Jul 14, 2026

Other translations are corrupted ?

One can certainly make this claim, but it rests on theological and historical assumptions that don’t withstand scrutiny.

The King James Only movement exists along a spectrum, ranging from “The KJV is the best translation and I prefer it” to the extreme position that “The KJV is itself the inspired word of God and all other translations are not only incorrect but active attempts to undermine the KJV and therefore God’s work.”[1] Those holding the most extreme version would indeed argue that only the KJV represents God’s Word while other translations are corrupted.

However, this position faces substantial difficulties. The KJV’s underlying text, the Textus Receptus, was based on relatively few manuscripts, while the discovery of various long-lost biblical manuscripts has questioned the authenticity of these foundational texts.[2] If the KJV alone preserved God’s Word perfectly, why would earlier manuscripts—closer to the originals—sometimes differ from it?

When modern texts move away from the KJV and the Textus Receptus, King James Only advocates often charge such alterations as doctrinally significant corruptions.[2] Yet even in contested passages like 1 Timothy 3:16, where modern texts replace “God” with “who,” many scholars continue viewing the modern reading as advancing a high view of Christology, though King James Only evangelicals persist in attacking the revision as denying Christ’s divinity.[2]

The fundamental problem is conflating translation preference with textual purity. One can reasonably prefer the KJV’s literary beauty and theological tradition without claiming it uniquely preserves God’s Word. The claim that other translations are “corrupted” typically means they differ from the Textus Receptus—not that they contradict the original languages or distort essential doctrine. This distinction matters: disagreement about manuscript sources differs fundamentally from corruption of Scripture’s core message.

[1] J. Harold Ellens, Heaven, Hell, and the Afterlife: Eternity in Judaism, Christianity, and Islam [3 Volumes] (Westport, CT: Praeger, 2013). [See here.]
[2] 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.














Bible Witness - Error (II)

Gethsamane Bible-Presbyterian Church published an article in her magazine-Bible Witness, click the link to download: https://biblewitness.com/resources/magazines/Vol24_Iss04.pdf

The writer wrote: "Paul certainly believed that he had “All scripture”—which has been given by inspiration of God—though he used apographs. By implication, Paul left his readers in no doubt as to whether God has preserved His inspired Word intact for the believers of his time. Therefore, it is absolutely unbiblical and unsound to teach that God has not preserved all of His inspired Scripture in the apographs. Like Paul, we ought to believe that we have all of the inspired Word, which is inerrant and infallible. Though many will try to prove otherwise with their humanistic scholarship, let us remember that they are only insisting on what their finite eyes and minds have observed. But we walk by faith in all of God’s promises, believing that He is able to perform all that He has promised—even in what appears to be an impossible situation."


My response:

The article conflates Paul’s confidence in Scripture with a doctrine of perfect textual preservation—a significant logical leap unsupported by the evidence it cites.

The article’s core argument rests on Paul’s trust in the texts available to him. However, Paul and Peter considered the texts they possessed to be God’s word and held them to be inerrant[1], but this tells us nothing about whether every subsequent copy remained error-free. Paul’s confidence in his texts doesn’t logically extend to all apographs across centuries. The article assumes that if Paul believed he had God’s inspired Word, then God must have preserved every copy identically—but this reasoning conflates personal reliability with mechanical preservation.

The article also mishandles the relationship between inspiration and preservation. While God did not continue the miracle of inerrancy in copying manuscripts to apographs, He providentially preserved His word in purity through transcription methods and the sheer number of copies made[2]. This distinction matters: preservation through providence and textual criticism differs fundamentally from claiming perfect preservation in every apograph.

More problematically, the article dismisses scholarly textual work as “humanistic scholarship” while ignoring that thousands of variations exist in biblical manuscripts, though most are negligible in spelling and grammar, and no single doctrine rests on a questionable manuscript reading[3]. The article’s appeal to “faith” over observable textual reality creates a false dichotomy—faith in God’s Word doesn’t require denying that copies contain errors.

Finally, the article’s claim that Paul’s use of apographs proves perfect preservation inverts the logical relationship. Textual criticism allows us to arrive at an accurate representation of the autographs, and to the degree we approximate the autographs’ content and intended meaning, we proclaim God’s Word[3]. This acknowledges both God’s care and human limitation—a more biblically defensible position than the article’s absolutism.

