Jun 11, 2026

Jot and tittle

In Matthew 5:18 (NIV), Jesus declares: "For truly I tell you, until heaven and earth disappear, not the smallest letter, not the least stroke of a pen, will by any means disappear from the Law until everything is accomplished".

What Matthew 5:18 Actually Means: A Correction to Preservation Misuse

Matthew 5:18 is frequently misappropriated to support the doctrine of Verbal Plenary Preservation, but this interpretation fundamentally misreads the verse’s context and meaning.

The Actual Meaning of the Verse

Jesus declares that “until heaven and earth disappear, not the smallest letter, not the least stroke of a pen, will by any means disappear from the Law until everything is accomplished.” (Matt 5:17–19) This statement is not about manuscript preservation or textual transmission. Rather, it concerns the permanent validity and authority of God’s Law.

Jesus is affirming the enduring significance of the Old Testament Law. He is saying that every detail of God’s revealed will remains binding and meaningful until the culmination of all things—when “everything is accomplished.” This is a statement about the Law’s authority and relevance, not about the mechanical preservation of ink on parchment across centuries of copying.

The Context: Jesus Defends the Law’s Permanence

Jesus begins by clarifying: “Do not think that I have come to abolish the Law or the Prophets; I have not come to abolish them but to fulfill them.” (Matt 5:17–19) He is addressing concerns that His teaching might undermine the Old Testament. His point is that the Law remains valid—not that every manuscript copy would be preserved without error.

Immediately following, Jesus warns: “Therefore anyone who sets aside one of the least of these commands and teaches others accordingly will be called least in the kingdom of heaven, but whoever practices and teaches these commands will be called great in the kingdom of heaven.” (Matt 5:17–19) The concern is about obedience to the Law’s content, not about textual preservation.

Why This Verse Does Not Support VPP

The verse says nothing about:

  • How God would preserve copies through scribal transmission

  • Whether apographs (copies) would be error-free

  • Which manuscript tradition would be authoritative

  • How textual variants would be handled

The verse addresses the permanence of God’s revealed will, not the mechanics of manuscript preservation. To use Matthew 5:18 as proof that God preserved every copy of Scripture without error is to import a meaning the text does not contain.

Parallel Passages: The Same Theme, Different Wording

Jesus reiterates this principle in Matthew 24:35: “Heaven and earth will pass away, but my words will never pass away.” Again, the focus is on the permanence of Christ’s teaching, not textual transmission. Isaiah similarly affirms: “The grass withers and the flowers fall, but the word of our God endures forever.” (Isa 40:8) The psalmist declares: “Your word, LORD, is eternal; it stands firm in the heavens.” (Ps 119:89)

These verses consistently emphasize that God’s truth is indestructible and eternally valid—not that every handwritten copy across history would be mechanically perfect.

The Distinction That Matters

There is a crucial difference between two claims:

1. God’s Word is eternally authoritative and will accomplish His purposes (what Matthew 5:18 actually teaches)

2. Every manuscript copy of Scripture is inerrant and error-free (what VPP proponents claim but the verse does not support)

The first claim is biblical and theologically sound. The second claim requires evidence the verse simply does not provide. In fact, the existence of textual variants across manuscripts demonstrates that God did not preserve copies with mechanical perfection—yet this does not undermine God’s Word or its authority.

The Actual Mechanism of Preservation

God preserved His Word through providential care over the manuscript tradition as a whole, not through miraculous perfection of individual copies. Luke 16:17 states: “It is easier for heaven and earth to disappear than for the least stroke of a pen to drop out of the Law.” This emphasizes the Law’s inviolable authority, not the perfection of every copy.

The sheer number of New Testament manuscripts—over 5,800 Greek fragments and manuscripts—ensures that the original text remains recoverable through careful textual criticism. No single copy needs to be perfect; the multiplicity of witnesses protects against the loss of the original meaning. This is how God actually preserved Scripture: not through magical preservation of copies, but through the redundancy of the manuscript tradition.

Conclusion: Honoring the Text by Reading It Correctly

To use Matthew 5:18 as proof of Verbal Plenary Preservation is to dishonor the verse by forcing it to teach what it does not. The verse teaches the permanence and authority of God’s Law—a truth that stands magnificently on its own without requiring the false claim that every manuscript copy is inerrant.

True respect for Scripture means reading it carefully, understanding its actual meaning, and resisting the temptation to make it say what we wish it said. Matthew 5:18 affirms that God’s Word is eternally authoritative and will accomplish His purposes. That is sufficient. That is glorious. That is true.


