What Bible translation are you using?
I use the Pure Cambridge KJV Edition (circa. early 1900), which can be found at Biblehub.com online or by picking up the Cambridge Edition by Holman Publishers (See
here at Amazon).
Brandon Peterson in the video may be using the Authorized Version (1769 Blayney Oxford KJB Edition) (Note: This would be the edition with the Apocrypha removed in 1885). But I am not sure which edition he is using in the screencap I provided from his video. There is no difference between these two KJB editions to my knowledge in the passages presented in the video. Brandon has taken the verses and highlighted them in color with some kind of computer program.
You said:
Revelation 6:13-14
King James Version
13 And the stars of heaven fell unto the earth, even as a fig tree casteth her untimely figs, when she is shaken of a mighty wind.
14 And the heaven departed as a scroll when it is rolled together; and every mountain and island were moved out of their places.
I don't see any differences. The verses of Revelation in the KJB in the video say the same thing as the KJV passage of Revelation you just posted unless you care to point out the differences. In the screen capture: One side is showing Isaiah 34 on the left, and the other side is showing Revelation on the right side.
You said:
That verse doesn't support KJV-onlyism if we read it in the KJV.
*Sigh* The verses he shows do not openly declare the words, "
Believe only in the KJV as the perfect Word of God."
You're missing the point.
It's more biblically systematic than that.
The main point here by the screencaps of the video that I wanted to show is that:
1. Multiple unspecified nations are being addressed in Isaiah 34.
2. Words within verses in Revelation are tied to words in Isaiah 34.
So this means that when Isaiah 34:16 says we are to seek ye out the Book of the Lord and read it, this would be in context to addressing most likely everybody in the world during the End Times mentioned in Revelation. So this means there is going to be an actual Book of the Lord in the times mentioned in Revelation. Logic dictates that we would have that Book of the Lord today seeing we are drawing ever closer to the time in Revelation.
You said:
If you discuss KJV-onlyism with KJV-onlyists, arguments for it just keep getting weaker and weaker and weirder and weirder.
What do you think I am saying here that is so weird?
I did not write the Bible. I am letting speak for itself.
There is going to be a Book of the Lord during the end times in Revelation.
That is what the King James Bible plainly states.
Now, you may argue that the time of Revelation is far off like by 1 million years or something and so there is no proof of the existence of any actual Book of the Lord today. But I don't think you would argue that the End Times is that far off.
You said:
Do you think the Greek text of the book of Revelation got uninspired after the King James as released?
No. There are no
original Greek texts of the Book of Revelation that we know of. While the Vaticanus (an Alexandrian text) has the entire Book of Revelation, the Vaticanus is a corruption of the Scriptures. In the pure line of manuscripts (the Antiochian line of texts), what we have are copies of copies of various fragments of it with most likely many of them being imperfect or not in agreement precisely (But the variation of difference is small). If there are fragments of copies of the Book of Revelation that reflect the originals perfectly then they would be entirely inspired. But we really cannot know that seeing sometimes they are merely in fragments or certain pages found in different places throughout time. The Vaticanus and Sinaitus are problematic because they disagree with each other in thousands of places, they have umlauts (double dots like in 1 John 5:7) showing there was an existing variation and pen knife cuts, and noted corrections. This is why Westcott and Hort were forced to create a new New Testament Greek text to combine these two together as if it was some kind of Frankenstein monster. Any truly pure uncorrupted copy of Scripture (with no errors) is truly and fully inspired.
In Textual Criticism, they have hybrid Bibles with true words of God and with false words mixed in.