I have no problem with you preferring the KJV
Of course you do not. You hold the position that there is no settled text, so the words of the Bible ultimately come down to preference, so long as no actual Bible is believed to be perfect or without error. That is precisely where we differ. I am not merely “KJV preferred,” as you would like to frame it.
I find that position deeply troubling. A shape shifter text or a Choose Your Own Adventure Bible Reading mentality is highly illogical and problematic on many levels.
You said:
as long as you do not practice bibliolatry.
I am not even sure what “bibliolatry” is supposed to mean in the real world we live in. I do not know of any meaningful group today that bows down to the KJV, kisses it, or believes it is the totality of God Himself. Even those commonly labeled as extreme KJV advocates believe God is spirit and distinct from the Bible. I have never seen anyone claim that the KJV should be worshipped.
The Bible is like a love letter from God. It is also where we receive His instructions, and those instructions go far beyond salvation alone. Sanctification matters. The way God instructs His people to live is altered in Modern Bibles, and that distortion has real consequences. The claim that doctrine and Christian living are unaffected by these changes is simply not true, and it is an issue you are not dealing with.
Scripture itself speaks directly to the nature of God’s words:
“Thy word is very pure: therefore thy servant loveth it.”
(Psalms 119:140, KJV)
This verse teaches two clear and inseparable truths. First, it declares that God’s words are very pure. Second, it teaches that the one who recognizes God’s word as pure loves it. The order matters. Love for God’s word flows from acknowledging its purity. God’s word is not loved in spite of corruption but because it is pure.
“Pure” means undefiled and without corruption. Psalm 119:140 does not describe devotion to a text believed to be corrupted, uncertain, or defective. It describes love for God’s word precisely because it is pure. We can openly say that we love God’s word because it is pure. You cannot say that consistently, because you believe the Bible is corrupted and defiled, even if you avoid using those exact words.
Psalm 119:140 also shows that it is not only appropriate but biblical to revere God’s words. Reverence is not idolatry. To revere God’s word is not to treat the Bible as God Himself or as something beyond what it is. The words of Scripture come from the mind of God. They are the expressed thoughts, will, and instructions of God communicated to man. Loving and honoring those words is simply honoring what God has spoken.
Those words are not God Himself, but they are not detached from Him either. They are the means by which He reveals His mind and directs His people. To attack those words, corrupt them, or treat them as unreliable is not a neutral academic exercise. It is an attack on the express thoughts and instructions God has given for our lives. Undermining the purity of God’s words undermines the authority of His revealed will. Psalm 119:140 affirms that God’s servant loves His word precisely because it is pure, and that reverence is exactly what the verse calls for.
This is exactly why the NIV shifts the focus away from God’s word and onto promises:
“Your promises have been thoroughly tested, and your servant loves them.”
(Psalms 119:140, NIV)
This reflects a consistent theme within the Modern Bible Movement, which did not gain real traction until the 1980s. Modern Bibles repeatedly water down or redirect the characteristics Scripture assigns to the communicated Word of God itself. Like many other doctrines that are weakened or altered, this one is foundational.
Your side consistently argues that it is only the doctrines or promises of God that are preserved, not the actual words. It is striking how perfectly Modern Bibles condition people to think exactly that way. Do not take my word for it. Read the PDF. Or download it, upload it into ChatGPT, and ask where this issue is addressed. You can verify for yourself whether what I am saying is true.
You may not agree with the KJV or its underlying Hebrew and Greek texts, but its doctrines and theological consistency are far superior to the Modern Bibles. People have been trained to view Scripture as an unsettled text that must be endlessly reconstructed and revised. That mindset did not come from the Bible itself but from modern scholarship, which conditions readers to distrust any settled form of God’s word. The result is perpetual uncertainty, where no Bible is ever final and no text is ever truly authoritative.
Modern scholars repeatedly insist that the KJV is defective while promoting a Critical Text that was never the Bible of the church for any meaningful period of history. That approach is not grounded in preservation, faith, or continuity. It is grounded in academic authority and constant revision.
You said:
So, anyway, I am ready to continue learning from you whenever you are ready to share some more couplets.
I am not interested. The pattern is already clear. You disagree, offer opinion, and avoid engaging the larger body of evidence. At this point, the material is already available. You will simply have to deal with reading the PDF.
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