What is wrong with you?

What is wrong in this statement: We believe in the divine, Verbal Plenary Inspiration (Autographs) and Verbal Plenary Preservation of the Scriptures (Apographs) in the original languages, their consequent inerrancy and infallibility, and as the perfect Word of God, the Supreme and final authority in faith and life (2 Tim 3:16; 2 Pet 1:20-21; Ps 12:6-7; Matt 5:18, 24:35);


The Critical Error in the Statement: Conflating Inspiration with Preservation

The statement above contains a fundamental theological error that undermines its entire foundation. By claiming “Verbal Plenary Preservation of the Scriptures (Apographs),” it conflates two distinct doctrines that must remain separate: divine inspiration of the originals and providential preservation of copies.

The Core Problem

The underlying problem with the doctrine of VPP is its false presupposition that God’s inspiration of Scripture at a particular point in human history also requires His divine preservation of every jot and tittle ever written down by anyone who ever sought to do the work of a scribe.[1] This is the exact error the statement commits.

Inspiration applies exclusively to the autographs—the original writings penned by the biblical authors. Scripture was given by God to His chosen penmen in a state that was free from all error of every kind, and in stating that the autographs were completely errorless, we do not contend that God continued the miracle in the copying of the original manuscripts to the apographs.[2]

The statement’s claim that apographs (copies) possess “inerrancy and infallibility” contradicts the historical Christian position held by Augustine, Jerome, and Calvin—figures who distinguished between the errorless originals and copies that, while generally reliable, could contain scribal mistakes.

The Preservation Question

Preservation is not the same as inspiration. God providentially preserved His word in purity, guarding it by the methods of transcription employed among the Jews and by the sheer number of copies made of the New Testament manuscripts.[2] This providential care does not mean every copy is perfect; it means God ensured His Word was preserved sufficiently across the manuscript tradition so that the original meaning remains recoverable through textual criticism.

The statement’s appeal to Psalm 12:6-7 and Matthew 24:35 misapplies these verses. Psalm 12:6 speaks of God’s words being “flawless,” referring to their inherent character, not the perfection of every transcription. Matthew 24:35 affirms that Christ’s words will not pass away—a promise about the permanence of God’s truth, not a guarantee that every manuscript copy is inerrant.

The Practical Consequence

By claiming apographs possess the same inerrancy as autographs, the statement creates an impossible burden: it must identify which specific manuscript tradition, which edition, which translation embodies this perfect preservation. Verbal Plenary Preservation is promoted by some (usually “King James Version Only” advocates) in support of the view that the Textus Receptus is the only New Testament text that is both divinely inspired and divinely preserved, requiring generation after generation of handwritten copies to be produced without error of any kind, yet VPP proponents incorrectly link the doctrine of inerrancy with inspiration and “providential preservation,” concluding that the Textus Receptus and the Majority Text are not only faithful, inerrant, and identical replicas of the original autographs, but that all other New Testament manuscripts are not inspired of God and therefore unworthy of use.[1]

This position is historically and textually indefensible. The Dead Sea Scrolls, which are second-century copies predating the Majority Text by hundreds of years, substantiated the accuracy of earlier non-majority text, and the Majority Text are only a selection of Greek texts from a particular area of the world during a particular time period in only one of the many languages that the New Testament had been preserved in.[3]

The Correct Position

A biblically sound statement would affirm: We believe in the divine, Verbal Plenary Inspiration of the original autographs in the original languages, their consequent inerrancy and infallibility, and the providential preservation of Scripture through the manuscript tradition, which allows us to recover the original text through careful textual criticism. Copies and translations, while reliable and adequate for faith and practice, are not themselves inerrant—a distinction maintained by the greatest theologians in church history.

[1] Got Questions Ministries, Got Questions? Bible Questions Answered (Bellingham, WA: Faithlife, 2014–2021). [See here, here.]
[2] Alan Cairns, in Dictionary of Theological Terms (Belfast; Greenville, SC: Ambassador Emerald International, 2002), 232.
[3] Got Questions Ministries, Got Questions? Bible Questions Answered. [See here.]













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Churches and Bible colleges that promote false doctrine

The Consequences of False Teaching in Churches and Bible Colleges

Churches and Bible colleges that promote false doctrine face severe spiritual and institutional consequences rooted in Scripture’s warnings about doctrinal corruption.

