a Christian, whose faith is too weak to accept the literal truth of Psalm 12:6,7, will piously quote Psalm 119:89.
"For ever, O LORD, thy word is settled in heaven."
Then he will state that God actually meant that He preserved His perfect Bible in Heaven, not on Earth. And they say this with a straight face! This escape to a house of straw is embarrassingly humorous.
First, it is foolish for anyone to believe that God inspired a perfect original on earth so that He could have it brought to Heaven. Is that supposed to be the reason that He wrote the originals? The answer is embarrassingly simple. The Bible is addressed to man, not God. God did not write a perfect book directed to man and then put it in a library in Heaven where man cannot benefit from its existence. Again we ask, "What good to us, here and now, is a perfect book locked up out of reach in Heaven?"
Secondly, Psalm 12:6 makes reference to His words being on earth. To preserve them somewhere other than on earth is not to preserve them at all. So we see then that God inspired the originals perfectly. Then over the centuries He has preserved those same words to today. They are found in the Authorized Version.
If it was indeed inerrant then the KJV of the Bible preceded itself in that the KJVO claim for it those same attributes.It was whatever version God had preserved inerrant in order to keep his promise.
The Bible says so. There is overwhelming evidence from a multitude of mss and witnesses to the Bible text that God's Word does say these things.But then on what basis do you believe that Abraham and Sarah conceived in old age, or that Jacob wrestled with an angel, or that Jesus walked on water?
Neither does the KJV.Originally posted by Cope:
I believe that the KJV is God's word, preserved in English, without provable error. I believe it is perfect (complete), pure (nothing added), sure (nothing in doubt), true (not in error). I believe it can rightly be called scripture, that is, an accurate translation of the words initially inspired of God.
The modern versions do not pass these tests.
Actually, it *is* short and simple.Originally posted by Cope:
Short and simple.
Well, I shall say that I have faith that God has preserved His word, and that He presents it AS HE CHOOSES, without regard to any man-made doctrines that some people use to tell Him how they believe He MUST present His word in order for it to pass THEIR criteria for authenticity.Originally posted by Dr. Bob Griffin:
Arch - you cannot disprove FAITH by using logic. No matter WHAT logic and right thinking might demand, one can "blow it off" by saying, "But I believe . . . "
KJVO is ultimately post-modernism!![]()
How then DID God preserve His Word. What does the Bible SAY about it?Originally posted by robycop3:
Well, I shall say that I have faith that God has preserved His word, and that He presents it AS HE CHOOSES, without regard to any man-made doctrines that some people use to tell Him how they believe He MUST present His word in order for it to pass THEIR criteria for authenticity.
On the contrary, nothing I have seen of your posts previously has very much to do with scriptural or historical reasoning. When followed to their head waters, all of your arguments come from a premise of faith based on presupposition. These presuppositions materialize out of thin air... they are your feelings no matter how you disguise them.Originally posted by Cope:
Perhaps you are speaking to someone else, but nothing I have pointed to has had anything to do with the way I feel.
No without evidence you wouldn't believe... you wouldn't even know about it. The fact is we have very specific written testimony that He walked on water, validated by the refusal of the witnesses to deny the truths about Christ even when the price was their lives.Further, not only should feelings eminate from faith, but so should our view of the evidence. If no evidence exists that Jesus walked on water, I still believe it.
As do I. But He did not promise to preserve His Word inerrant solely in the KJV.If God promised to preserve his word inerrant, I still believe it.
Because the Holy Spirit enlightens me through the scriptures that these events actually occurred. That fact does not negate the other fact that we have an abundance of evidence testifying to the accuracy and reliability of the biblical texts.I am not asking why you believe that the original manuscripts said these things. I am asking you why believe that these events actually occured.
Yes it is!!! It is the primary evidence that these things happened. A written document is a stronger witness than even an eyewitness. Current law recognizes this as did the Apostle Peter.The fact that the original autographs contained these verses is not evidence that these things actually happened.
Sorry but no. The same logic does not support KJVOnlyism. The Bible explicitly tells us many things. I believe that it implicitly suggests many other things. It neither implicitly nor explicitly establishes version onlyism. The history of the Bible itself is overwhelming evidence against such a notion.You believe that they actually happened because you believe that the Bible is a reliable document and that what it says is true. It is on this same basis that I formulate my belief that the KJV is without error.
I believe that the Bible teaches that God will preserve his word without error,[qb] Which brings us to an immediate, insurmountable problem with your view...
The KJV was not a preservation of anything. It was new and unique in all of history in 1611. The translators drew from numerous sources, not just one. You have put them in the position of assembling the "perfect" from the "imperfect". That task demands direct intervention by God Himself. The question then becomes "What kind of men were the KJV translators and were they qualified as writers of scripture?" The answers: they were men who held several serious false doctrines and, NO, they were not qualified as prophets, Apostles, nor holy men of old.[qb] And so, once one believes that the Bible is reliable, and the it teaches inerrant perservation, one does not need an identifiable, inerrant Bible in existence prior to 1611. One only need the promise in the Bible.But you still lack the bridge necessary to make your belief scriptural. You have done nothing but woven a very elaborate means of evasion. Your "belief" in the inerrant preservation of words fails several tests.
It fails because as I noted above, the KJV is not a preservation of anything and we know this to be a fact.
