(Click here) This issue of Bible Witness (Vol. 2, Issue 4, Oct–Dec 2002) is published by Gethsemane Bible-Presbyterian Church, Singapore, and represents a particular conservative Reformed/Fundamentalist position. From a broader evangelical and Reformed theological perspective, several claims in the magazine warrant critical scrutiny.
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Claims That Are Theologically Problematic or Overstated
1. Verbal Plenary Preservation (VPP) as Equivalent to Verbal Plenary Inspiration (VPI)
The magazine repeatedly equates the inspiration of the original autographs with the preservation of a specific text — the Textus Receptus underlying the KJV. This is a significant theological leap.
The problem: The Westminster Confession of Faith (I.VIII), which they frequently cite, says the Scriptures are "kept pure in all ages" — but this is a general providential claim, not an identification of any specific manuscript tradition as the uniquely preserved text. Mainstream Reformed scholarship (Warfield, Hodge, Machen, Bavinck) affirmed inerrancy of the autographs while acknowledging the legitimate work of textual criticism in recovering the original text. The VPP position as articulated here essentially invests a specific printed edition (the 1633 Elzevir Textus Receptus) with divine authority — something the Confession itself does not do.
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2. KJV-Onlyism Presented as the Only Faithful Position
Jeffrey Khoo's comparison chart ("The Perfection of the Bible: 3 Views," p. 21) places KJV-Onlyism under "All Perfect — Biblical & Reformed Fundamentalism" and treats all other positions as compromised or liberal. This is a false trichotomy.
The problem: This dismisses the vast majority of faithful, inerrantist evangelical scholarship. Scholars like B.B. Warfield, J. Gresham Machen, John Piper, D.A. Carson, and Wayne Grudem all affirm full inerrancy while rejecting KJV-Onlyism. The NASB, ESV, and other translations based on the critical text are not "corrupt" in any doctrinally meaningful sense — the actual textual differences affect no core Christian doctrine. Calling the NIV and other translations "perversions" (as the review of Waite's book does) is polemically excessive and not historically or textually defensible.
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3. The Textus Receptus as the Uniquely "Received" and Preserved Text
Timothy Tow and others argue that the Textus Receptus is the providentially preserved text and that manuscripts underlying modern versions (Westcott-Hort, Nestle-Aland) are "corrupt."
The problem: The Textus Receptus was compiled by Erasmus (1516) from a handful of late Byzantine manuscripts, some of which he back-translated from the Latin Vulgate. It contains readings found in no Greek manuscript (e.g., Revelation 22:19). The claim that God uniquely preserved His Word in this specific tradition is an assertion without clear biblical warrant. The manuscript tradition underlying modern critical texts (Codex Sinaiticus, Codex Vaticanus, Papyrus 46, etc.) is in fact earlier and in many cases more reliable by standard text-critical methodology. The charge that the Nestle-Aland editors were "unbelievers and apostates" does not automatically invalidate their textual work.
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4. Ad Hominem Against Eugene Nida and Westcott & Hort
Tow Siang Hwa calls Eugene Nida "an unregenerate man" and attributes corruption of the Bible to his personal unbelief. The magazine repeatedly frames textual criticism as Satanic conspiracy.
The problem: While Dynamic Equivalence translation theory has legitimate critiques (and formal equivalence has real advantages), dismissing all such work as demonic or the fruit of unbelief is not a sound theological argument. One may critique a methodology without impugning the soul of its proponent. Furthermore, Westcott and Hort, whatever their theological weaknesses, were careful textual scholars whose work has been significantly refined — not simply "corrupt." This kind of rhetoric substitutes invective for argument.
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5. Conflating Preservation Promises with a Specific English Translation
The articles use passages like Psalm 12:6-7, Matthew 5:18, and Matthew 24:35 as proof-texts for the KJV being the perfectly preserved Word of God in English.
The problem: These passages speak to the eternal authority and indestructibility of God's Word — they do not specify which manuscript tradition or which translation God has preserved. Psalm 12:6-7, grammatically, may refer to the preservation of God's people rather than His words (a legitimate exegetical alternative). Using these texts to endorse a specific 17th-century English translation involves a hermeneutical move that the texts themselves do not support.
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6. The Dismissal of Textual Scholarship as "Intellectualism" Opposing Faith
Prabhudas Koshy's article "Faith Guides, Intellectualism Beguiles" sets up a false antithesis between faith in God's Word and scholarly inquiry into manuscripts.
The problem: This is a form of fideism that has historically harmed the church. The Reformers — Calvin, Luther, Beza — were humanist scholars who engaged deeply with the original languages precisely because they had high regard for Scripture. Careful textual study serves faith; it is not its enemy. The suggestion that questioning the KJV's textual base is equivalent to doubting God is a form of intellectual coercion that conflates a theological position with Scripture itself.
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What the Magazine Gets Right
To be fair, the magazine correctly affirms:
• Verbal Plenary Inspiration of the autographs (2 Tim. 3:16; 2 Pet. 1:20-21) — this is orthodox
• The indestructibility and authority of Scripture as a general principle
• The danger of liberal/neo-orthodox views that deny inerrancy
• The importance of formal equivalence in translation as a general principle
• Jesus' high view of Scripture in Matthew 5:17-19 — the exposition is largely sound
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Summary
The core theological error is this: VPP/KJV-Onlyism elevates a particular textual tradition and translation to the level of inspired Scripture itself, which neither the Bible nor the Westminster Standards actually teach. It creates a secondary canon — not the autographs, not even the manuscript traditions, but a 1611 English translation — and then treats any questioning of it as apostasy. This goes beyond what Scripture claims for itself and beyond what the Reformed confessional tradition actually teaches.