Jun 26, 2026

The challenge of defining an “original” text

The challenge of defining an “original” text stems from several interconnected problems that have fundamentally reshaped how scholars approach textual reconstruction.

The sheer volume of textual variation creates the first obstacle. Estimates suggest approximately 900,000 variants exist across surviving Old Testament manuscripts, while New Testament manuscripts contain between 200,000 and 350,000 variants—exceeding the total word count of the New Testament itself.[1] No two manuscripts are identical until the printing press era[1], meaning any attempt to isolate a single authoritative text faces overwhelming evidence of divergence.

Beyond mere quantity, the nature of textual transmission complicates recovery efforts. Early Christian communities in cities like Alexandria, Antioch, and Rome produced localized manuscript traditions, each developing distinctive characteristics as congregations copied scriptures in forms that became known as text-types.[2] Textual transmission appears to have begun before literary composition was complete—each stage was treated as final and released, with literary activity continuing into the first century AD, as evidenced by Septuagint manuscripts and Qumran scrolls.[3] This means distinguishing between intentional literary revision and scribal error becomes nearly impossible.

Contemporary scholarship has largely abandoned the traditional goal. Most scholars today consider recovering the complete original Greek New Testament impossible, given overwhelming textual variants and overlapping textual traditions.[2] Many textual critics have shifted focus from reconstructing an original text toward examining what manuscripts reveal about their sociohistorical contexts and language usage.[1] Modern scholars increasingly pursue the “initial text”—the earliest recoverable form of each biblical book—acknowledging that considerable changes may have occurred between the author’s manuscript and this initial text, leaving no surviving traces.[2] This represents a fundamental conceptual shift: rather than seeking a definitive original, scholars now reconstruct the earliest textual stage accessible through surviving evidence.

[1] Lee Martin McDonald, Before There Was a Bible: Authorities in Early Christianity (London; New York; Oxford; New Delhi; Sydney: T&T Clark, 2023), 128–129.
[2] Edward D. Andrews, The Reading Culture of Early Christianity: The Production, Publication, Circulation, and Use of Books in the Early Christian Church (Cambridge, OH: Christian Publishing House, 2019). [See here, here, here.]
[3] Emanuel Tov, “Textual Criticism of the Hebrew Bible, History of Text,” in The Lexham Bible Dictionary, ed. John D. Barry et al. (Bellingham, WA: Lexham Press, 2016). [See here.]



















Paul’s call to unity

Paul’s call to unity in Ephesians doesn’t require uniformity in every dimension of church life. The theological foundation for unity rests on the triune God—one Spirit empowering the body, one Lord as its head, and one Father ordaining redemption[1]—but this doesn’t extend to prescribing a single Bible translation.

The ideal of unity need not eliminate distinctive witnesses to Christian faith, distinctive practices, or distinctive polities; rather, it should lead to valuing the multiplicity of forms in which the gospel has taken shape across different parts of the body of Christ, with each tradition enriching others through humble learning[2]. Bible translations fall into this category of legitimate diversity.

What Paul emphasizes instead are the virtues that enable unity across differences. The five virtues characterizing life worthy of Christian calling include humility, which points to dependence on God and is necessary for unity because pride often stands behind discord[3]. Gentleness—strength under control—is a work of divine grace producing patience and submission to God[3].

We suggest that unity relates to understanding God and salvation: there is one all-embracing God whose nature as love is revealed in Christ and the Spirit, and human salvation consists in imitating this divine unity both inwardly and socially[4]. This unity operates at the level of faith itself—shared trust in Christ—rather than at the level of textual particulars. Different Bible translations can communicate the same gospel and call believers to the same faith, hope, and love that Paul identifies as the markers of authentic Christian community.

[1] C. Ryan Fields, Local and Universal: A Free Church Account of Ecclesial Catholicity, Studies in Christian Doctrine and Scripture (Downers Grove, IL: IVP Academic: An Imprint of InterVarsity Press, 2024), 54.
[2] David Arthur deSilva, An Introduction to the New Testament: Contexts, Methods and Ministry Formation (Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press, 2004), 730–731.
[3] David S. Dockery, “Convictional Yet Cooperative: The Making of a Great Commission People,” in The Great Commission Resurgence (Nashville, TN: B&H Academic, 2010), 396.
[4] John Muddiman, The Epistle to the Ephesians, Black’s New Testament Commentary (London: Continuum, 2001), 49.






















From Vulgate to Nova Vulgata

The Council of Trent adopted the Vulgate as the authorized translation of the Roman Catholic Church in 1546[1], establishing it as the Church’s official Latin Bible for centuries. However, the Vulgate that developed over time became a composite work—some portions from Jerome’s original translation, some from surviving Old Latin versions, and some revised after Jerome’s death[2]. This textual complexity, combined with advances in biblical scholarship, eventually prompted ecclesiastical reconsideration.

