Since the first King James Bible, there have been over 400 word changes to the
KJB. At what point did the KJB become the perfect Word of God? Was it in 1612,
1613, 1616, 1629, 1638, or 1769? The KJB was edited in each of those years. Was
it the Oxford edition or the Cambridge edition? Victorian text? The Pure Cambridge
Edition? Collins editions? The Concord text? The Scrivener’s Edition? For example:
Oxford: Jeremiah 34:16 But ye turned and polluted my name, and caused every man
his servant, and every man his handmaid, whom he had set at liberty at their pleasure,
to return, and brought them into subjection, to be unto you for servants and for handmaids.
Cambridge: Jeremiah 34:16 But ye turned and polluted my name, and caused every man
his servant, and every man his handmaid, whom ye had set at liberty at their pleasure,
to return, and brought them into subjection, to be unto you for servants and for handmaids.
This has been addressed over and over on the KJV threads. Did your question come about honestly or from a website? 99% of the changes you are questioning are spelling as in "feare" to "fear".
Bible agnostics and unbelievers in the inerrancy of ANY Bible in any language are always bringing them up in an effort to prove to us that the King James Bible is not the inerrant words of God. Of course they themselves don't have one they will ever show us, but they seem to want us to hold the same position of unbelief they do.
Some King James Bible believers sincerely ask: "Why didn't God intervene to preserve the printing process so that the KJB was absolutely perfect the first time?" I think this is a legitimate question and I have some ideas on why God did it this way.
The originals never did make up an entire Bible - not even close to it. Only God knew which texts and readings and meanings were the ones He intended and inspired.
And just as God, who is the ruler among the nations, and who sees the end from the beginning, used imperfect yet believing men to give us those never seen originals in the first place, so too did He used a group of imperfect yet believing men to gather together into one Book His perfect, infallible and inspired words.
But the text of the King James Bible has never been "revised". Spelling and punctuation have been updated. In 1611 and even much later in the history of the English language, the rules of spelling were not as fixed as they are today.
We start out with a perfect underlying text; the specific Hebrew and Greek texts that God guided the King James Bible translators to use as the basis of The Holy Bible. And just as words sometimes dropped out of the manuscripts by copyists, or were misspelled, (often just one letter as "he/she" or "ye/he"), so too with the continued guidance of God they were soon caught and corrected to their original purity. We see this same process to a much smaller degree having taken place in the printings of the King James Bible. No other book in history has undergone such rigorous examination and attention to detail.
So rather than seeing the accidental occurrences of minor printing errors that were soon caught and corrected as a stumbling block that causes unbelief in an inerrant Bible, what we see is an illustration of the process the originals themselves went through until God had gathered them all together into one perfect Book of the LORD. (Isaiah 34:16)