Spiritual Decay and Loss of Authority

When doctrine is marginalized, churches will inevitably drift and fall prey to false teaching, since the spirit of the antichrist is always knocking at the door of churches[1]. This drift is not accidental—it represents a fundamental abandonment of the church’s primary responsibility. When churches reduce Christianity to feeling better about ourselves and being more satisfied rather than grounding faith in truth, the church struggles for its very life[1].

A Bible college teaching false doctrine undermines its foundational mission. Rather than equipping leaders to defend and proclaim biblical truth, it produces graduates who spread corruption throughout the churches they serve. The damage multiplies generationally as false teachers train new false teachers.

Corporate Responsibility and Judgment

If a church’s official doctrines agree with Scripture but the church tolerates individuals within its communion to teach and spread false doctrines, then the entire church body must be held responsible for the wrong teachings of the individual[2]. This principle is critical: institutional tolerance of heresy makes the institution itself complicit.

A true church is one which in all its doctrines adheres strictly to the Word of God; a false church is one which in one or more points departs from the teachings of the Word of God. In designating a church a false church, we do not pass judgment on the personal faith of its individual members, but only on its public doctrines[2].

Division, Instability, and Spiritual Ruin

False doctrine distorts or contradicts the revealed truth of God, causing division and distress in the church by leading people away from the truth. It contradicts the gospel and leads to instability and confusion[3]. The consequences extend beyond confusion—false doctrine leads to severe punishment[3].

The Requirement for Discipline

The New Testament combats the spread of false teaching through the establishment of church government. Though all believers are end-time priests before God, elders are appointed as end-time priests in an official capacity to teach God’s Word and guard against false teaching[1]. Church elders must wage war against such deception. Therefore elders, as end-time harbingers of truth, must preserve and proclaim God’s Word in earnest and without corruption[1].

When institutions fail this responsibility, they forfeit their spiritual authority. If a false teacher persistently refuses to listen to the truth of God, we must part company with him[2].

Ultimate Judgment

A church that elevates ethics over doctrine, life over theology, and cultural accommodation over cultural confrontation will most assuredly be spewed out of the mouth of a God whose holiness cannot tolerate sin and whose truth cannot coexist with error[4].

The trajectory is clear: institutions promoting false teaching experience spiritual decline, loss of credibility, internal division, and ultimately divine judgment. Their graduates become vectors of corruption. Their influence extends the damage far beyond their walls. The only remedy is immediate repentance, doctrinal correction, and faithful discipline.

[1] Benjamin L. Gladd and Matthew S. Harmon, Making All Things New: Inaugurated Eschatology for the Life of the Church (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Academic: A Division of Baker Publishing Group, 2016), 93–94.
[2] Edward Wilhelm August Koehler, A Summary of Christian Doctrine: A Popular Presentation of the Teachings of the Bible (St. Louis, MO: Concordia Publishing House, 1999), 246.
[3] Martin H. Manser, Dictionary of Bible Themes: The Accessible and Comprehensive Tool for Topical Studies (London: Martin Manser, 2009). [See here, here.]
[4] Donald G. Bloesch, The Church: Sacraments, Worship, Ministry, Mission (Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press, 2002), 111.
































FEBC liars telling lies

What FEBC Actually Teaches

FEBC teaches that the Greek and Hebrew texts were miraculously restored by the KJV translators in 1611 to be word-for-word identical with the original manuscripts (the autographa), effectively promoting a form of KJV-Onlyism and Verbal Plenary Preservation.


The Theological and Logical Collapse of KJV-Only Doctrine

The KJV-only movement rests on three foundational claims, each of which crumbles under scrutiny: that the King James Version represents a perfect English Bible, that God preserved His Word through a doctrine called “Verbal Plenary Preservation,” and that secondary separation—breaking fellowship with those who disagree—is biblically mandated. These claims are not merely debatable; they are internally contradictory and theologically incoherent.

The Illusion of Textual Certainty

The KJV-only movement exemplifies evangelicalism’s “desperate quest for certainty” that has “subtly, if unwittingly, relegated the person of God to a status secondary to scripture.”[1] This inversion is fundamental to the movement’s deception. Rather than trusting God’s character and active guidance, KJV advocates have constructed an idol—a book they claim is perfect—and demanded allegiance to it as a substitute for genuine faith.

By divorcing the Bible from history while viewing it as the source rather than the medium of divine truth, evangelicalism effectively deified a book.[1] The KJV-only position takes this further: it claims that God’s preservation activity ended in 1611 with the printing press, creating a static, ahistorical text divorced from the living God who claims to guide believers into truth.

