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USER COMMENTS BY MURRAYA |
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| RECENTLY-COMMENTED SERMONS | More | Last Post | Total |
· Page 1 · Found: 500 user comments posted recently. |
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9/5/08 11:22 PM |
MurrayA | | Australia | | ![](https://media.sermonaudio.com/images/web/images/gray2.gif) | ![Find all comments by MurrayA](https://media.sermonaudio.com/images/web/images/magnifier.gif) |
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Hidemi, I think I see what you're getting at, and I agree. You have basically given up on judges, because the basis of law and justice, the Word of God, has been abandoned. So what then does it matter where they they get their ideas: Wikipedia, or for that matter the back of a corn flakes packet? This news item reminds me of when I was in Munich about 4 years ago. Wandering around the centre of the city I saw the Hall of Justice. It is an impressive building, with elaborately carved window frames and main portico. Over this main entrance or portico are two tablets of stone, representing the Ten Commandments. Over each of the ten windows in the facade is (in summary symbol) a commandment of the Decalogue, one for each window. The message is clear: Justice is founded on revealed Divine Law, and that Law is in the Bible. But alas! That perspective has been abandoned in modern, militantly secular Europe. |
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8/26/08 10:12 PM |
MurrayA | | Australia | | ![](https://media.sermonaudio.com/images/web/images/gray2.gif) | ![Find all comments by MurrayA](https://media.sermonaudio.com/images/web/images/magnifier.gif) |
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DJC49, Regarding 1 Tim.3:16 See my comment on this verse on my website: http://www.adamthwaite.com.au/html/papyri__4.htmlCodex A, the principal witness to the Pastoral Epistles and dated C5th, is badly faded in parts, including this passage, but modern photographic techniques have revealed that it does indeed read "God", not "who". I agree with you: I pay attention to citations, but it is regrettable that it has taken this long to produce new photographs, the last having been done in the late C19th! One other thing: Jude 25 and "Jesus Christ our Lord": this is included on the basis of an overwhelming number of early mss, which KJV-only-ites choose to ignore, and in particular P72 (late C3rd). But KJV-only-ites seem not to have heard of P72, being caught in a time-warp over Codices Aleph and B. |
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8/20/08 7:55 PM |
MurrayA | | Australia | | ![](https://media.sermonaudio.com/images/web/images/gray2.gif) | ![Find all comments by MurrayA](https://media.sermonaudio.com/images/web/images/magnifier.gif) |
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hidemi williges wrote: I had to quit due to an accident. 60lb bag of cement landed on my knee. So I am disabled for now. Oh dear! Are you badly injured? Cement is heavy dead-weight! I will pray for your speedy recovery. Forget our debates for the present! |
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8/20/08 12:16 AM |
MurrayA | | Australia | | ![](https://media.sermonaudio.com/images/web/images/gray2.gif) | ![Find all comments by MurrayA](https://media.sermonaudio.com/images/web/images/magnifier.gif) |
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hidemi, I note your experience, but with respect, your experience does not make a fallacy valid.My own experience is otherwise: there are many evangelical Presbyterian churches which preach and expound God's Word from either the the NIV (which I personally dislike), the NASB, or the ESV. Many of them are what I would call spiritually alive. But all the while - properly - they will be appealing to the original Hebrew or Greek. Currently I worship at a Grace Community Bible church, one of the John Macarthur circle (I left the Presbyterian circle over the usual issues of baptism and church govt.), and although I would like the musical side to be different, the expository preaching is excellent. And it is growing, with many young couples and families attending and growing in the faith! As I commented to others on this board: if you have a liking for the KJV, that's fine. I have no quarrel with that. But when so many of the KJVO-ers on this board denounce modern versions (often in virulent language) they are tacitly making it a law for everyone to use the KJV - otherwise one's sanctification is suspect! That is the clear message I have gained from many, despite pleas and protests to the contrary. |
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8/19/08 10:40 PM |
MurrayA | | Australia | | ![](https://media.sermonaudio.com/images/web/images/gray2.gif) | ![Find all comments by MurrayA](https://media.sermonaudio.com/images/web/images/magnifier.gif) |
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hidemi williges wrote: The one single issue that weighs heavy on my mind is the fact that most KJV bashers (especially Pastors) either run or belong to some of the most liberal, modernist and corrupt Churches or Associations around. Most in co-operation with Roman Catholicism. hidemi, I note that you reject Riplinger. Good! Note that I did not accuse you of doing so, I only expressed the hope that you did not.Now as to the portion quoted: Your argument seems to be: Pastor X is a KJV-basher RCs and liberals are KJV-bashers Therefore Pastor X is a RC or a liberal. I see this kind of argument time and again from your circles. But let me make a substitution of terms in the same argument form: This cat has fur All dogs have fur Therefore this cat is a dog. You see how ridiculous - and unfair - this formal fallacy is? In formal logic it's called variously the illicit common factor, or the undistributed middle term. But one finds it so commonly in our reason-deficient world. Just because I oppose KJV-only-ism that in itself DOES NOT make me a liberal, or a Roman Catholic, or whatever. Do learn to reason validly. |
