Straw man. I never said I was an originals onlyist. An accurate copy of a document has the same words.
While different beliefs do exist, there are primarily three positions to my knowledge involving this topic.
#1. The Modern scholar's chosen manuscripts make up the Word of God (Despite their many differences between each other and or their errors). Generally, this is the Alexandrian manuscripts (Vaticanus and Sinaiticus - NT Greek texts), and the LXX (False manuscripts that are supposed to be a translation of the Old Testament before Christ written in Greek). This also could include the Hebraica (and its later variations) that is used in the OT portion for Modern Bibles and this was originally created by a German rationalist who was anti-semitic. This is the most common belief today. They see the Word of God as in a constant state of flux or like evolution. Some words are true and others are false. The individual or the scholar gets to choose. It's like a "Choose Your Own Adventure Bible." There is no real Word of God that can somebody can point to and say this is God's Holy Word.
#2. While it is not as common, you will get a few Christians who primarily just look to all of the Modern English translations, compiled together to make up the Word of God or the Bible. While they may respect the original language copies, they are more focused on the Bible speaking to us in the contemporary languages as being the Bible for today. This is problematic because Modern Bibles contradict even each other in many places. Even the NIV contradicts a previous edition of itself. These were not changes done to perfect printing errors or to get back to the original handwritten master copy, like with the King James Bible.
#3. The King James Bible is the Word of God that is perfect and without error.
Side Note: I am aware there are Majority Text Only folks, and KJB Only preferred type believers. But they are not as common.
If your belief is different to the ones mentioned above, then it is on you to reveal to me and others what you actually believe. Generally, most hold to #1 on my list. If that is not what you believe, please share what you actually believe.
Bible Highlighter said:
God was not concerned with the originals but with the copy. The copy was not any less perfect than the original.
You said:
The KJV is not a copy of the scriptures. It is a translation of it.
My point was to ultimately refute the popular belief today that says, "
Only the original manuscripts" are inspired, and no copy today can be perfect or error-free like the originals. Unless I had a brain fart, and said something off while being overzealous again, which sometimes happens, I was not intending to claim that the KJB is a copy. The Pure Cambridge KJV (WW2) (by A.W. Pollard) is an accurate translation of the originals.
You said:
Timothy did not have a King James translation. Jeremiah wrote in Hebrew, not King James English. So these are arguments against your position.
Not really, my friend.
Textual Critic Christians say that the Bible must be in the Hebrew, Aramaic, and Greek because that is what the original languages that they had written them in. However....
(1) There was never any Hebrew, Aramaic, and Greek Scriptures bound together into one book by early Christians.
(2) We are told in Isaiah 34:16 to seek ye out the book of the Lord and read it (See my post here for pictorial examples of verses in Revelation connecting in with Isaiah 34, which shows that Isaiah 34:16 is talking about our having a Book of the Lord during the End Times). How can we read this book if they are in dead languages that are long gone? The only way we can understand such languages is if they are translated.
(3) God is not the God of the dead, but of the living. God does not exist only in the past with these dead languages.
(4) God translates many times in the Scriptures. So it would be consistent about what we know about God if He translated the Scriptures into another language. God did not keep the Scriptures in Hebrew, but He moved them to Greek, proving that God is not concerned with staying in one original language only.
(5) God is concerned about spreading the truth within the Great Commission. This job would be greatly hindered if we had to learn three dead languages, which would be lifetime pursuits.
(6) English is the world language. There are several articles on this., whereby they make their case
(7) The KJB is the most printed book in the world and it is the most influential book.
You said:
Don't make junk up and attribute it to God. You don't know what concerns God had about original manuscripts of scriptures beyond what had been revealed. At the end of the book of Job, Job was to make a sacrifice and pray for his friends who had wrongly spoken about the Almighty.
Bruce Metzger who is hailed as a great in Textual Criticism does not believe the story of Job actually happened.
Note on Job: “The ancient folktale of a patient Job circulated orally among oriental sages in the second millennium B.C. and was probably written down in Hebrew at the time of David and Solomon or a century later (about 1000-800 B.C.)” (Metzger and May,
New Oxford Annotated Bible). (
Article Source)
You said:
If you make up ideas or attitudes and attribute them to God, why wouldn't you do that about me?
Look in the mirror.
You said:
Where did I bring up or defent Textual Criticism?
If the roles were reversed and I did not believe in a particular belief that the person said, I would not be evasive or mysterious about my belief but I would simply tell them what I actually believe. So what do you believe instead? Will I get an answer?
You said:
The KJV is partly translated from the Textus Receptus, the result of textual criticism, so if you are against textual criticism, you should oppose the KJV.
You are confused about translation done in the past by faithful men vs. Modern Textual Criticism, which does not believe in the divine preservation of God's Words, and they attempt to handle the text like they would any other man-made document. No special spiritual considerations are taken into account. Modern Textual Criticism also has not been able to come out with one settled text, either. They are always in a constant state of flux or evolution with some new exciting manuscript discovery just waiting around the corner to be discovered in some cave somewhere. They don't fully have the words of God. They have a Frankenstein monster of a Bible with some parts of that being true and other parts being false (With them sitting in the seat of God and determining what God said and did not say). They cannot identify any book that is the perfect and infallible words of God on the planet. So then, they or the scholars ultimately become the authority and not God.