The shift to the Nova Vulgata reflected the Church’s engagement with modern scholarly methods. The Nova Vulgata was produced under Pope Paul VI and included stylistic and textual updates relying on modern critical methods[1], and it was published in Rome in 1979 and remains the official version for the Roman Catholic Church[1]. Rather than abandoning the Vulgate tradition entirely, the Church modernized it—the Nova Vulgata serves as a Latin typical edition for use in the Roman Rite[3].

The rationale behind this revision centered on scholarly integrity and fidelity to original texts. The Nova Vulgata bears witness to the Church’s critical sense and desire to make full use of human sciences, with the Church serving the Word of God by making every effort to use the best texts and removing errors introduced through transmission[3]. Critics raised concerns about losing the Vulgate’s distinctive readings and their connection to liturgical tradition, yet the Nova Vulgata and accompanying guidelines provide useful and necessary direction for preparing liturgical texts while remaining appropriately flexible in addressing complicated textual problems[3]. Essentially, the Church chose to honor Jerome’s own scholarly principles—updating his work with better access to original sources—rather than preserving a fixed text that had accumulated errors over twelve centuries.

[1] Jeffrey E. Miller, “Vulgate,” in The Concise Lexham Bible Dictionary, ed. John D. Barry et al. (Bellingham, WA: Lexham Press, 2021). [See here, here, here.]
[2] Gregory W. Dawes, Introduction to the Bible, ed. Daniel Durken, The New Collegeville Bible Commentary (Collegeville, MN: Liturgical Press, 2007), 1:30.
[3] Stephen Ryan, “Chapter 9: The Word of God and the Textual Pluriformity of the Old Testament,” in Verbum Domini and the Complementarity of Exegesis and Theology, ed. Scott Carl and Christopher J. Thompson, Catholic Theological Formation Series (Grand Rapids, MI; Cambridge, UK: William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company, 2015), 147.





















Jun 25, 2026

Three interconnected claims

Plenary Divine Inspiration means that all of Scripture is inspired, not just part of it[1]. The term “plenary” emphasizes completeness—the “God-breathed” quality must be applied to all Scripture, not merely its concepts[2]. This differs from partial inspiration theories that claim only certain portions or themes carry divine authority. God the Holy Spirit brought Scripture into being through the process called inspiration[2], making the entire written text a product of divine agency working through human authors.

Inerrancy and Infallibility follow as consequences of this inspiration. As a consequence of divine inspiration, Scripture is infallible and thus completely trustworthy in all that it affirms, teaches, and communicates[3]. The Bible, when correctly interpreted in light of the level to which culture and the means of communication had developed at the time it was written, and in view of the purposes for which it was given, is fully truthful in all that it affirms[4]. Importantly, infallibility is especially connected with religious truth, and in the domain of religious truth and the kingdom of God among men, Scripture’s claim to authority and sufficiency is absolute[5].

Supreme and Final Authority means that Scripture is without error in all that it teaches and asserts, and is the final, sufficient, and magisterial authority for our knowledge of God, self, and the world[3]. The biblical writers and Jesus Himself claim that the written word is the final arbitrator in matters of faith and practice[1]. This authority is intrinsic to Scripture itself, not granted by the church or dependent on human interpretation.

[1] Norman L. Geisler and William E. Nix, A General Introduction to the Bible (Chicago: Moody Press, 1986), 52.
[2] Harlyn Graydon Purdy, A Distinct Twenty-First Century Pentecostal Hermeneutic (Eugene, OR: Wipf & Stock, 2015), 120, 122.
[3] Stephen J. Wellum, Systematic Theology: From Canon to Concept, Systematic Theology (Brentwood, TN: B&H Academic, 2024), 1:225.
[4] Aída Besançon Spencer and William David Spencer, Christian Egalitarian Leadership: Empowering the Whole Church according to the Scriptures (Eugene, OR: Wipf and Stock, 2020). [See here.]
[5] William Burt Pope, A Compendium of Christian Theology: Being Analytical Outlines of a Course of Theological Study, Biblical, Dogmatic, Historical, Volumes 1-3 (London: Beveridge and Co., 1879), 1:174–175.



























Some advices to the proponents of the Textus Receptus and KJV-Only position

Proponents of the Textus Receptus and KJV-Only position deserve respectful engagement, but several important clarifications deserve consideration:

Acknowledge legitimate concerns. The commitment to biblical authority and resistance to subjective interpretation reflects genuine evangelical conviction about God’s Word[1]. This motivation is sincere and should be honored, even where conclusions differ.

Recognize the textual reality. Over 85% of all Greek New Testament editions agree with one another[2], meaning the differences between the Textus Receptus and modern critical texts are far smaller than rhetoric sometimes suggests. The Textus Receptus will not lead into theological error, though it is based on a few late manuscripts, and editions closer to the original autographs have been produced[3]. This is not a matter of choosing between truth and falsehood, but between different manuscript witnesses.

Distinguish between translation and textual criticism. The KJV is an excellent translation, but defending a particular translation doesn’t require defending a particular Greek text. The King James Version was based closely upon Beza 1598[2], which itself represents one point in a developing textual tradition—not a final, unchangeable standard.

