Difflugia wrote: ↑Thu Dec 26, 2024 9:51 am
placebofactor wrote: ↑Thu Dec 26, 2024 9:31 amFor that reason alone, I believe the King James Bible is the finished work of the Holy Spirit. All these other new renderings of the Bible came out around 1950 or later. Easier to read, "Yes" if you're lazy. The problem is corruption enters the picture.
Leaving aside for the moment whether the modern text-critical editions are valid, do you think that there is a single manuscript of the New Testament (presumably, but not necessarily, the
Textus Receptus) that has been accurately preserved by the Holy Spirit?
Do you also think that the English Translation of the KJV is inspired? Is it inerrant?
Because of the Divine communication of God’s will to Moses, the prophets, and the people, we read of God’s love and plan for man’s salvation, having been revealed to the Jews first and then to the Gentiles. The Scriptures express fully God’s word.
Who was commanded by God to keep and maintain His word? Romans 3:2, “Unto them (the Jews) were committed the oracles of God.” The word “oracles” means something uttered or by Divine communication. We can have complete confidence in the Masoretic text of the King James Bible.
The word “Bible” is a Greek word that means book. The O.T. consists of 39 books, and the New Testament consists of 27 books. The body of the Scriptures, from Genesis to Revelation, was written over approximately 1,400 years. From Moses to the end of the first century, the Holy Spirit inspired the whole of Scripture to those who penned or wrote the text.
The text has come down to us in a remarkable state of preservation. The discovery of the Dead Sea Scrolls, written as far back as the second and third centuries B.C., bears witness to this fact. The Christian church recognizes and uses this collection of books from Genesis to Revelation as the inspired record of God’s Revelation concerning Himself and His will for us.
Guidelines have been laid down and defined for us. The word speaks of great men, spirit creatures, enemies of God, friends of God, political and religious history, and future prophesy. After the last book was penned, the prophecy was closed. There will be no further announcements coming from God. Those who add or subtract from the Scriptures will answer to God, and the cost will be steep.
The terms Old and New Testament have been used since the end of the second century. Most of the Old Testament was written in Hebrew, the language spoken by the Hebrews in Canaan before the Babylonian Captivity, and a few sections of the Old Testament are written in Aramaic. There are no vowels (A, E, I, O, U) in the Hebrew alphabet, only consonants. The Jewish Masoretic scholars invented vowel signs or points in the sixth century.
Although the Bible has been preserved in its’ original meaning, customs, and traditions, the Hebrew language has undergone many changes. The language has gone from the golden age (Adam to Jacob) through silver (Jews in Egypt), bronze (Babylonian and Medo-Persian captivity), and iron (Greek and Roman conquest,) and like our modern English today, it is a far cry from the original.
Except for a few words and sentences, the New Testament was written in Greek, the people’s language in the time of our Lord Jesus. The Greek of the N.T. is identical to the Greek spoken in the Mediterranean in the first century. The New Testament of the K.J.V. is marked strikingly by the Jewish character and colorful language that existed in the days of our Lord. It holds to the idioms, the peculiar language of a group of people or nation. Other dialects of Greek were Aeolic, Boeotic, Doric, Ionic, and especially the dialect of Attic.