The Doctrine of Verbal Plenary Preservation: Ad Hoc Theology

The doctrine of “Verbal Plenary Preservation” is not a historical Christian doctrine—it is a modern invention designed to protect KJV authority. While KJV-onlyism claims God’s continual preservation of the Bible until 1611, “providential preservation is revealed to be an ad hoc measure employed to protect certain favored interpretations.”[1] This is theological dishonesty dressed in pious language.

The doctrine contradicts itself immediately: if God preserved every word perfectly, why do different KJV editions contain variants? Why does the TR itself exist in multiple editions with documented differences? The answer exposes the lie—there was no perfect preservation; there was only selective memory and circular reasoning.

Secondary Separation: Weaponized Legalism

Secondary separation doctrine teaches believers to separate from other Christians who do not separate from those deemed “unorthodox,”[2] creating an endless spiral of division justified by claims of doctrinal purity. This practice directly violates Scripture’s mandate for unity and love among believers.

Those who practice secondary separation over translation preferences commit the exact sin Jesus condemned in the Pharisees: they create barriers to fellowship based on human traditions rather than biblical essentials. They divide the body of Christ while claiming to defend it—a contradiction that exposes their true motivation: power and control, not faithfulness to God’s Word.

How to Respond to These Deceptions

When encountering KJV-only advocates, respond with clarity and charity:

  • Expose the logical contradiction. Ask them to identify which TR edition is “perfect”—they cannot answer without abandoning their position.
  • Appeal to historical reality. Point out that Augustine, Jerome, and Luther all affirmed inerrancy of autographs only, not copies or translations. These giants of the faith would reject KJV-only claims.
  • Distinguish infallibility from preservation. God’s Word is infallible in its original form; this does not require perfect transmission through copying or translation. Acknowledging textual variants honors God’s Word rather than dishonoring it.
  • Emphasize the unity Christ prayed for. Rather than trusting God’s active presence in history as the one who will “guide us into all truth,” KJV advocates replace this with “a static set of propositions, the meaning of which is said to be universally, eternally, and thus ahistorically clear.”[1] This replaces a living relationship with God with dead certainty in a book.
  • Refuse secondary separation. Maintain fellowship with faithful believers across translation preferences. Do not allow legalism to fracture the church.

The fundamental issue is this: KJV-only teaching asks believers to trust a human translation as infallible while claiming to defend God’s authority. This is idolatry. True faithfulness means pursuing the best available manuscript evidence with humility, maintaining unity across non-essential differences, and trusting God’s character rather than demanding textual certainty. Those who refuse this path reveal not devotion to Scripture but rebellion against its central message: love one another.

[1] Jason A. Hentschel, “The King James Only Movement,” in The Oxford Handbook of the Bible in America, ed. Paul C. Gutjahr, Oxford Handbooks (New York: Oxford University Press, 2017), 238.
[2] Mark Sidwell, Set Apart: The Nature and Importance of Biblical Separation (Greenville, SC: JourneyForth, 2016). [See here.]

 

Are you a fool?

The Illusion of Textual Perfection: Exposing the Logical Collapse of KJV-Only Claims

The KJV-only position rests on a fundamental contradiction: it claims to defend biblical perfection while simultaneously ignoring the documented reality of textual variation across every manuscript tradition. This contradiction reveals not scholarly rigor but intellectual dishonesty masquerading as faithfulness.

The Myth of a Perfect Underlying Text

The cornerstone of KJV-only argumentation collapses under basic historical scrutiny. Orthodox Christian theology has never claimed inerrant transmission of God’s Word, only inerrant originals.[1] Yet KJV advocates invert this distinction, treating a seventeenth-century translation as though it possessed the infallibility reserved for autographs alone.

The Textus Receptus itself—the Greek text underlying the KJV—was never a unified, stable entity. Different editions of the TR contain significant variants: John 1:28 reads “Bethabara” in some editions and “Bethany” in others; Romans 8:11 differs between Beza and other editors; Romans 12:11 varies between “serving the Lord” and “serving the time”; James 2:18 contains competing readings across editions.[2] KJV-only proponents cannot even identify which TR edition they consider authoritative—a fatal admission that undermines their entire position.