Resist the false binary. KJV defenders criticize modern textual considerations as subjective human fancy, yet modern textual criticism actually represents a disciplined attempt to protect the biblical text, not a vehicle for humanistic belief[1]. Engaging with manuscript evidence is not inherently compromising faith.

Pursue humility about certainty. Even fundamentalists should reject attempts to make the Textus Receptus the only acceptable Greek text[3]. Scholarly integrity requires acknowledging that our knowledge of the original text continues to improve through careful study of available evidence.

[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), 231–232.
[2] Stephen’s 1550 Textus Receptus: With Morphology (Bellingham, WA: Logos Bible Software, 2002). [See here, here.]
[3] William Sailer et al., Religious and Theological Abstracts (Myerstown, PA: Religious and Theological Abstracts, 2012). [See here, here.]
















The Living Word Among Us

God speaks to humanity through His Word, and this reality transforms how we encounter Scripture. Throughout history, God has continuously revealed Himself through what is called the threefold Word of God[1]—the eternal Word (Christ), the written Word (Scripture), and the proclaimed Word (preaching). Each form carries the same divine authority because human speech becomes God’s Word not through its own merit, but through His sanctifying gifts[1].

The Bible’s power lies not in ink and paper, but in its origin. Creation itself emerged from God’s spoken word: “God said, ‘Let there be light,’ and there was light”[2]. That same creative force operates through Scripture today. God’s Word does not merely impart information; it actually creates life. It’s not only descriptive; it’s effective, too. God speaking is God acting.[3] When you open the Bible, you’re not simply reading ancient history—you’re encountering the voice of the One who sustains all things.

Yet this power reaches us through human vessels. Humility is required to listen to the divine Word expressed through human mediation, whether through the prophets and apostles or through one’s local pastor[1]. When a fallible person speaks God’s name, our piety and obedience toward God are best demonstrated when we show ourselves teachable toward his minister, although he excels us in nothing.[1]

As you read Scripture today, approach it not as a historical document to analyze, but as the living Word planted within you. The Word is “planted in you, which can save you”; the Word that “abides in you”; and the Word which should “dwell in you richly”[3]. Trust that God’s Spirit works through these words to accomplish exactly what He intends.

[1] R. Michael Allen, Reformed Theology, Doing Theology (New York; London: T&T Clark, 2010), 24–25.
[2] Bryan Chapell, Christ-Centered Worship: Letting the Gospel Shape Our Practice (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Academic, 2009), 223.
[3] Michael Lawrence, Biblical Theology in the Life of the Church: A Guide for Ministry, 9Marks (Wheaton, IL: Crossway, 2010), 17–18.















"Hava Nagila" (הבה נגילה), "Let us rejoice"


 

Psalm 12, the study in the Vulgate

Here is a full theological interpretation of Psalm 11 (Vulgate numbering) — which corresponds to Psalm 12 in most Hebrew-numbered Protestant Bibles — based on Jerome's Latin text and the Douay-Rheims rendering.


Psalm 11 (Vulgate) — Salva me ,Domine — "Save me, O Lord"

A note on numbering: The Vulgate's Psalm 11 is numbered as Psalm 12 in the Hebrew (Masoretic) tradition and most Protestant Bibles, due to the Vulgate combining Psalms 9 and 10 into one. The superscription in the Vulgate reads "in finem pro octava" — "unto the end: for the octave, a psalm for David." The "octava" likely refers to a musical instrument of eight strings or a liturgical octave context, and "in finem" points the Psalm toward its eschatological or messianic telos.


Verses 2–3: The Crisis of Faithlessness

Jerome's Latin renders the opening cry: "Save me, O Lord, for there is now no saint: truths are decayed from among the children of men." The word "sanctus" (holy one, saint) has disappeared from human society; what has also diminished is "veritates" — truths, or faithful loyalties. This is not merely a social complaint but a theological crisis: when fidelity (fides) dries up among humanity, God's own covenant faithfulness is being contradicted in the moral order.

The psalm continues: "They have spoken vain things, every one to his neighbour: with deceitful lips, and with a double heart have they spoken." The Latin "corde et corde" — literally "heart and heart" — is a striking expression for duplicity. The double heart ("cor duplex") is the opposite of the single-hearted devotion ("cor unum") that marks the covenant community. This anticipates James 1:8's "vir duplex animo" (double-minded man).


Verse 4: Imprecation Against Falsehood

"May the Lord destroy all deceitful lips, and the tongue that speaketh proud things." The Latin "linguam magniloquam" — the great-speaking or boastful tongue — is a theologically significant phrase. The tongue that exalts itself usurps the place of God's own word ("eloquium"). This sets up a contrast that reaches its climax in verse 7.


Verse 5: The Autonomy of the Wicked

"Who have said: We will magnify our tongue: our lips are our own: who is Lord over us?" This is the archetypal voice of human self-sufficiency. "Labia nostra a nobis sunt" — "our lips are from ourselves" — denies the creatureliness of human speech. Patristic interpreters like Augustine read this as the language of pride ("superbia"), the primal sin by which the creature refuses to acknowledge the Creator as the source and norm of all speech and action.


