Rebuttal #1 of many. I'm going to address several of your 77 points in each of my posts. I will post as I have time to address the arguments you make. Given that you make so many fallacious statements, this will take time.
As I have already stated, no doctrine is formed from a single verse, so your charge that any of these differences "changes a doctrine" is inherently baseless. Nevertheless, I take pleasure in shredding dumb arguments, so I will take pleasure in shredding yours.
To Point 1: "The power of Jesus denied": no, nothing in the cited verses "denies" the power of Jesus. That's a mischaracterization on your part. Overstating your point is equivalent to presenting a falsehood as the truth. Get some integrity and state things exactly as they are, without your underhanded attempts at emotional manipulation of your audience.
Jesus was not and could not be omnipresent while He was in the flesh... period. His omnipresence is by His Spirit after His ascension, and this implication is clear in His statement, which was made near the end of His earthly ministry.
Overall, this point is badly titled and poorly supported.
To Point 2: "The false demi-god Jesus view" is blatant misrepresentation. No genuine Christian believes that Jesus is a demi-god. You put the clarification in brackets: "Jesus did not exist eternally in the past" but that is definitely not the same meaning.
You further misrepresent the truth by stating this difference is an "attack" upon the eternal nature of ... Jesus Christ. No, it isn't. It's a serious attempt to represent the original-language text in English. You attribute motive where you have no evidence. Again, no doctrine in changed.
The Greek behind "only-begotten" does not mean "born"; it means "unique".
To Point 3: "Modern Bibles falsely teach that Jesus had faith...".
The KJV of Romans 3:22 and Galatians 3:22 say, "faith of Jesus Christ". Galatians 2:16 says it twice. Your point is moot. You have no moral ground for making a criticism of another translation when your own says exactly what you decry.
To Point 4: "Certain words of Jesus are missing or footnoted... or doubted with a footnote." You do know that the original 1611 KJV had sidenotes, don't you? Here's an example from John 3 showing that your vaunted KJV does EXACTLY THE SAME THING. again, your point is moot. Do your homework!

As I have already stated, no doctrine is formed from a single verse, so your charge that any of these differences "changes a doctrine" is inherently baseless. Nevertheless, I take pleasure in shredding dumb arguments, so I will take pleasure in shredding yours.
To Point 1: "The power of Jesus denied": no, nothing in the cited verses "denies" the power of Jesus. That's a mischaracterization on your part. Overstating your point is equivalent to presenting a falsehood as the truth. Get some integrity and state things exactly as they are, without your underhanded attempts at emotional manipulation of your audience.
Jesus was not and could not be omnipresent while He was in the flesh... period. His omnipresence is by His Spirit after His ascension, and this implication is clear in His statement, which was made near the end of His earthly ministry.
Overall, this point is badly titled and poorly supported.
To Point 2: "The false demi-god Jesus view" is blatant misrepresentation. No genuine Christian believes that Jesus is a demi-god. You put the clarification in brackets: "Jesus did not exist eternally in the past" but that is definitely not the same meaning.
You further misrepresent the truth by stating this difference is an "attack" upon the eternal nature of ... Jesus Christ. No, it isn't. It's a serious attempt to represent the original-language text in English. You attribute motive where you have no evidence. Again, no doctrine in changed.
The Greek behind "only-begotten" does not mean "born"; it means "unique".
To Point 3: "Modern Bibles falsely teach that Jesus had faith...".
The KJV of Romans 3:22 and Galatians 3:22 say, "faith of Jesus Christ". Galatians 2:16 says it twice. Your point is moot. You have no moral ground for making a criticism of another translation when your own says exactly what you decry.
To Point 4: "Certain words of Jesus are missing or footnoted... or doubted with a footnote." You do know that the original 1611 KJV had sidenotes, don't you? Here's an example from John 3 showing that your vaunted KJV does EXACTLY THE SAME THING. again, your point is moot. Do your homework!