[1] John S. Feinberg, Light in a Dark Place: The Doctrine of Scripture, ed. John S. Feinberg, Foundations of Evangelical Theology (Wheaton, IL: Crossway, 2018), 316.
[2] Alan Cairns, in Dictionary of Theological Terms (Belfast; Greenville, SC: Ambassador Emerald International, 2002), 232.
[3] John R. Higgins, “God’s Inspired Word,” in Systematic Theology: Revised Edition, ed. Stanley M. Horton (Springfield, MO: Logion Press, 2007), 106.

















Bible Witness - Error (I)

Gethsamane Bible-Presbyterian Church published an article in her magazine - Bible Witness, click the link to download: https://biblewitness.com/resources/magazines/Vol24_Iss04.pdf

The writer says, "All the words of God’s inspired Scripture are preserved forever. We believe with good reason that the King James Version provides us with the best translation of the inspired Hebrew, Aramaic and Greek words, which God has kept pure in all ages by His singular care and providence. Our belief in a perfectly preserved Bible is not a heresy—it is the bedrock of our most holy faith!"


My response:

This statement conflates two distinct theological claims that require careful separation. The belief that God’s Word endures eternally differs fundamentally from the claim that a particular translation or textual tradition perfectly preserves the original languages.

Inspiration—the doctrine that God guided the original authors—does not logically demand preservation[1]. God could have inspired Scripture without being obligated to protect every subsequent copy from error. Any ancient document surviving today, whether biblical or secular, owes its existence to God’s sovereignty over history[1], but this general providence differs from a doctrine requiring perfect textual preservation.

The King James Version presents a specific problem for this argument. The King James New Testament is based on the Textus Receptus[2], which relies on only about seven manuscripts out of thousands[2]. The Greek New Testament manuscripts contain over 400,000 textual variants[2]—a reality incompatible with claiming that one translation or text-type perfectly preserves the originals. If God preserved Scripture perfectly, why does every manuscript read differently?[2]

A more defensible position recognizes preservation through restoration—where centuries of textual scholarship have reconstructed a text mirroring the original authors’ words[2]. This acknowledges both God’s care for Scripture and the messy historical reality of transmission.

The statement’s real weakness lies in equating doctrinal confidence in Scripture’s reliability with historical claims about a particular translation. Trusting God’s Word and trusting the King James Version are not identical propositions. Many evangelical Christians affirm Scripture’s authority while using multiple translations based on earlier manuscripts, finding no contradiction between faith in God’s Word and scholarly textual work.

[1] William W. Combs, “The Preservation of Scripture,” Detroit Baptist Seminary Journal Volume 5 (2000), 5:8.
[2] Edward D. Andrews, Introduction to the Text of the New Testament: From the Authors and Scribe to the Modern Critical Text (Cambridge, OH: Christian Publishing House, 2019). [See here, here, here, here, here.]














Mary, the Mother of Jesus

What aspects of Catholic Mariology are “wrong,”? What are the common Protestant criticisms and what the Catholic Church actually teaches—which often differs from how critics portray it.

A central problem in this debate involves critics constructing a “straw man,” attacking mistaken notions of what the Catholic Church teaches rather than its actual doctrine.[1] Critics frequently begin with hostile assumptions—that Catholic Mariology is radically unbiblical, idolatrous, or blasphemous—which prevents them from reading relevant passages fairly and understanding their intended meaning.[1]

The core Protestant objection centers on mediation. Reformers criticized Catholic insistence on Mary’s mediating role in redemption, viewing any such role as detracting from Christ’s unique mediation.[2] Some Protestants worry that Catholic art, liturgy, and prayer practices suggest Mary shares a place parallel to Jesus, and that this reflects the Church’s tendency to forget that only God’s grace through Christ saves us.[3]

However, contemporary Catholic theology—shaped by Vatican II—teaches that Mary is distinct as the paradigmatic disciple and type of the Church, but subordinate to Christ in redemption, with her mediation representing the perfection of mediation exercised by all Christ’s members, no more detracting from Christ than the priesthood of the faithful or Christian goodness detracts from God alone being good.[2]

The disagreement ultimately reflects different theological frameworks: Barth identified Catholic Marian doctrine as revealing a fundamentally different notion that human receptivity and freedom play a decisive role in God’s saving activity[3]—a difference rooted in broader Catholic-Protestant divisions about grace and human cooperation rather than specific “errors” about Mary herself.