Verse 6: God's Arising on Behalf of the Poor

"By reason of the misery of the needy, and the groans of the poor, now will I arise, saith the Lord. I will set him in safety: I will deal confidently in his regard." This is the theological turning point of the Psalm. The "gemitus pauperum" (groans of the poor) reaches the ears of God and provokes divine action. The word "nunc exsurgam" — "now will I arise" — is an almost juridical language of God taking his place as judge and defender. This verse has deep resonance with the Magnificat tradition and the preferential concern for the "anawim" (the poor and humble).


Verse 7: The Purity of Divine Speech

"The words of the Lord are pure words: as silver tried by the fire, purged from the earth, refined seven times." Here the Psalm sets the "eloquia Domini" (words of the Lord) in deliberate contrast to the deceitful lips of verses 3–5. The metaphor of silver refined "septuplum" — seven times — speaks of absolute, complete purity. The number seven carries its full theological weight as the number of perfection and completeness. Where human words are duplicitous and self-serving, God's word is wholly reliable. This verse has been widely used in the tradition to affirm the trustworthiness of Scripture.


Verse 8: Eternal Preservation

"Thou, O Lord, wilt preserve us: and keep us from this generation for ever." The divine pledge of "custodia" (keeping, guarding) is the answer to the moral collapse described in the opening. The community of faith is preserved not by its own moral achievement but by God's faithful watchfulness across every generation.


Verse 9: The Final Tension

"The wicked walk round about: according to thy highness, thou hast multiplied the children of men." This closing verse holds the tension characteristic of the Psalter: the wicked are still circling, but God's sovereign elevation ("altitudo tua") governs even this. The Vulgate's rendering suggests that the very proliferation of humanity — for good or ill — falls under divine providence.


Theological Summary

Psalm 11 in the Vulgate is fundamentally a meditation on "the crisis of human speech and the reliability of divine speech". The collapse of "sanctus" and "veritas" among human beings (vv. 2–3) leads to the arrogance of self-sovereign language (vv. 4–5), which in turn provokes God's vindicating word on behalf of the poor (v. 6). The climax is the assertion that God's own "eloquia" are the gold standard of truth — refined, tested, unadulterated. The Church Fathers, particularly Augustine in his "Enarrationes in Psalmos", read this Psalm Christologically: the absence of the "sanctus" among humanity points to the need for the one true Holy One, Christ, whose word is the "argentum igne probatum" par excellence.



Three infallable and inerrant popes in Bible-Presbyterian Church

The Roman Catholic Church teaches that papal infallibility applies only when the pope speaks “ex cathedra”—that is, when exercising his office as shepherd and teacher of all Christians with supreme apostolic authority, defining a doctrine concerning faith or morals for the whole church. This is a narrow, specific condition, not a blanket claim about all papal statements or actions.

Infallibility operates under four conditions, the first being that the pope defines a universal doctrine concerning faith or morals—so infallibility applies to issues like the fate of the wicked in hell and homosexuality, but not to matters like evolutionary theory or economic systems. Second, the pope must speak from the chair of Peter with supreme authority as the vicar of Christ. Third, infallibility is an ability the pope possesses through God’s assistance, which Christ promised to Peter and his successors. Fourth, papal pronouncements don’t require church approval and cannot be altered.

The practical scope is remarkably small. Since Vatican Council I declared this doctrine in 1870, popes have made only one “ex cathedra” pronouncement: Pope Pius XII’s 1950 declaration of the bodily assumption of Mary. Individual popes remain fallible in their personal beliefs, pastoral letters, and most official statements. The doctrine protects only solemn, formally defined doctrinal declarations on faith and morals—a category so restrictive that it has been invoked essentially once in over 150 years.

We have three infallable and inerrant popes in Bible-Presbyterian Church, if you know their names, please type in the comment below. 


Psalmi - Chapter 11, The Latin Vulgate Old Testament Bible

 1 victori pro octava canticum David


in finem pro octava psalmus David


Unto the end: for the octave, a psalm for David.



2 salva Domine quoniam defecit sanctus quoniam inminuti sunt fideles a filiis hominum


salvum me fac Domine quoniam defecit sanctus quoniam deminutae sunt veritates a filiis hominum


Save me, O Lord, for there is now no saint: truths are decayed from among the children of men.



3 frustra loquuntur unusquisque proximo suo labium subdolum in corde et corde locuti sunt


vana locuti sunt unusquisque ad proximum suum labia dolosa in corde et corde locuti sunt


They have spoken vain things, every one to his neighbour: with deceitful lips, and with a double heart have they spoken.


4 disperdat Dominus omnia labia dolosa linguam magniloquam


disperdat Dominus universa labia dolosa linguam magniloquam


May the Lord destroy all deceitful lips, and the tongue that speaketh proud things.