The Printing Press Did Not Create Infallibility

The notion that mechanical reproduction somehow conferred divine protection represents magical thinking dressed in theological language. Erasmus prepared his foundational edition in great haste using only a few late manuscripts, and he refused to use his oldest and best manuscript (Codex 1 from the twelfth century) because its text differed significantly from others he knew.[3] For Revelation, Erasmus possessed only one manuscript with an unreadable text lacking its final page, so he retranslated missing passages from the Latin Vulgate into Greek, creating words that had never existed in any Greek manuscript.[3]

This is not the foundation of infallibility—it is the foundation of compromise. Due to the rush to print, the first edition contained numerous printing errors; Erasmus himself acknowledged the work was “precipitated rather than edited,” and his second edition contained over 400 corrections.[4] Neither the KJV translators, nor Luther before them, nor Erasmus before him ever used only one New Testament manuscript exclusively, and no two manuscripts of the few dozen used in preparing these editions ever agreed in every exact detail.[1]

The Deception of Majority Counting

KJV defenders frequently claim that the Byzantine text-type—comprising roughly 80 percent of surviving manuscripts—must be accurate because of its numerical dominance. This argument reveals fundamental misunderstanding of textual methodology. Textual criticism is not a democracy; one does not count manuscripts but weighs them. The reason so many Byzantine texts survive is largely because Byzantium was the center of the Eastern Orthodox world for centuries, exactly where the greatest number of manuscripts would naturally be preserved.[1]

Numerical prevalence proves nothing about textual reliability. It merely demonstrates historical accident and geographic concentration.

The Self-Refuting Nature of TR Perfection Claims

KJV supporters claim that manuscripts following the Textus Receptus tradition flawlessly preserved the New Testament originals. They demonstrably did not.[1] The very existence of multiple TR editions—each differing from the others—proves the claim of perfection false. The text of the fourth, fifth, and sixth Elzevir editions was identical, but other editions exhibited variations, and few copies of the “Textus Receptus” issued by other printers exhibited absolutely the same text.[5]

If the TR were perfect, these variations would not exist. Their existence proves that either (1) the TR is not perfect, or (2) KJV advocates cannot identify which edition they consider authoritative. Both conclusions are devastating to their position.

The Theological Incoherence

The affirmation of an errorless text extends only to the original autographs, and only indirectly to copies. Verbal inerrancy of the autographs implies that evangelicals must not attach finality to contemporary versions or translations, but must earnestly pursue the best text.[6] The KJV-only movement does precisely the opposite: it attaches finality to a translation while abandoning the pursuit of better manuscript evidence.

Infallibility of copies does not imply the inerrancy of copies. Inerrancy is a divinely vouchsafed quality of the autographs; such inspiration extended only to the original writings, not to transcripts or translations.[7] Yet KJV advocates conflate these categories, claiming for a translation what theology reserves for autographs.

Conclusion: The Folly Exposed

The KJV-only position asks believers to trust a translation based on a Greek text that (1) contains documented variants across editions, (2) was assembled hastily from late, limited manuscripts, (3) includes passages translated from Latin rather than Greek originals, and (4) cannot be definitively identified even by its own defenders. This is not faithfulness to Scripture—it is substituting human tradition for honest engagement with textual evidence.

The translations we have are in no case beyond the possibility and even the necessity of improvement by revision, and sounder discrimination between early copies remains in prospect.[7] Acknowledging this reality demonstrates genuine respect for God’s Word, not disrespect. The fool claims perfection where none exists; the wise pursue the best available evidence with humility and rigor.

[1] Craig Blomberg, Can We Still Believe the Bible? An Evangelical Engagement with Contemporary Questions (Grand Rapids, MI: Brazos Press, 2014), 37–38.

[2] Rod Mattoon, Treasures from Philippians, Treasures from Scripture Series (Springfield, IL: Rod Mattoon, 2004), 273–274.
[3] Helmut Koester, History and Literature of Early Christianity, Introduction to the New Testament (New York; Berlin: Walter de Gruyter, 2000), 37.
[4] Charles W. Draper, “Textus Receptus,” in Holman Illustrated Bible Dictionary, ed. Chad Brand et al. (Nashville, TN: Holman Bible Publishers, 2003), 1577.
[5] John Peter Lange et al., A Commentary on the Holy Scriptures: Acts (Bellingham, WA: Logos Bible Software, 2008), vi.
[6] Gregory Alan Thornbury, Recovering Classic Evangelicalism: Applying the Wisdom and Vision of Carl F. H. Henry (Wheaton, IL: Crossway, 2013), 139–140.
[7] Carl F. H. Henry, God, Revelation, and Authority (Wheaton, IL: Crossway Books, 1999), 4:232, 4:244.































 

Augustine, Jerome, and Martin Luther

Augustine, Jerome, and Martin Luther all affirmed biblical infallibility, but their understanding centered on the original manuscripts (autographs), not copies or translations.