[1] Dave Armstrong, “The Catholic Mary”: Quite Contrary to the Bible? (Dave Armstrong, 2010), 128.
[2] Daniel G. Reid, Robert Dean Linder, et al., in Dictionary of Christianity in America (Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press, 1990). [See here, here.]
[3] Brian E. Daley, Biblical Interpretation and Doctrine in Early Christianity: Collected Essays, ed. Andrew Hofer (Grand Rapids, MI: William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company, 2025), 86–87.














Spiritual formation, RC vs Protestant

Spiritual formation describes the intentional process through which Christians develop greater alignment with Christ’s character and values. This mysterious transformation involves the Christian life coming into increasingly resonant alignment with the pattern and character of Jesus Christ[1], and it unfolds as a continuous process guided by the Holy Spirit[1].

The Catholic and Protestant approaches to spiritual formation diverge fundamentally in their understanding of how God’s transformative presence reaches believers. Catholic spirituality emphasizes that God continues to speak through Christ by and in the Church[2], making the institutional church essential to spiritual development. For Catholicism, authentic Christian spirituality requires the co-presence of fellow believers with Christ and oneself in the Church—not merely as a helpful means but as essential to the very goal of spiritual life[2].

Protestant spirituality operates from a different foundation. Protestantism locates the divine Word’s present actuality as wholly interiorized and individualized, with believers finding the Word illuminated through the “interior witness” of the Holy Spirit, producing a spirituality that springs from the relationship between God revealed in Christ and the individual believer[2]. Spiritual transformation often begins with a dramatic awareness of personal sin leading to conversion, then continues throughout life via various venues like church services, Bible studies, and religious resources[3].

A crucial distinction emerges in how grace operates within each tradition. For the Reformers, God forgives sin once and for all through a completely free act, whereas traditional Catholic spirituality understood that grace makes human actions worthy in God’s sight, with the sacraments communicating grace that sanctifies our incomplete works, thus leaving room for human action in the salvation process[3]. This reflects deeper differences: Protestant spirituality emphasizes dependency solely on God, hearing God’s voice through Scripture, personal accountability for sin with repentance, and belief in a future eschatological kingdom[3], while Catholic formation integrates sacramental participation and the church’s ongoing mediation of grace.

[1] Tom Schwanda, “Formation, Spiritual,” in Dictionary of Christian Spirituality, ed. Glen G. Scorgie (Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan, 2011), 452.
[2] Louis Bouyer, Introduction to the Spiritual Life (Notre Dame, IN: Christian Classics, 2013), 24–25.
[3] Greg Carlson et al., Perspectives on Children’s Spiritual Formation : Four Views (Nashville, TN: Broadman & Holman Publishers, 2006), 20–21.














Jul 13, 2026

Doctrinal drift in the immediate post-apostolic period

Doctrinal drift in the immediate post-apostolic period resulted from three converging pressures: the loss of direct apostolic authority, the rise of institutional gatekeeping through episcopal control, and the church’s need to defend itself against external and internal threats.

Distance from Apostolic Sources

Once the church moved one or two steps removed from Jesus and the apostles as sources of doctrinal authority, heresies became deeper, more numerous, and more threatening.[1] This distance proved catastrophic because the apostles themselves had established clear doctrinal boundaries—Paul had set up justification through faith alone and John the incarnation of God in Christ as indispensable elements in Christian confession[2]—yet without the apostles present to enforce these boundaries, interpretation became malleable. The post-apostolic church’s soteriological teachings quickly launched it on a doctrinal trajectory that moved the entire church away from pristine Pauline teaching on salvation by pure grace and justification by faith alone.[3]

Institutional Authority Replacing Scriptural Sufficiency

The struggle with heresy raised the question of authority—who had authority to define and ferret out heresy?—and this authority was eventually vested in the office of the monarchical bishop.[1] This shift proved decisive: In periods of persecution, heresies, and the search for church unity, the monarchical bishop became more than a leader and high priest—he became the doctrinal authority.[1] Rather than appealing to apostolic precedent, the church increasingly appealed to episcopal pronouncement. Creeds gradually changed purpose from educational tools to guides to orthodoxy, with control increasingly in the hands of bishops.[1]

Syncretism and Legalism

From the Apostolic Fathers onward, the church fell into serious soteriological error, with grace and faith giving way to legalism and good works as the way of salvation, with an unevangelical nomism running virtually unabated through these church fathers’ writings.[3] The church absorbed pagan and Jewish frameworks without apostolic resistance to correct them.