5 qui dixerunt linguam nostram roboremus labia nostra nobiscum sunt quis dominus noster est


qui dixerunt linguam nostram magnificabimus labia nostra a nobis sunt quis noster dominus est


Who have said: We will magnify our tongue: our lips are our own: who is Lord over us?



6 propter vastitatem inopum et gemitum pauperum nunc consurgam dicit Dominus ponam in salutari auxilium eorum


propter miseriam inopum et gemitum pauperum nunc exsurgam dicit Dominus ponam in salutari fiducialiter agam in eo


By reason of the misery of the needy, and the groans of the poor, now will I arise, saith the Lord. I will set him in safety: I will deal confidently in his regard.


7 eloquia Domini eloquia munda argentum igne probatum separatum a terra colatum septuplum


eloquia Domini eloquia casta argentum igne examinatum probatum terrae purgatum septuplum


The words of the Lord are pure words: as silver tried by the fire, purged from the earth, refined seven times.



8 tu Domine custodies ea servabis nos a generatione hac in aeternum


tu Domine servabis nos et custodies nos a generatione hac et in aeternum


Thou, O Lord, wilt preserve us: and keep us from this generation for ever.



9 in circuitu impii ambulabunt cum exaltati fuerint vilissimi filiorum hominum


in circuitu impii ambulant secundum altitudinem tuam multiplicasti filios hominum


The wicked walk round about: according to thy highness, thou hast multiplied the children of men.




Divino Afflante Spiritu

The Roman Catholic Church has substantially moved away from this problem in recent decades, though the historical rigidity persisted far longer than many realize.

For centuries, the Church treated the Latin Vulgate as infallible—the Council of Trent (1546) and Vatican Council (1870) both declared it “sacred and canonical” and containing “revelation, with no admixture of error.”[1] This doctrine of Vulgate authority created genuine difficulties for Catholic scholars as errors became increasingly apparent and widely acknowledged.[1]

The turning point came with institutional change. In 1943, Pope Pius XII issued the encyclical Divino Afflante Spiritu, which permitted Catholic translations to be based on original Hebrew and Greek texts rather than exclusively on the Latin Vulgate.[2] This represented a fundamental reversal. The Confraternity subsequently produced an Old Testament translation based on original texts, with the complete project finished by 1969 and published as the New American Bible in 1970.[2]

By 1966, Catholic scholars were collaborating with Protestant scholars on ecumenical projects like the Common Bible (1973) and New Oxford Annotated Bible (1977).[2] This collaborative approach would have been unthinkable during the Reformation era.

However, the Church didn’t entirely abandon the Vulgate—it remains historically significant—but it no longer insists on its infallibility or exclusivity. The shift from defending an indefensible position to embracing scholarly engagement with original languages represents genuine institutional reform. Modern Catholic Bible translations now function similarly to Protestant ones, drawing from the best available manuscript evidence rather than claiming preservation through a single authoritative version. The problem has been substantially resolved, though it took nearly four centuries after the Reformation for Rome to acknowledge what Protestant scholars had argued from the beginning.

[1] Loraine Boettner, Roman Catholicism (Phillipsburg, NJ: Presbyterian and Reformed Publishing Company, 1962), 88.
[2] Norman L. Geisler and William E. Nix, A General Introduction to the Bible (Chicago: Moody Press, 1986), 563.












Doctrine of preservation in Roman Catholic Church

For centuries, the Roman Catholic Church maintained that the Latin Vulgate was God’s preserved Word.[1] This position mirrors KJV-onlyism in its fundamental claim: that God supernaturally guaranteed the perfection of a particular translation.

The comparison becomes even more explicit when examining the logical endpoint of both positions. Those who argue that God perfectly preserved His Word in copies and translations reason that He would prevent misunderstanding through interpretation—a rationale that led the Catholic Church to declare that the Pope and Church Councils were infallible when speaking authoritatively, since human fallibility at the interpretive stage would compromise the preservation of the Word.[1]

What’s particularly revealing is how defenders of the infallible King James Bible find their reasoning leading back toward Roman Catholicism[1]—the very tradition Protestants rejected. Both systems attempt to eliminate human fallibility from the chain of communication by investing infallibility in an institution or text rather than trusting God’s Word to accomplish its purpose despite human limitations.

Some KJV advocates, like Peter Ruckman, teach what amounts to a doctrine of double inspiration—claiming God supernaturally guided the KJV translators to “correct the Greek”—similar to Augustine’s error regarding the Septuagint.[1] This doctrine parallels Rome’s claim that the Church itself becomes an infallible interpreter and preserver of Scripture.

The fundamental problem both share is an overextension of the doctrine of preservation. Rather than trusting that God’s Word accomplishes its redemptive purpose through imperfect human vessels, both systems demand absolute textual or institutional perfection—a demand that Scripture itself never makes and that ultimately undermines the accessibility and clarity of God’s Word to ordinary believers.

[1] James B. Williams and Randolph Shaylor, eds., God’s Word in Our Hands: The Bible Preserved for Us (Greenville, SC; Belfast, Northern Ireland: Ambassador Emerald International, 2003), 373–374.








