-17-
Letters
ON THE INSPIRATION AND INERRANCY OF
SCRIPTURE
Dear H. B.
May 20, 1983
...I was relieved that
you desire to treat the Scriptures in an honorable manner. But,
you have me puzzled, for while you are quick to maintain the
"King James is a faithful translation of the Bible", yet, you
claim it is "errant." It appears to me that you are fudging. If
it is errant, it is definitely not "faithful."
You affirm your conviction in the
preservation of God's Word, yet, you say no translation is
inerrant. If the tomatoes my wife preserved are errant, the
whole will shortly stink. I believe the same is true regarding
the Bible. When you pretend to find faults, when do you make an
end? It is to open Pandora's Box.
The "faults" you find in the King
James Version such as chapter divisions in no way harms the
text, nor would typographical errors such as the "Breeches"
Bible or the "Vinegar" Bible. I use the Geneva on occasion. The
obscurities you mention such as the words "prevent," and "let"
can easily be explained in three minutes as can the "eth" on the
end of verbs such as the present-progressive tense.
In your first letter, you said, "We
have no qualms about correcting the King James Version where
necessary." In your recent letter you say, "I believe that the
greatest attack upon Scripture is the view than man can correct
the Word of God." From this, it appears that you do not believe
the King James Version to be the Word of God, but only to
"contain" the Word of God. How does your position differ from
the Neo-Orthodox position?
I very much appreciated your point
that to believe in present day revelation or inspiration is to
accept the present day use of tongues, and all the other signs
of an apostle. I heartily concur, and could not have stated it
better than you did. However, you misunderstand my position of
the preservation of Scripture. I do not believe men are inspired
today in the same sense as the amanuenses of Scripture. Rather,
I believe that, nothing being too hard for the Lord, God has
superintended His Word—that He has protected it, and has guided
godly translators. Luther was so solicitous of his German
translation, that he refused to translate unless there were two
or three present. This does not make these men to be great, but
God great who guided them.
Basically, this is my
position: l.) The Bible I have in my possession is the very Word
of God, no less so than the Organic Word which was used in
Creation when God verbally spoke creation into being. 2.) While
my Bible is not inspired, it being "given by inspiration", yet
it is inerrant because God has preserved it from error. 3.) I
can rely upon my Bible, for not alone are the original
manuscripts reliable. 4.) The Bible was designed for common men,
and not for the intelligentsia alone. It is therefore to be
received in simple child-like faith in the plain meaning. If
faith is rooted in scholarship, how could the uneducated
believe? "May God Smile On You."—J. S. Bach
TO ONE WHO BELIEVES THE KING JAMES VERSION
OF THE BIBLE WAS TAMPERED WITH BY THE BRITISH GOVERNMENT IN
ORDER TO REGAIN CONTROL OF HER AMERICAN COLONIES
Dear M. B.
July 14, 1987
King James did not set out to have
his own version of the Bible. Actually, for several hundred
years, possession of the Bible was forbidden to "lay people."
For instance, the Lollards, for so the followers of John
Wycliffe were nicknamed, if apprehended were burned at the stake
with their Bible tied about their neck. And, much documentation
exists that Rome felt that if common men had possession of the
Scriptures it would be the death of the Roman Catholic Church.
After suffering 80 years of
passionate persecution, Protestants deemed the best way to have
free circulation of God's Word was to obtain permission from the
king. Since James was sympathetic to Rome, and was a dissolute
man, the Puritans played upon his vanity telling the monarch
that if he would allow free distribution of the edition, they
would dedicate it to him, and wherever the Bible went, so would
the name of James. The king conceded and called for 54
translators, although history records the names of only 48.
Even though the English parliament
had passed two acts in 1534 that broke ties with the foreign
pontiff, yet England faced recurring struggles with Roman
Catholic intrigue for the next 100 years. During this time, some
of the kings of England were Roman Catholic, and attempts were
made to destroy Protestantism.
William Tyndale had been
burned at the state in Brussels on October 6, 1536. Granted, it
was with the intrigue of the English government since Tyndale
was forever smuggling copies of God's Word into his homeland.
The King James translators actually used about 80 percent of
Tyndale's translation. Many of the words found in the English
Bible now were coined by the martyr. Words like "propitiation",
and "mercy-seat" were unknown in the English language until
Tyndale coined them.
Although Puritans went to
James to obtain his permission for the publication of the
"Authorized Version," most Puritans refused to use the
translation because it was dedicated to the ungodly king. Most
preferred to use the Geneva Bible.
The first Bible printed in the
United States was authorized by Congress in 1782. Mr. Robert
Aitken's publication was but the King James Version. However,
your notion that the King James Version of the Bible was part of
a conspiracy by England to regain control over her American
colonies is utter nonsense. It lacks all proof, and the thought
is pernicious at its source.
Contents
Previous
Next |