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Rivi 9: | Rivi 9: | ||
<font color="Green">''RESPONSE | <font color="Green">''RESPONSE | ||
* It is clear that the first corruption of the scriptures were done out of malice (1 Nephi 13) even before the Bible was compiled (based on what Joseph Smith teach), right after the death of the apostles (1 Nephi 13:26-19), even though the apostasy started before their death. The earliest NT manuscript which is just a fragment is dated 120 A.D -150 A.D , was made at least 40 years after the closing of the New testament. (Not many manuscripts dated on the second century). There are many evidences outside the scriptures of the corruption of the NT scriptures by the end of the second century. Church fathers referred to the corruption of the scripture such as Origen who complained about the copies of the Gospels he accessed. It’s clear that the organized Bible decommissioned by Constantine in the fourth century was already corrupt, which only 4 Gospels out of many and 66 books out of many were chosen without authority to be orthodox. So if anyone claims that a Bible version is more accurate based on early manuscripts and discoveries, they will ignored that men choose 66 books to be in the Bible and yet, the earliest New Testament Library even in Greek (older than Codex Sinaiticus manuscripts) are the Nag Hammadi Codices (which are rejected by most Christians today and the Gnostic text are considered to be corrupt works even tough they can contain some truths).<font color="Red"> THE POINT IS</font> <font color="Green"> scholarly using the earliest manuscripts to support the modern Bible or a modern Bible version will not be a good idea. | * It is clear that the first corruption of the scriptures were done out of malice (1 Nephi 13) even before the Bible was compiled (based on what Joseph Smith teach), right after the death of the apostles (1 Nephi 13:26-19), even though the apostasy started before their death. The earliest NT manuscript which is just a fragment is dated 120 A.D -150 A.D , was made at least 40 years after the closing of the New testament. (Not many manuscripts dated on the second century). There are many evidences outside the scriptures of the corruption of the NT scriptures by the end of the second century. Church fathers referred to the corruption of the scripture such as Origen who complained about the copies of the Gospels he accessed. It’s clear that the organized Bible decommissioned by Constantine in the fourth century was already corrupt, which only 4 Gospels out of many and 66 books out of many were chosen without authority to be orthodox. So if anyone claims that a Bible version is more accurate based on early manuscripts and discoveries, they will ignored that men choose 66 books to be in the Bible and yet, the earliest New Testament Library even in Greek (older than Codex Sinaiticus manuscripts) are the Nag Hammadi Codices (which are rejected by most Christians today and the Gnostic text are considered to be corrupt works even tough they can contain some truths).<font color="Red"> THE POINT IS</font> <font color="Green"> scholarly using the earliest manuscripts to support the modern Bible or a modern Bible version will not be a good idea. | ||
CONCLUSION, there is only over 5,700 surviving manuscripts, not two are exactly alike, so critics cannot intellectually claim to have a Bible closer to how the writings of the apostles were. .''</font> | CONCLUSION, there is only over 5,700 surviving manuscripts, not two are exactly alike, so critics cannot intellectually claim to have a Bible closer to how the writings of the apostles were. .''</font></font> | ||
I read Mike S.'s placeholder text for this article, and I have some significant concerns about the direction it's going. To wit: This claim greatly oversimplifies the methodology of textual criticism. For example:
This just scratches the surface. To claim that "no original manuscripts exist, therefore we don't know how the originals read" ignores a vast amount of scholarly literature on the Biblical text that goes back hundreds of years.
RESPONSE
CONCLUSION, there is only over 5,700 surviving manuscripts, not two are exactly alike, so critics cannot intellectually claim to have a Bible closer to how the writings of the apostles were. .
Yes, this is true of any translation, but the King James Version is probably the biggest offender in this regard.
For example, the KJV translates Isaiah 26:19a, "Thy dead men shall live, together with my dead body shall they arise," a clear allusion to the future resurrection of Jehovah/Jesus Christ. This is a thoroughly irresponsible rendering of the text, which actually reads "Your dead will live; Their corpses will rise" (NIV).
Likewise in Daniel 3:25b, which the KJV renders, "...and the form of the fourth is like the Son of God." This translation was driven by the translators' theological bias to see a pre-mortal Jesus Christ in the fiery furnace with the three young men -- even though the person who said the words was a polytheistic Babylonian who didn't have any understanding of a "Son of God." The passage should read "son of the gods," as it does in every modern translation (including theologically conservative ones like the NIV and NET).
There are a number of significant problems with this claim:
Defending the pericope is not something we should try to do, especially when another FAIR wiki article (correctly) includes it in a list of suspect passages.
On these last three claims, I agree with you. And this is my point -- Latter-day Saints continue to use the KJV simply because of its strong linguistic ties to the Book of Mormon, Doctrine and Covenants, and Pearl of Great Price. There are no other reasons for continuing to use the KJV, and many, many reasons to discard it in favor of a more modern translation.
The King James Bible was based on corrupted and inferior manuscripts that in many cases do not accurately represent the meaning of the original text. --MikeParker 16:57, 28 March 2008 (MDT)
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