Psalm 12 New American Bible—Vatican

 For the leader; “upon the eighth.” A psalm of David.


I

2

Help, LORD, for no one loyal remains;


the faithful have vanished from the children of men.a


3

They tell lies to one another,


speak with deceiving lips and a double heart.b


II

4

May the LORD cut off all deceiving lips,


and every boastful tongue,


5

Those who say, “By our tongues we prevail;


when our lips speak, who can lord it over us?”c


III

6

“Because they rob the weak, and the needy groan,


I will now arise,” says the LORD;


“I will grant safety to whoever longs for it.”d


IV

7

The promises of the LORD are sure,


silver refined in a crucible,*


silver purified seven times.e


8

You, O LORD, protect us always;


preserve us from this generation.


9

On every side the wicked roam;


the shameless are extolled by the children of men.

Psalm 12 New American Bible Revised Edition (NAB-RE)

For the leader; “upon the eighth.” A psalm of David.


I

2

Help, LORD, for no one loyal remains;


the faithful have vanished from the children of men.a


3

They tell lies to one another,


speak with deceiving lips and a double heart.b


II

4

May the LORD cut off all deceiving lips,


and every boastful tongue,


5

Those who say, “By our tongues we prevail;


when our lips speak, who can lord it over us?”c


III

6

“Because they rob the weak, and the needy groan,


I will now arise,” says the LORD;


“I will grant safety to whoever longs for it.”d


IV

7

The promises of the LORD are sure,


silver refined in a crucible,*


silver purified seven times.e


8

You, O LORD, protect us always;


preserve us from this generation.


9

On every side the wicked roam;


the shameless are extolled by the children of men.


Psalm 12 Revised Standard Version Catholic Edition

 Psalm 12

Revised Standard Version Catholic Edition


Plea for Help in Evil Times

To the choirmaster: according to The Sheminith. A Psalm of David.


1 Help, Lord; for there is no longer any that is godly;

    for the faithful have vanished from among the sons of men.

2 Every one utters lies to his neighbor;

    with flattering lips and a double heart they speak.


3 May the Lord cut off all flattering lips,

    the tongue that makes great boasts,

4 those who say, “With our tongue we will prevail,

    our lips are with us; who is our master?”


5 “Because the poor are despoiled, because the needy groan,

    I will now arise,” says the Lord;

    “I will place him in the safety for which he longs.”

6 The promises of the Lord are promises that are pure,

    silver refined in a furnace on the ground,

    purified seven times.


7 Do thou, O Lord, protect us,

    guard us ever from this generation.

8 On every side the wicked prowl,

    as vileness is exalted among the sons of men.



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What is Ipsissima verba?

Ipsissima verba is a Latin phrase meaning “the very words”[1][2]—specifically, it refers to language scholars can attribute to the historical Jesus as recorded in biblical texts and other early Christian writings[1].

The term functions as a scholarly tool for assessing the historical authenticity of Jesus’s recorded statements. When scholars identify a saying as ipsissima verba, they’re claiming that the exact wording reflects what Jesus actually spoke. However, this standard is quite stringent, and many scholars recognize a related but less demanding criterion: ipsissima vox Jesu (“the very voice of Jesus”), which allows that while the precise words may not be verbatim, they faithfully capture Jesus’s actual thoughts, intentions, and meaning[3].

This distinction matters because the Gospels were written decades after Jesus’s ministry and transmitted orally before being recorded. Scholars acknowledge that Jesus’s words are often presented in “inspired paraphrase rather than word for word,”[4] which is why ipsissima verba represents a higher bar than ipsissima vox. The latter offers a more realistic standard for evaluating Gospel authenticity—accepting that while we may not possess the exact Aramaic words Jesus spoke, the Gospel accounts preserve his authentic voice and meaning.

[1] Joel B. Green and Lee Martin McDonald, “Glossary,” in The World of the New Testament: Cultural, Social, and Historical Contexts, ed. Joel B. Green and Lee Martin McDonald (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Academic, 2013), 583.
[2] Douglas Mangum, The Lexham Glossary of Theology (Bellingham, WA: Lexham Press, 2014). [See here.]
[3] Arthur G. Patzia and Anthony J. Petrotta, Pocket Dictionary of Biblical Studies (Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press, 2002), 64.
[4] Charles H.H. Scobie, “Review of The Glory of Christ by Peter Lewis,” Themelios (1994), 19:3:30.






















Ipsissima Verba

As a pastor who stands within the heritage of historic Protestant orthodoxy, I honor your fierce devotion to the ipsissima verba—the very words of God. The doctrine of preservation is not a Reformation novelty; it is a biblical promise. However, the specific formulation of Verbal Plenary Preservation (VPP) as applied exclusively to the 1611 King James Version demands a rigorous, loving, and practical critique.


Let us walk through five epistemological and historical thresholds, and I will pose the piercing questions that arise at each.


1. The Historical Lacuna (The 1,500-Year Silence)

The Question: If God providentially preserved every single inspired word exclusively in the Textus Receptus (TR) stream, culminating in the KJV, what is your theological accounting for the Byzantine, Alexandrian, and Western text-types used by the undivided Church for fifteen centuries? 

