Lol, I can read the Koinic Greek and some of the Hebrew. And I'm the thirteenth great grand nephew of the person most responsible for the KJV, which means I'm exceedingly familiar with his work.
Feel free to research the Complutensian Polyglot when you get the chance... and don't be scared to pick up an interlinear Bible. Hahaha.
It's actually the First Lie that gets exposed once you begin studying how the Bible was written and transmitted throughout the ages.
Check out the Tetragrammaton... and ask yourself why it was edited out of the Old Testament (there was an agenda, but also Jerome couldn't read Hebrew when he translated the Vulgate.)
Thankfully, the Tetragrammaton was preserved in the earliest Septuagint fragments that survive (in paleo Hebrew no less, within the Nahal Hever fragments.) You won't know what any of this means, but if you decide to delve into it, you'll be amazed.
Particularly in light of John 17, but these days you'd have to know the Greek to know that "sua ton onoma" has been replaced in most translations.
Or you can tell yourself that someone who can rattle off this sort of Biblical knowledge, must surely be wrong about the Trinity... because that's more comfortable to process, lol.
Here's what the writers of the KJV thought of the Septuagint and Jerome's Latin Vulgate, as told in the foreword of the KJV itself.
Neither did we run over the work with that posting haste that the Septuagint did, if that be true which is reported of them, that they finished it in seventy-two days ; neither were we barred or hindered from going over it again, having once done it, like St. Jerome--if that be true which himself reporteth, that he could no sooner write anything but presently it was caught from him and published, and he could not have leave to mend it --; neither, to be short, were we the first that fell in hand with translating the Scripture into English, and consequently destitute of former helps, as it is written of Origen, that he was the first in a manner that put his hand to write commentaries upon the Scriptures, and therefore no marvel, if he overshot himself many times.
(there was an agenda, but also Jerome couldn't read Hebrew when he translated the Vulgate.)
The KJV is mostly translated from the Masoretic text. Which were the true texts completed by the Levite scribes around 250BC. And from which Jesus Christ quoted from during His ministry on Earth.
Septuagint along with the Vulgate are works that were compiled by the two apostates Jerome and Origen. Anyone can check this by comparing their works to the KJV and seeing that nothing matches.
has been replaced in most translations.
Any modern Bible is an apostate Bible. All of these works emerged from Egypt, from which God called us out of and told us not to go back into.
As I stated in the beginning, you were created from the dust and the spirit of life was breathed into you, creating your soul. Body, soul and spirit, created as image of a three-part God.
You are body, soul, spirit created in the image of God. The reason you don't know this is because you're reading an apostate Bible, not the KJV.
Lol, I can read the Koinic Greek and some of the Hebrew. And I'm the thirteenth great grand nephew of the person most responsible for the KJV, which means I'm exceedingly familiar with his work.
Feel free to research the Complutensian Polyglot when you get the chance... and don't be scared to pick up an interlinear Bible. Hahaha.
Dude, missing the Trinity is like the very first total failure of Bible interpretation.
It's actually the First Lie that gets exposed once you begin studying how the Bible was written and transmitted throughout the ages.
Check out the Tetragrammaton... and ask yourself why it was edited out of the Old Testament (there was an agenda, but also Jerome couldn't read Hebrew when he translated the Vulgate.)
Thankfully, the Tetragrammaton was preserved in the earliest Septuagint fragments that survive (in paleo Hebrew no less, within the Nahal Hever fragments.) You won't know what any of this means, but if you decide to delve into it, you'll be amazed.
Particularly in light of John 17, but these days you'd have to know the Greek to know that "sua ton onoma" has been replaced in most translations.
Or you can tell yourself that someone who can rattle off this sort of Biblical knowledge, must surely be wrong about the Trinity... because that's more comfortable to process, lol.
Here's what the writers of the KJV thought of the Septuagint and Jerome's Latin Vulgate, as told in the foreword of the KJV itself.
Neither did we run over the work with that posting haste that the Septuagint did, if that be true which is reported of them, that they finished it in seventy-two days ; neither were we barred or hindered from going over it again, having once done it, like St. Jerome--if that be true which himself reporteth, that he could no sooner write anything but presently it was caught from him and published, and he could not have leave to mend it --; neither, to be short, were we the first that fell in hand with translating the Scripture into English, and consequently destitute of former helps, as it is written of Origen, that he was the first in a manner that put his hand to write commentaries upon the Scriptures, and therefore no marvel, if he overshot himself many times.
(there was an agenda, but also Jerome couldn't read Hebrew when he translated the Vulgate.)
The KJV is mostly translated from the Masoretic text. Which were the true texts completed by the Levite scribes around 250BC. And from which Jesus Christ quoted from during His ministry on Earth.
Septuagint along with the Vulgate are works that were compiled by the two apostates Jerome and Origen. Anyone can check this by comparing their works to the KJV and seeing that nothing matches.
has been replaced in most translations.
Any modern Bible is an apostate Bible. All of these works emerged from Egypt, from which God called us out of and told us not to go back into.
As I stated in the beginning, you were created from the dust and the spirit of life was breathed into you, creating your soul. Body, soul and spirit, created as image of a three-part God.