Augustine and Jerome’s Position

Augustine established a foundational principle in his correspondence with Jerome: only Scripture itself should be considered inerrant[1]. This distinction was crucial—Augustine recognized that while the original writings were divinely inspired and without error, subsequent human efforts to reproduce or translate them could introduce mistakes. Augustine maintained that “the evangelists are free from all falsehood, both from that which proceeds from deliberate deceit, and that which is the result of forgetfulness,”[2] yet he acknowledged that copyists might introduce errors through negligence rather than intentional deception.

Luther’s Perspective

Luther affirmed that God Himself authored Scripture, which is divine wisdom rather than human composition, and declared that “the Word must stand, for God cannot lie; and heaven and earth must go to ruins before the most insignificant letter or tittle of His Word remains unfulfilled.”[1] Importantly, while Luther viewed the canon’s boundaries as an open question, he accepted writings he considered canonical as the inspired and absolutely authoritative Word of God[3].

The Critical Distinction: Autographs vs. Apographs

All three theologians maintained a crucial theological boundary: inerrancy and infallibility do not extend to copies or translations of Scripture, but rather are restricted to the original manuscripts[1]. While the autographs were completely errorless, God did not continue miraculous preservation through copying; instead, He providentially preserved His word through Jewish transcription methods and the sheer number of New Testament copies[4].

This position directly contradicts modern KJV-only claims. These ancient theologians would reject the notion that any single translation—whether the King James Version or any other—possesses the infallibility they attributed solely to the original autographs.

[1] R. C. Sproul, What Is Reformed Theology?: Understanding the Basics (Baker, 2016). [See here, here, here, here.]
[2] D. A. Carson and John D. Woodbridge, Scripture and Truth (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Book House, 1992), 255.
[3] Carl F. H. Henry, God, Revelation, and Authority (Wheaton, IL: Crossway Books, 1999), 4:375.
[4] Alan Cairns, in Dictionary of Theological Terms (Belfast; Greenville, SC: Ambassador Emerald International, 2002), 232.






















The Hypocrisy

The Hypocrisy of Divisive Legalism: A Scriptural Examination

Those who claim biblical fidelity while fracturing the church embody a contradiction that Scripture directly condemns. The pattern is unmistakable: outward adherence to doctrinal purity masks inward corruption and destructive behavior.

The Nature of Their Hypocrisy

This behavior mirrors the Pharisees—appearing righteous externally while harboring hypocrisy and wickedness within (Matt 23:27–28). More specifically, those who honor God with their lips while their hearts remain distant from Him offer worship that is empty, substituting human rules for genuine spiritual commitment (Matt 15:7–9). Jesus warned His followers to guard against this “yeast” of hypocrisy (Luke 12:1), which spreads through communities claiming doctrinal superiority.

Division as Evidence of Spiritual Corruption

The divisive behavior itself reveals the true condition of the heart. Those who create divisions and obstacles contrary to Christian teaching are not serving Christ but their own appetites (Rom 16:17–18). When bitter envy and selfish ambition dwell in the heart, such “wisdom” is earthly and demonic, producing disorder and every evil practice (James 3:13–18). Dissensions and factions are listed among the deeds of the flesh, and those who practice such things will not inherit God’s kingdom (Gal 5:19–21).

The Contradiction Between Preaching and Practice

Their claim to uphold unity while attacking other believers represents fundamental contradiction. Paul appealed for believers to agree with one another and maintain perfect unity in mind and thought (1 Cor 1:10). Jesus prayed that all believers would be one so the world would recognize His mission—a unity that brings complete wholeness (John 17:20–23). Yet those who divide churches while preaching doctrinal purity directly undermine this prayer.

The hypocrisy becomes evident when they focus on minor differences in others while ignoring their own destructive behavior—attempting to remove specks from others’ eyes while a plank remains in their own (Matt 7:3–5).

The Verdict on Divisive Persons

Scripture prescribes clear action: warn divisive persons twice, then separate from them, recognizing they are warped, sinful, and self-condemned (Titus 3:10–11). Those who divide the church follow mere natural instincts and lack the Spirit (Jude 19). God detests those who stir up conflict in the community.

The fundamental issue is this: breaking the unity Christ established becomes an immeasurable sin against God’s work and Christ’s heart[1]. Claiming biblical authority while sowing division reveals not faithfulness but rebellion against Scripture’s central mandate for believers to love and honor one another across doctrinal boundaries.

[1] Lewis Sperry Chafer, Systematic Theology (Grand Rapids, MI: Kregel Publications, 1993), 5:159.