It fails because the external evidence of Bible transmission history is completely contradictory to your belief.
It fails because the internal evidence from even the KJV itself contradicts the notion that perfect words are necessary to maintain the perfect Word.
Once again you are attempting to evade the hard issues by changing the subject. You claim that you can scriptural prove your position. The questions I asked above are absolutely essential to proving such an idea.>>>>>
Can you cite a single scripture that God will preserve to each generation a perfectly worded text? Can you cite a scripture that tells us what mechanism He would use for this type of preservation? Can you cite a scripture that says what type of people He would use for this miraculous preservation?
>>>>>
I will outline, from Scripture, why I believe that the KJV is God's word preserved in English without provable error when you sufficiently answer the following:
Yes. Galatians 1:12 to start with. I will be willing to go further down this line once you have given fair treatment to my questions.1. Can you cite a single scripture that states the originals were inspired?
And quite notably, none of these were the KJV... proving that versions other than the KJV are valid.To the contrary, there are several cases where *copies* and *translations* are referred to as scripture.
Yes. In Luke 4:17, Jesus refers to Isaiah 61 by reading from the scriptures. The words in Luke 4:18 are not the same in form or even detail as the words in Isaiah 61.2. Can you cite a single scripture that refers to something that contains *ERROR* as either the word of God, or scripture?
That evasion might give you an out for the most part but not in the example above. In the example above, we are told specifically that Jesus read from a book.I am not asking you to find a NT quotation of an OT passage wherein the NT quotation differs from the OT quotation. To call that an error would be to call the original autograph of the NT an error.
When you compare the KJV with the NKJV, NASB, Geneva, etc., I am looking for a provable *ERROR* not a *DIFFERENCE*. You would arbitrarily say that the KJV is the standard by which other English versions are to be judged. Presumably a "DIFFERENCE" from the KJV in one of these versions would constitute an "ERROR". But then, without any reason whatsoever, you suspend this rule when comparing the KJV with other parts of the KJV.I am looking for an *ERROR* not a *DIFFERENCE*
FTR, the KJV both takes away and adds to the Word of God, ie. "God forbid" in Romans. Also, God never spoke through a writer of scripture in English so it is completely accurate to say that NONE of the words in the KJV were part of the "every word from the mouth of God."3. Why is the inerrancy of the originals important, and not of copies and translations? When did inerrancy cease to be important? (Dt. 4:4 (et al) states that adding to and taking away from God's word incapacitates one in his obedience to God. Mt. 4:4 and Lk. 4:4 teach that EVERY word from the mouth of God is important.)
Once again you are evading legitimate issues. I didn't say that you said this. I said the KJV translators did.>>>>>
The KJV translators used the example of a decree from the king. They said that if different people translated such a decree into a different language, all of the translations would be the word of the king as long as they accurately communicated the meaning of the decree... even though some wouldn't do it as well as others. In other words, it doesn't require perfect wording to accurately reflect someone's word.
>>>>>
In addition to the fact that I did not say any of this, you have taken the argument further than is necessary and then drawn an unecessary conclusion. Anyone who uses the argument as you presented it would be silly. We should stick to the arguments at hand, rather than present and refute those not under discussiong, especially when presenting them in a way favorable to your conclusion.
These verses say absolutely nothing about KJVOnlyism or any other version onlyism.>>>>>
We want to know what that standard is.
>>>>>
The standard is, in part, Ps. 19, II Tim. 3:16,
The character? Agreed. But character does not equal a single set of words in any language.and various other verses in the Bible that describe the character of God's word.
This is based on your presuppositions, not fact. The KJV does have internal errors, ie. 2 Kings 8:26 v 2 Chronicles 22:2, the various texts of the crucifixion signs. I know that these differences come from the original language texts but that in and of itself doesn't resolve them. These things are "either or" propositions. Both simply does not work.The fact that there is no provable error in the KJV itself (testing it internally and externally) prevents this argument from being circular.
Not true. If you establish a system by some manipulation of the scriptures but specialize it to pertain only to the KJV then it cannot be "preservation" of any kind.If the KJVO cannot demonstrate his position from scripture, then he has trouble, of course. However, if he is unable to find a pre-1611 translation of the word of God without error he is in no trouble at all.
The only test these versions don't pass is that of your presuppositions or of being the KJV.>>>>>
Why can't that be the NKJV today?... or the LITV, WEB, H&F Majority Text, NASB, NA27, etc?
>>>>>
None of these meets the tests outlined above, the KJV does.
Not fair to answer a question with a question! But simple enough, so . . God gave His Word, guided men to write it, and preserved it in those documents and copies of them. Man might have added/subtracted, misspelled (is that spelled right?) etc, but we have hundreds of copies of these originals.Originally posted by Terry_Herrington:
Well Dr. Bob, let me turn the tables and ask you to answer your own question. How did God preserve the Bible?
Not fair to answer a question with a question! But simple enough, so . . God gave His Word, guided men to write it, and preserved it in those documents and copies of them. Man might have added/subtracted, misspelled (is that spelled right?) etc, but we have hundreds of copies of these originals.Originally posted by Dr. Bob Griffin:
</font><blockquote>quote:</font><hr />Originally posted by Terry_Herrington:
Well Dr. Bob, let me turn the tables and ask you to answer your own question. How did God preserve the Bible?