The Practical Critique: The Eastern Orthodox Church, the Syriac-speaking church, and the Latin Vulgate tradition operated for millennia without access to your specific Greek TR. If VPP is "verbal" and "plenary," then either the Church was without the complete Word for 1,500 years, or God’s preservation was generic (substantive, yet text-critically fluid) rather than verbal until the Reformation. This collapses the historical continuity of the visible Church.


2. The Shifting Sands of the "Received Text"

The Question: Which edition of the TR do you hold to be the infallibly preserved text? Erasmus' 1516 edition (which lacked 1 John 5:7), his 1522 edition (which added it retroactively from a dubious Latin manuscript), Stephanus’ 1550, Beza’s 1598, or the KJV translators’ own 1611 marginal variants? 

The Practical Critique: VPP demands a fixed archetype. Yet the TR was a moving target. If you claim the KJV translation is the standard, then you are effectively arguing that the apographa (copies) did not merely reflect the autographs, but superseded them. Practically, this forces you into a position where the 1611 translators—who admitted in their preface that "we do not deny, nay we affirm and avow, that the very meanest translation is the Word of God"—were more inspired in their final English output than they themselves realized.


3. The Translation Paradox (Hebrew/Aramaic/Greek vs. English)

The Question: Does VPP apply to the original-language words underlying the KJV, or to the English words in the KJV itself? If the latter, why does the KJV translate the same Hebrew nephesh as "soul," "life," "creature," and "person" variably? Why does it translate the same Greek baptizo as "wash" (Mark 7:4) but "baptize" elsewhere?

The Practical Critique: Verbal preservation of meaning is theologically sound. Verbal preservation of specific English lexical units is impossible because translation is inherently a trade-off of denotation, connotation, and syntax. If you insist the English rendering of Acts 12:4 (Easter rather than Passover) is verbally preserved, you force the Holy Spirit to utter a historical anachronism. Practically, VPP applied to translation requires the translators to possess concurrent inspiration, a doctrine the Reformers vehemently rejected (reserving inspiration solely for the prophets and apostles).


4. The Ecclesiological and Missiological Dilemma

The Question: If the KJV is the terminus of VPP, how does God exercise His verbal preservation for the 4.5 billion non-anglophone souls alive today? Is the Chinese Union Version, the Luther Bible, or the Reina-Valera merely a "second-hand" witness, lacking plenary verbal authority?

The Practical Critique: This reduces the universal priesthood of believers to a linguistic aristocracy. God promised that His Word would not return void (Isaiah 55:11) for every nation, tribe, and tongue. To bind VPP to a 17th-century Early Modern English translation is to make the doctrine of preservation accidental to history, rather than essential to soteriology. The historic, practical reality is that the Spirit regenerates through faithful translations, not exclusively through perfect translations.


5. The Epistemological Circularity (The Canon within the Canon)

The Question: How do you justify the exclusion of the Apocrypha from your VPP? The original 1611 KJV included the Apocrypha between the Testaments. If the 1611 edition is the preserved standard, were those books verbally preserved for the first 250 years of KJV history, only to lose their verbal preservation later?

The Practical Critique: This exposes the fatal flaw: VPP is not derived from an objective textual history; it is derived from a post-hoc theological commitment. You must use the KJV to prove the TR, and the TR to prove the KJV—a Cartesian circle. Practically, this means your doctrine of preservation is not evidential (arising from manuscript data) but confessional (arising from tradition), which ironically is the very charge you level against Roman Catholicism.


The Pastoral and Practical Conclusion:

My critique, offered in the bonds of evangelical charity, is this: VPP as defined by KJV-Onlyism confuses Revelation (the inerrant autographs, given once for all) with Transmission (the providential, yet fallible, process of copying and translating).

The historic Reformed position (e.g., the Westminster Confession 1.8) holds that the original Hebrew and Greek are immediately inspired and kept pure in all ages by God's singular care—but this "purity" refers to the substantive preservation of the text in the majority of witnesses, not to the exclusive verbal perfection of a single printed edition or translation.

Hold the KJV high—for its majesty, its literary gravity, and its historical fruit. But set it in its proper place: it is the precious conduit, not the inspired autograph. By doing so, you free the doctrine of preservation from the brittle prison of 1611 and restore its global, historical, and Christ-centered majesty. For the Word preserved is ultimately the Word Incarnate—and He is not bound to the pages of a single English tome, but is revealed faithfully across every faithful translation that preaches His cross.



Jun 24, 2026

A CRITIQUE ON THE ARTICLE: "THE BIBLE KEPT PURE"

https://www.truelifebpc.org.sg/church_weekly/the-bible-kept-pure/ 

Here are the key errors and weaknesses in the article:

Theological/Logical Errors

  • The article conflates inspiration (God superintending the original writing) with preservation (transmission through history). These are related but distinct doctrines requiring separate arguments, not simple equations like "100% inspiration requires 100% preservation."
  • The Westminster Confession phrase "kept pure in all ages" is being made to carry far more weight than it was originally intended to bear. Most WCF scholars argue this refers to the substance of Scripture being preserved, not the precise wording of a specific textual tradition.
  • Matthew 5:18 is misapplied. Jesus was affirming the authority and fulfillment of the Law, not making a promise about manuscript transmission accuracy.