Jun 10, 2026

Solomon’s salvation

Scripture presents Solomon’s spiritual trajectory as a dramatic descent followed by ambiguous recovery, leaving his ultimate salvation status genuinely uncertain.

The Fall from Grace

Solomon’s heart turned away from God as he aged, and he did evil in the Lord’s eyes by failing to follow Him completely as his father David had done. (1 Kings 11:1–13) The Lord became angry because Solomon’s heart had turned away from Him despite explicit commands against following other gods. (1 Kings 11:1–13) Yet God’s judgment came with a crucial qualification: though He would tear the kingdom away, He would not do so during Solomon’s lifetime, for David’s sake. (1 Kings 11:1–13)

Evidence of Repentance

There were grounds for cautious hope about Solomon’s salvation. There is reason to be hopeful because God had promised David that although his son would be disciplined, he would not be forsaken, and God’s steadfast love would not depart from him.[1] If the book of Ecclesiastes is any indication, the king learned from his mistakes and came back into a right relationship with God.[1] The closing words of Ecclesiastes—where Solomon urges readers to “fear God and keep his commandments”—suggest genuine spiritual restoration.

The Unresolved Question

However, Solomon’s recovery from spiritual weariness was slow and incomplete, not like the strong penitence that brought David assurance of forgiveness, and he could not restore the freshness of his first love.[2] Notably, Chrysostom and Greek Church theologians have generally favored his salvation, while Augustine and Latin theologians have generally opposed it.[2]

The biblical record leaves Solomon’s eternal destiny genuinely ambiguous—a sobering reminder that even wisdom and privilege offer no guarantee against spiritual decline, yet also that God’s covenant mercies may extend even to those who fall most dramatically.

[1] Philip Graham Ryken, 1 Kings, ed. Richard D. Phillips, Iain M. Duguid, and Philip Graham Ryken, Reformed Expository Commentary (Phillipsburg, NJ: P&R Publishing, 2011), 300.
[2] John M’Clintock and James Strong, “Sol′omon,” in Cyclopædia of Biblical, Theological, and Ecclesiastical Literature (New York: Harper & Brothers, Publishers, 1880), 9:871.

















Verbal Plenary Preservation

Verbal Plenary Preservation is an argument promoted primarily by King James Version Only advocates claiming that the Textus Receptus represents the only New Testament text that is both divinely inspired and divinely preserved.[1] The doctrine rests on a foundational theological claim: that God’s inspiration of Scripture necessarily entails flawless transmission through every subsequent handwritten copy across generations.

The Core Problem: A False Theological Equation

The underlying flaw is the false presupposition that God’s inspiration of Scripture at a particular point in history also requires His divine preservation of every jot and tittle ever written down by anyone who ever sought to do the work of a scribe.[1] This conflates two distinct divine acts—inspiration (God’s initial authorship) with preservation (God’s protection of copies)—treating them as inseparable when Scripture itself makes no such claim.

Historical and Logical Failures

The Textus Receptus is a compilation by Erasmus from manuscripts dating mostly from AD 900 to 1100, yet Erasmus made use of a very narrow group of texts.[1] He could have consulted manuscripts from numerous geographic locations to avoid textual drifting, manuscripts from varying time periods to identify scribal inaccuracy, or even the available Latin manuscripts which outnumbered the Greek two-to-one, but instead used only a narrow selection.[2]

The Self-Defeating Logic

If Verbal Plenary Preservation were true, the older surviving texts would also have been divinely preserved, making the Majority Text merely a variant of earlier texts and thus an errant version—proof that VPP is false—yet proponents are forced to claim VPP applies only to the MT/TR with no historical, biblical, or logical reason.[1]

The Historical Absence

Most significantly, the early church had no doctrine of preservation, and no doctrine of preservation in any form was stated in a creed until the seventeenth century—well after the creation of the earliest manuscripts and the Textus Receptus itself.[1] This suggests the doctrine emerged from theological anxiety rather than apostolic teaching.

[1] Got Questions Ministries, Got Questions? Bible Questions Answered (Bellingham, WA: Faithlife, 2014–2021). [See here, here, here, here, here, here.]
[2] Got Questions Ministries, Got Questions? Bible Questions Answered [See here.]



Narcissism in pastoral leadership

Narcissism in pastoral leadership represents a profound spiritual pathology where leaders exploit their position to meet personal needs rather than shepherd their congregations. The term describes a specific personality disorder manifesting in churches through patterns of manipulation, control, and emotional abuse.