[1] James E Reed and Ronnie Prevost, A History of Christian Education (B&H Academic, 2018), 77–78.
[2] Johann Heinrich Kurtz, Church History, ed. W. Robertson Nicoll, trans. John Macpherson, The Foreign Biblical Library (New York; London; Toronto: Funk & Wagnalls, 1889–1894), 1:65.
[3] Robert L. Reymond, The Reformation’s Conflict with Rome: Why It Must Continue (Fearn, Ross-shire, UK: Christian Focus Publications, 2001), 67–68.
















The major doctrinal divisions between Christianity and Islam

The major doctrinal divisions between Christianity and Islam center on God’s nature, Christ’s identity, salvation’s mechanism, and scriptural authority—differences so fundamental they shape entirely divergent religious worldviews.

God’s Nature and the Trinity

Christians express God’s oneness as a divine threeness, while Muslims insist upon consistent monotheism[1]. The Qur’an criticizes the doctrine of the Trinity and the divine sonship of Jesus Christ[2], viewing these concepts as violations of pure monotheism. This disagreement proves irreconcilable—both traditions cannot simultaneously be correct about God’s fundamental nature.

Christ’s Identity and Work

The person and mission of Jesus represent the deepest theological divide. Jesus was the incarnation of God to Christians; for Muslims he was a great prophet but not divine[1]. For Christians, Jesus is the incarnation of the One True God, the second member of the Triune Godhead, the Son of God, the Messiah, the sacrificial atonement for the sins of humankind, and the resurrected Savior[1]. Muslims deny the crucifixion, reject the concept that anyone can atone for another person’s sins, and view Jesus as a prophet like Muhammad but neither a priest nor a king[1].

Salvation and Human Nature

For Christians, salvation is acquired by grace through faith; Muslims believe they must earn their salvation through obedience to Allah[1]. Islam rejects the doctrine of original sin, with Muslims generally believing that human beings are born innocent but weak[3], whereas for Christians, atonement for inherited sin is essential[1].

Ultimate Goals and Authority

The supreme goal in Christianity is to love the Lord with all your heart and to love your neighbor as yourself, while the supreme goal in Islam is to bring the whole world under the dominance of Allah[4]. The Bible alone is the Word of God for most Christians, as the Qur’an is for Muslims[1].

[1] Larry Poston, “Islam: Theological Exchanges,” in Handbook of Religion: A Christian Engagement with Traditions, Teachings, and Practices, ed. Terry C. Muck, Harold A. Netland, and Gerald R. McDermott (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Academic, 2014), 166.
[2] Sinclair B. Ferguson and J.I. Packer, in New Dictionary of Theology (Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press, 2000), 343.
[3] P. G. Riddell and M. J. Nazir-Ali, “Islam and Christianity,” in New Dictionary of Theology: Historical and Systematic, ed. Martin Davie et al. (London; Downers Grove, IL: Inter-Varsity Press; InterVarsity Press, 2016), 460.
[4] Daniel Janosik, The Guide to Answering Islam: What Every Christian Needs to Know about Islam and the Rise of Radical Islam (Cambridge, OH: Christian Publishing House, 2019). [See here.]

































Heavenly works

Heaven encompasses both rest from earthly toil and meaningful activity—a paradox that Scripture affirms without fully resolving, though the emphasis falls on purposeful engagement rather than eternal idleness.

The Nature of Heavenly Work

There may be work in the new creation, where believers labor without toil or frustration to fulfill the original mandate given to Adam and Eve—to rule the earth and develop its riches.[1] This work differs fundamentally from earthly labor because work will be radically healed, no longer toilsome.[2] All activities addressing sin’s sorrows cease—no one will pull weeds, and many occupations become unnecessary, including soldiers, surgeons, and prison guards.[1]

Leadership and Judgment

Jesus told his disciples that those who followed him would sit on twelve thrones, judging the twelve tribes of Israel, and in the Bible, to judge is to lead, with leadership always appearing to entail work.[1] This suggests governance and stewardship continue in heaven’s structure.