Historical Errors

  • The article implies the Textus Receptus (underlying the KJV) represents the purely preserved text, but the TR itself went through multiple editions with variations — Erasmus compiled it hastily in 1516 with significant errors, even back-translating from the Latin Vulgate in places.
  • The KJV translators themselves did not hold the view being argued here. Their preface explicitly acknowledges they worked from multiple manuscripts and expected future revision.

Logical Fallacies

  • The article presents a false dilemma: either the KJV/TR is perfectly preserved, or we have no reliable Bible at all.
  • Circular reasoning appears throughout — the preserved Bible must be the KJV/TR because we need a perfectly preserved Bible.

Omissions

  • No engagement with textual criticism as a discipline or the vast manuscript evidence (Dead Sea Scrolls, papyri, etc.) that actually demonstrates substantial preservation.
  • No acknowledgment that the Byzantine/TR tradition itself contains textual variants and debates.



A critique on a sermon: THE AUTHORITY AND SUFFICIENCY OF SCRIPTURE

https://www.truelifebpc.org.sg/church_weekly/the-authority-and-sufficiency-of-scripture/

This is, overall, a strong evangelical sermon in terms of clarity, structure, and pastoral intent. It is carefully organized, text-driven, and aims to move from doctrine (inspiration) to application (obedience). That said, there are several theological, exegetical, and rhetorical issues worth critiquing.

One of the first concerns is how the sermon reads 2 Timothy 3:16–17. The passage is primarily describing the function and divine origin of “scripture” in Paul’s context, not laying out a fully developed doctrine of “the Bible” as a bound, completed canon in the modern sense. The sermon slides fairly quickly from “scripture” in the first-century sense (primarily the Old Testament, with emerging apostolic writings) to “the Bible” as a fixed, completed book identical to modern printed editions. That move is common in preaching, but it is still a theological inference rather than something explicitly stated in the text.

A second issue is the way “inspiration” is explained. The sermon equates “inspiration” with a kind of direct divine speech where “every word written is His.” That reflects a strong doctrine of verbal inspiration, which may be within orthodox evangelical bounds, but the sermon does not distinguish carefully between inspiration (the Spirit’s role in the production of Scripture) and preservation, transmission, or translation. Later, it effectively collapses all of these into a seamless chain where “what we have in the Bible is what God wants to say to us” in a very direct, almost unmediated sense. This risks flattening important distinctions that historical theology and textual criticism normally keep separate.

Closely related is the treatment of translations. The sermon says that translations “represent the words of the original” and therefore “we have in our hands the word of God.” That is broadly acceptable in a pastoral sense, but it sidesteps a real complexity: translations are interpretive acts, not merely mechanical transfers. Different translation philosophies (formal equivalence, dynamic equivalence, etc.) inevitably involve interpretive decisions. The sermon acknowledges limitation (“no translation captures all”), but then quickly resolves the tension in a way that may overstate equivalence between original texts and all translations.

Another point concerns the doctrine of sufficiency. The sermon strongly emphasizes that Scripture is sufficient for doctrine and life, which is biblically grounded (cf. 2 Timothy 3:17). However, it extends sufficiency into a near-comprehensive claim: “Without this book, we do not know what it means to be human.” While the intention is to emphasize Scripture’s authority, this risks an overstatement that can blur the distinction between general revelation (nature, conscience, reason) and special revelation (Scripture). Classical Christian theology typically affirms both, whereas the sermon’s language leans toward an exclusive epistemological claim.

There is also a rhetorical concern in the final section, where neglecting Scripture is framed in almost absolute terms: “God will deal with you in judgment… there will be no one to blame for your ruined life.” While warnings are appropriate in preaching, the tone becomes somewhat unilateral, leaving little room for pastoral nuance regarding weakness, ignorance, or spiritual struggle. It risks turning a doctrinal exhortation into a moral ultimatum that may not reflect the varied ways Scripture itself speaks to believers who are weak but genuine.

Finally, the sermon occasionally compresses theological concepts into slogans: “from His mouth to our ears,” “direct revelation,” “every word is His.” These phrases are powerful rhetorically but tend to bypass careful theological distinctions that matter in debates about inspiration, canon, and transmission. The result is a high level of confidence in formulation, but a lower level of precision in defining terms.

In summary, the sermon is strong in structure, devotional aim, and pastoral urgency, and it rightly emphasizes the authority and importance of Scripture. Its main weaknesses are not devotional but conceptual: it tends to conflate inspiration with preservation and translation, assumes a simplified view of the biblical canon and textual history, and occasionally overstates sufficiency in ways that underplay other forms of revelation and theological nuance.



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