The Error of KJV-Onlyism

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Sipsey

Well-known member
Sep 27, 2018
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Most seminary graduates today have been influenced out of their belief in God's word and into the belief that they can properly correct it and understand it better than the simpletons because they've been educated in Greek and Hebrew.
I don't know any of these students, do you?
 

Bible_Highlighter

Well-known member
Nov 28, 2023
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I don't know any of these students, do you?
Some articles I posted in this thread talk about how students fall away from the faith when they attend Bible college. They are not KJV-only articles, either. So yes. It happens. No surprise because they learn of Textual Criticism that makes them doubt God's Word and not trust it. When I first confronted Textual Criticism early on in my faith back in 1992, and its attacks on the Bible, it made me doubt for a fraction of a second that God's Word could not be trusted. Years later, the supposed error this Textual Critic pointed out was resolved by looking at other verses in Scripture. So don't be deceived by the Science of Textual Criticism. Bart Ehrman and Rick Beckman both fell away from the faith due to the false science of textual criticism.
 

Bible_Highlighter

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Naturally, if you learn about a "teaching" that makes you question the words of God (like the serpent did with Eve in the garden), apostasy is a logical next step for many. If you cannot trust God's words in some places then why trust them in other parts?

It would mean God's word is not trustworthy if it has errors in it. We walk by faith in what His Word says.
How do you truly know what His Word says if you have a Bible that is corrupted?
It could be entirely corrupt for all you know. But if you believe the promises of Psalms 12:6-7, this is not a problem.
You simply then walk by faith and trust God's Word no matter what.
 

Bible_Highlighter

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Nov 28, 2023
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Why do you believe in the resurrection?
Is it because you learned that there are tons of great manuscript evidence for it?
Is it because you learned of scientific evidence of the resurrection?
Generally, we just believe the gospel by faith in what God’s Word says.
So it is with the Bible’s own teachings on the doctrines of purity and preservation.
One either accepts these verses like they would the verses that talk about resurrection.
However, I believe many do not like the idea of a perfect Bible they have to be in authority under because it does not sit well with them. They like the idea of treating the 5% parts of God’s Word as if it was silly putty. They get to sit in the seat of God and determine what God said and did not say. The scholar of course will get a rush from others falling his so-called expertise. You can bend the knee and kiss his ring to his great knowledge. But Christians are to learn by the Anointing of the Spirit instead (1 John 2:27). We just simply believe the Bible and we are not looking to complicate our faith in His Word.
 

iamsoandso

Senior Member
Oct 6, 2011
8,048
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I am still in the midst of relearning a few things I once studied some time ago. See if you agree with this summation:
https://christianity.stackexchange....bout-jeromes-latin-translation-of-the-bible-t

lol,hmm this will bring a little friction but never the less... If you notice there has always been debate between Paul and the law of Moses even in the 1st century(Acts 15 ,24 ect.)... There were other groups that believed in Christ but with different ideas of his person/deity. For instance the Ebionites who also wrote or interpreted their own writings(Gospels) believed Jesus was the Messiah but they did not believe he was born of virgin birth(to them they saw Joseph as Jesus father). There was also the "Nazarene sect" with different views from the 12 Apostles,Paul ect.... In Luke he begins with saying that there were "many" who had "drew up a narration" but then in verse 3-4 is saying that he was writing to so that he/they would know with "certainty"(they were seeing Gospels that ere different from the Apostles) https://biblehub.com/interlinear/luke/1.htm https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ebionites

So look real close at Jerome, Pamphilus ect. along with the Q,,M source ect. because if you do you will notice that in Jerome's commentaries he says that there was a Gospel wrote by the apostle and it was interpreted but they didn't no who interpreted it. He(Jerome that translated the LV) says his own self that the Gospel he obtained was "Gospel of the Hebrews" that the Nazarene sect. was using in Caesarea(they called it the Gospel of Matthew). Anyway it's a touchy subject because even when Jerome interpreted it he didn't know if there were two different men who wrote a Gospel( the Apostle Matthew and an Ebionite also named Matthew) or if the to had become combined during interpretations by ad400(meaning the original by the Apostle was lost because of it)... Look at this your own self because everyone is going to see it different they have since ad400 when Jerome translated it and it was put in the LV...
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hebrew_Gospel_hypothesis https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nazarene_(sect)
 

Dino246

Senior Member
Jun 30, 2015
25,491
13,797
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Here is the problem of the Science of Textual Criticism:

The textual critic approaches the Bible as he would any other literary work of antiquity in which the original autographs are no longer available. The premise is that since the original copies have long since perished and that which has survived consists of questionable, conflicting copies, it is, therefore, impossible to have a pure Bible.
Your source is clearly biased and therefore unreliable.
 