The Mechanics of Narcissistic Leadership

Predatory narcissists exploit the church environment, where congregants naturally defer to pastoral authority, positioning themselves to satisfy personal desires while neglecting their flocks.[1] These leaders weaponize charisma as a grooming tactic, using intelligence and confidence to render victims powerless while perpetuating emotional neglect, psychological manipulation, and oppressive authority.[1]

The narcissistic pastor operates through a carefully constructed public persona. Abusers typically cultivate socially responsible behavior in public, building reputations as upstanding community members while privately exploiting Christian principles of forgiveness and grace to silence resistance and override discomfort.[1]

Systemic Corruption

Narcissistic church systems promote themselves as uniquely blessed, special, or faithful compared to other congregations, fostering collective grandiosity where members believe they inhabit an extraordinary spiritual moment.[2] Those questioning policies or apparent abuses face swift dismissal.[2] Though mission statements emphasize service and care, the system exists primarily for itself, exhausting those near leadership who must either compromise their integrity or resign.[2]

The Deeper Problem

Narcissistic leaders disregard subordinates’ legitimate emotional needs, exploiting loyalty through callousness and excessive criticism, fostering submissiveness that stifles healthy functioning.[3] Rather than embodying Jesus’s way, narcissistic pastors pursue power and self-protection, resembling corrupt ancient kings indifferent to their wounded congregation.[2]

The tragedy deepens because narcissism and public leadership attract each other—narcissistic personalities gravitate toward positions offering power and prestige, meaning churches disproportionately recruit leaders poorly equipped for healthy relationships.[3]

[1] Jeff Mattson and Terra A. Mattson, Shrinking the Integrity Gap: Between What Leaders Preach and Live (Colorado Springs, CO: David C Cook, 2020), 123–124.
[2] Chuck DeGroat and Richard J. Mouw, When Narcissism Comes to Church: Healing Your Community From Emotional and Spiritual Abuse (Downers Grove, IL: IVP, 2020), 24–25.
[3] Joseph H. Hellerman, “Power in the Service of Others: Leadership in Pauline Theology,” in Biblical Leadership: Theology for the Everyday Leader, Biblical Theology for the Church (Grand Rapids, MI: Kregel Publications, 2017), 420.

























Hyper-separatism

Hyper-separatism represents a theological pathology where the pursuit of doctrinal purity becomes so rigid that it transforms minor disagreements into tests of faith itself. This mindset creates several interconnected problems.

The Problem of Disproportionate Judgment

Hyper-orthodoxy—the desire to defend orthodox belief by any means—wrongly establishes orthodoxy[1], and when applied separatistically, it treats secondary theological nuances as though they carry the weight of core Christian convictions. The result is a distorted hierarchy where distinctions that the early church debated for generations become instant disqualifiers for fellowship. A disagreement about eschatology, church polity, or the precise mechanics of justification becomes weaponized as evidence of apostasy.

The Feedback Loop of Extremism

These errors tend to feed off each other: as the hyper-orthodox feel that right belief is under threat from liberalizers and minimalists, so the hypo-orthodox feel that right belief is at risk from fundamentalists, rigorists and conservatives.[1] Hyper-separatism doesn’t prevent erosion of doctrine—it accelerates it by driving away thoughtful believers who recognize the difference between heresy and honest theological disagreement.

The Loss of Proper Discernment

Treating all disagreements equally destroys the ability to distinguish between what truly matters and what doesn’t. To define “Jesus,” doctrinal division is unavoidable, and we benefit from divisions that have already taken place. The early church required generations of dispute to work out that Jesus has two distinct natures, not a divine-human hybrid, affirming with the Chalcedonian definition that Jesus is “to be acknowledged in two natures, inconfusedly, unchangeably, indivisibly, inseparably.”[2] Hyper-separatism collapses this necessary discernment by making every theological preference equally binding.

The Spiritual Consequence

A “both/and” approach is nearly always required to apprehend truth, a willingness to meet half-way in moderation.[1] Hyper-separatism abandons this balance, fracturing the body of Christ over matters where Scripture itself permits faithful disagreement.

[1] Michael Ward, “Epilogue,” in Heresies and How to Avoid Them: Why It Matters What Christians Believe, ed. Ben Quash and Michael Ward (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Academic: A Division of Baker Publishing Group, 2012), 132–134.
[2] Gavin Ortlund, Finding the Right Hills to Die On: The Case for Theological Triage, The Gospel Coalition Booklet Series (Wheaton, IL: Crossway, 2020), 46.























Jot and tittle

In Matthew 5:18 (NIV), Jesus declares: "For truly I tell you, until heaven and earth disappear, not the smallest letter, not the least ...