First, you did not heed the admonition of studying God’s word (2Tiimothy 2:15)
Second, there was no counterpoint on your part so that “antiquity” could not work against the KJV.
Third, your “consistent” presentation of seeming errors in the KJV is a consistent error on your part. Of course, you could not correct the Holy writ. It will always correct us. Actually, your method has no bearing and serves no evidence to find fault with the KJV.
Fourth, to give you a fair play of something you posted of comparing two English Bibles, I have to assume with the following implications:
1. Translation error, however, the KJV is correct with translation concern. Evidence..
a. Internal evidence. The Hebrew word simply means pillow
b. Context means it’s a pillow that is being
sewed. Your magic charm? No…
Magical Charms - Mystical Amulets Love Charms Money Magic Charms Success Charms Protection Charms Mystical Healing Charms
c. External evidence – shows the fact that Egyptian culture and magic involves pillows so we have “pillow magic”.
The Pillow Amulet ***
2. Antiquity:
Perhaps this may be your slightest chance to degenerate the “outdated /obsolete” 1611 English but antiquity could not work against the KJV! Let’s see your proposal:
Given 1611 English KJV considered by many here as obsolete, then what about the NIV where the NT was first published in 1973 and the OT was publish in 1978. I also assume that this must be a default English with a mock test for Ezek. Being the given text. According to my source, your “magic charm” is also out-dated! To break this spell out in your eyes…
Magic is first used in the late 14C yet the NIV used them, too old for me.
https://www.etymonline.com/word/magic
charm is first used was during 1300’s yet in this test, it is antiquated.
https://www.etymonline.com/word/charm
So in short and in plain language, the antiquity used against the KJV is definitely wrong and the argument is entirely no weight. I have to agree it’s a bogus claim!