Dino246

Senior Member
Jun 30, 2015
25,491
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Most seminary graduates today have been influenced out of their belief in God's word and into the belief that they can properly correct it and understand it better than the simpletons because they've been educated in Greek and Hebrew.
"Most seminary graduates"? Really? Where are the testimonies and the statistics to support your assertion?
 

John146

Senior Member
Jan 13, 2016
17,130
3,689
113
"Most seminary graduates"? Really? Where are the testimonies and the statistics to support your assertion?
Pull up just about any pastor’s sermon and listen. It doesn’t take long to figure out.

A better way to say this is…
The Greek word is…which means…
Thats not a good translation, a better word would be…
The original says…
 

John146

Senior Member
Jan 13, 2016
17,130
3,689
113
"Most seminary graduates"? Really? Where are the testimonies and the statistics to support your assertion?
Can you give me one pastor who believes they are holding the word of God without error? That needs no correction?
 

Nehemiah6

Senior Member
Jul 18, 2017
26,074
13,777
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I don't know any of these students, do you?
What you can do is obtain two books by Harold Lindsell; (1) The Battle for the Bible and (2) The Bible in the Balance (and I own both).

Both books expose -- in meticulous detail -- how many evangelical Bible colleges and seminaries departed from the doctrine of biblical inerrancy -- that there are no errors of any kind in the Bible. That because it is the Word of God, there can be no errors in it.

The divine inspiration of Scripture demands belief in biblical inerrancy and infallibility. But many "scholars" have rejected this doctrine. This is a result of Higher and Lower Criticism being taught in seminaries. As a result many seminary graduates do not have a firm belief in biblical inerrancy, nor the divine preservation of Scripture.

Shockingly, most of the fundamentalist seminaries accepted the bogus theory of Westcott & Hort, and ignored everything that exposed their lies. Thus they rejected the King James Bible, and now almost all evangelical and even fundamentalist churches use modern bible versions. All of which are corrupt.
 

Dino246

Senior Member
Jun 30, 2015
25,491
13,797
113
Pull up just about any pastor’s sermon and listen. It doesn’t take long to figure out.

A better way to say this is…
The Greek word is…which means…
Thats not a good translation, a better word would be…
The original says…
You made the assumption, you provide the evidence. I am not obligated to do your homework for you.
 

selahsays

Well-known member
May 31, 2023
2,796
1,484
113
Why do you believe in the resurrection?
Is it because you learned that there are tons of great manuscript evidence for it?
Is it because you learned of scientific evidence of the resurrection?
Generally, we just believe the gospel by faith in what God’s Word says.
So it is with the Bible’s own teachings on the doctrines of purity and preservation.
One either accepts these verses like they would the verses that talk about resurrection.
However, I believe many do not like the idea of a perfect Bible they have to be in authority under because it does not sit well with them. They like the idea of treating the 5% parts of God’s Word as if it was silly putty. They get to sit in the seat of God and determine what God said and did not say. The scholar of course will get a rush from others falling his so-called expertise. You can bend the knee and kiss his ring to his great knowledge. But Christians are to learn by the Anointing of the Spirit instead (1 John 2:27). We just simply believe the Bible and we are not looking to complicate our faith in His Word.
How long will you continue with this thread? Many of the things you say are false; they’re presumptions and downright lies. Let’s move on, shall w?
 