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8/19/08 9:40 PM |
MurrayA | | Australia | | ![](https://media.sermonaudio.com/images/web/images/gray2.gif) | ![Find all comments by MurrayA](https://media.sermonaudio.com/images/web/images/magnifier.gif) |
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hidemi williges wrote: MurrayA, Looks like the only thing that I agree with you, is your stand on global warning. And pray, hidemi, what points in particular do you dispute about my two essays on the history of the KJV? Bear in mind, I researched these thoroughly over several months before I put them up, and meanwhile, the literature cited is not exhaustive.You are probably miffed that I did not cite KJVO literature. I have seen quite a bit of it, and heard some lectures (Dr. Waite in particular), and I can only say that it has to be some of the most unscholarly and tendentious rubbish I have ever seen masquerading as serious scholarship. It is full of special pleading, non-sequiturs, circular reasoning and many other such fallacies, as well as incendiary vituperations and invective. Gail Riplinger's "New Age Bible Versions" is a case in point. How such a menagerie of error-filled bile and nonsense ever saw the light of day is beyond me. She is as far to the right as Germaine Greer is to the far left! I would hope that you are not endorsing that! I would say that of all the writers of this persuasion E F Hills would be the best. At least he tries to interact with the papyri evidence. |
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8/19/08 8:36 PM |
MurrayA | | Australia | | ![](https://media.sermonaudio.com/images/web/images/gray2.gif) | ![Find all comments by MurrayA](https://media.sermonaudio.com/images/web/images/magnifier.gif) |
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Mark Fitzpatrick wrote: The reason it is called the King James Bible is that it was authorised by King James. Sorry to inform you, Mark, but that is not correct, even if a widespread misconception. Adam Nicolson makes the following observation: " The King James Bible (henceforth known as the Authorised Version, although no known document authorising its use by the king, Council, or anyone else survived the 1619 Whitehall fire) was to become, by order, the only English Bible..." [God's Secretaries, p.228]F F Bruce makes a similar point in his "The History of the English Bible" (I don't have a copy at hand as it was on loan from a College library, so I can't give the page reference. But the same point was certainly there.) I have outlined the history of publication of the KJV on my website: http://www.adamthwaite.com.au/html/history_kjv_ii.html As opposed to the mythology concerning the history of the KJV which abounds in KJVO circles and literature, the real story is much more interesting, if somewhat more depressing. |
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8/19/08 8:27 AM |
MurrayA | | Australia | | ![](https://media.sermonaudio.com/images/web/images/gray2.gif) | ![Find all comments by MurrayA](https://media.sermonaudio.com/images/web/images/magnifier.gif) |
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hidemi, I recognise that Tregelles held to textual criticism and text critical principles, more so than Burgon, but what I meant to emphasise was that the latter was not averse to a revision of the KJV, and wanted to see it. However, he stood opposed to any revision making use of the two codices Vaticanus and Sinaiticus. That I grant.Tregelles' position on textual criticism, I firmly believe, has much to teach us. Hywel Jones in a study of Tregelles in 1975 (Evangelical Library lecture) makes the following point, speaking of that class who refuse to see any imperfections in the KJV: "To them the 1611 version must not be altered by a jot or a tittle. Any preacher who alters it is automatically classed with the liberals, to be at least inconsistent if not a traitor. This ought not to be. Let us learn from Tregelles." With that I thoroughly concur, having had the "liberal" slur hurled at me time and again on this board for precisely the reason Jones indicates. This is unworthy, not to say outrageous. Tregelles was an outstanding scholar, and at the same time a thoroughly reverent Christian with a very high view of Scripture, as Jones outlines. You would do well to learn from him too, instead of repeating ad nauseam the outdated arguments and vituperations of Burgon. |
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8/19/08 3:35 AM |
MurrayA | | Australia | | ![](https://media.sermonaudio.com/images/web/images/gray2.gif) | ![Find all comments by MurrayA](https://media.sermonaudio.com/images/web/images/magnifier.gif) |
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hidemi, I have not tracked down the quotation from Burgon re the Comma Johanneum, but I shall soon enough. He did reject the Comma, even though (as I recall) he supported its inclusion in a revised version on traditional grounds. He was not opposed in principle to revision, and as I said before, stood in principle with S P Tregelles.However, Burgon is really not relevant to the whole debate on textual issues. He wrote well before the mass of NT papyri were found, and these have supported the text attested by the great C4th codices. When KJVO-ers repeatedly ignore this evidence, as I have found consistently and to my sorrow, they rule themselves out of serious consideration. On the Comma, this quotation from F H A Scrivener aptly sums up my position: "We need not hesitate to declare our conviction that the disputed words were not written by St. John: that they were originally brought into Latin copies in Africa from the margin, where they had been placed as a pious and orthodox gloss on ver. 8: that from the Latin they crept into two or three late Greek codices, and thence into the printed Greek text, a place to which they had no rightful claim." [A Plain Introduction to the Criticism of the New Testament, Third Ed., Cambridge, 1883, p. 654.] |
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