Sipsey

Well-known member
Sep 27, 2018
1,481
695
113
lol,hmm this will bring a little friction but never the less... If you notice there has always been debate between Paul and the law of Moses even in the 1st century(Acts 15 ,24 ect.)... There were other groups that believed in Christ but with different ideas of his person/deity. For instance the Ebionites who also wrote or interpreted their own writings(Gospels) believed Jesus was the Messiah but they did not believe he was born of virgin birth(to them they saw Joseph as Jesus father). There was also the "Nazarene sect" with different views from the 12 Apostles,Paul ect.... In Luke he begins with saying that there were "many" who had "drew up a narration" but then in verse 3-4 is saying that he was writing to so that he/they would know with "certainty"(they were seeing Gospels that ere different from the Apostles) https://biblehub.com/interlinear/luke/1.htm https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ebionites

So look real close at Jerome, Pamphilus ect. along with the Q,,M source ect. because if you do you will notice that in Jerome's commentaries he says that there was a Gospel wrote by the apostle and it was interpreted but they didn't no who interpreted it. He(Jerome that translated the LV) says his own self that the Gospel he obtained was "Gospel of the Hebrews" that the Nazarene sect. was using in Caesarea(they called it the Gospel of Matthew). Anyway it's a touchy subject because even when Jerome interpreted it he didn't know if there were two different men who wrote a Gospel( the Apostle Matthew and an Ebionite also named Matthew) or if the to had become combined during interpretations by ad400(meaning the original by the Apostle was lost because of it)... Look at this your own self because everyone is going to see it different they have since ad400 when Jerome translated it and it was put in the LV...
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hebrew_Gospel_hypothesis https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nazarene_(sect)
No issues here. The more one digs, the more rabbit trails come into view. Biblical history is not nearly as clean-cut as we would like. I am confident that what we have is darn close. I do enjoy studying and have a friend with a huge library that spent several years in seminary to learn Greek and Hebrew. Just got off the phone with him after discussing early translations. I do a lot of research in my job, and I study a good deal, but I am by no means an expert at anything, except maybe fishing.:)
 

Bible_Highlighter

Well-known member
Nov 28, 2023
2,070
336
83
What you can do is obtain two books by Harold Lindsell; (1) The Battle for the Bible and (2) The Bible in the Balance (and I own both).

Both books expose -- in meticulous detail -- how many evangelical Bible colleges and seminaries departed from the doctrine of biblical inerrancy -- that there are no errors of any kind in the Bible. That because it is the Word of God, there can be no errors in it.

The divine inspiration of Scripture demands belief in biblical inerrancy and infallibility. But many "scholars" have rejected this doctrine. This is a result of Higher and Lower Criticism being taught in seminaries. As a result many seminary graduates do not have a firm belief in biblical inerrancy, nor the divine preservation of Scripture.

Shockingly, most of the fundamentalist seminaries accepted the bogus theory of Westcott & Hort, and ignored everything that exposed their lies. Thus they rejected the King James Bible, and now almost all evangelical and even fundamentalist churches use modern bible versions. All of which are corrupt.
I just got the books on Westcott and Hort’s letters written by their sons.

Also, thank you for the book recommendations. I will have to add them to my wish list.
 

Bible_Highlighter

Well-known member
Nov 28, 2023
2,070
336
83
To all:

Understand that two different kinds of faiths can be seen today. One can either follow the Modern Translations or follow the Bible that Christians had for hundreds of years. I was just looking at an article on how the Word is good. The author proceeded to mention verses in Psalms 119. However, the problem was that he was referring to words that my Bible does not say. We have two different faiths. They are similar, but not exactly the same because the words are not precisely the same. So one must choose which side you want to be on. Do you go with heretics to translate your Bible like Westcott and Hort? Or do you go with a Bible that was translated by 47 well-learned men who worked in six different committees and who really knew the languages and were almost destroyed by the Catholic Church? Do you follow the Modern Bibles that have corrupt doctrines? Or do you follow the established Bible that is pure in doctrine? Ultimately common sense tells us to follow that which is good.

I hope this helps the person who has ears to hear on this very important matter.

May the Lord Jesus Christ bless you all.
 

Bible_Highlighter

Well-known member
Nov 28, 2023
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Anglo-centric folly.
And the Popular Modern Textual Critic’s would be a….

Westcott and Hort-centric folly.

Also, nothing in the KJB translation is placed in it to favor Anglicanism. But we do see Westcott and Hort favoring texts that align with their heretical beliefs. Therein lies the difference.