Growth and Learning

Believers will continue to grow—as they explore God’s creation, they will grow in knowledge of his handiwork, and as they meet people from every land and century, they will grow in knowledge of God’s love and grace.[1] The skills and abilities developed now in earthly work will be utilized and further developed in future work God has for believers in the new heavens and new earth, with earthly time serving as preparation for an eternity of activity and creativity.[2]

The Honest Uncertainty

Scripture leaves many details unknown—whether believers will take naps for pleasure, what will happen to sports, sexuality, creativity, and invention remains unclear.[1] The biblical vision resists reducing heaven to either perpetual leisure or endless labor, instead pointing toward purposeful existence freed from sin’s corruption.

[1] Daniel M. Doriani, Matthew & 2, ed. Richard D. Phillips, Philip Graham Ryken, and Daniel M. Doriani, Reformed Expository Commentary (Phillipsburg, NJ: P&R Publishing, 2008), 2:308–309.
[2] Bryan J. Dik, Redeeming Work: A Guide To Discovering God’s Calling For Your Career (West Conshohocken, PA: Templeton Press, 2020), 148.














Are the saints and angels in heaven actively praying for believers on earth ?

The question of whether saints and angels actively pray for believers on earth divides Christian traditions sharply, with Catholic theology affirming it while Reformation theology rejects the claim as unbiblical and unnecessary.

The Catholic and Traditional Argument

Catholic theology argues that saints in heaven do not forget us, and if they have one desire greater than another, it is to see believers wearing the crowns that await them in heaven[1]. The reasoning follows that the spirits of people in bliss possess intelligence and will, are always close to God, love us deeply, are equal to the angels, and have experienced human miseries that angels have not[2], making them naturally inclined toward intercession. However, a critical problem undermines this position: neither angels nor saints are omniscient or knowers of hearts, and therefore they do not know all the anguished groans of our hearts, making it impossible to firmly state they pray for us in particular anguish and calamity[2].

The Reformation Objection

The Reformation position is decisive: the apostles carefully explain the fellowship between the churches triumphant and militant, but nowhere add that the saints in heaven pray for the living by virtue of their own merits or that the living should invoke them[2]. More fundamentally, the sort of intercession which is the foundation for religious invocation cannot be deduced from communion between churches, and therefore cannot be deduced from fellowship of the church triumphant with the church militant[2].

A Moderate Evangelical Position

The saints are intercessors only insofar as they participate in Christ’s intercession, and because of the temptation to view saints as mediators of redemption, we should generally refrain from invoking the saints in glory, though Christ alone is our Advocate[3]. The biblical answer is that believers need not depend on angelic or saintly intercession—Christ’s present intercession suffices completely.

[1] James Gibbons, The Faith of Our Fathers: Being a Plain Exposition and Vindication of the Church Founded by Our Lord Jesus Christ (Baltimore; New York; London; Glasgow: John Murphy Company; R. & T. Washbourne, Ltd., 1904), 154.
[2] Johann Gerhard, On Death, ed. Joshua J. Hayes, Heath R. Curtis, and Benjamin T. G. Mayes, trans. Richard J. Dinda, Theological Commonplaces (St. Louis, MO: Concordia Publishing House, 2024), 2:253–254.
[3] Donald G. Bloesch, The Last Things: Resurrection, Judgment, Glory (Downers Grove, IL: IVP Academic, 2004), 165.






















Heaven is real

The doctrine of heaven offers a framework for processing grief that neither denies sorrow nor surrenders to despair—a balance that Heaven Is for Real misses by treating personal experience as theological authority.

Heaven’s Legitimate Pastoral Function

Christian understanding of heaven validates grief while simultaneously enabling believers to mourn with hope[1]. Since death entered the world through human rebellion rather than divine design, and Jesus himself responded to death with both sadness and anger, believers are free to experience genuine sorrow[1]. Scripture promises that death itself will ultimately be destroyed, suffering eliminated, disease eradicated, and violence brought to final judgment, with believers spending eternity with God and one another[1]. This hope transforms grief from despair into what Paul calls mourning “not as those who have no hope.”

The Danger of Misusing Heaven

However, when Christian hope is weaponized to discourage public mourning, believers may use heaven as an escape from necessary pain, pretending death isn’t real because reunion awaits, while others impose a cultural ban on grief itself[2]. Death remains a genuine fact whose sting is painfully real, and believers must mourn this reality rather than deflect from it through theological abstractions[2].

The Critical Distinction

Biblical lament acknowledges that though heaven is real, we genuinely lament here on earth[2]. The book Heaven Is for Real collapses this distinction by treating a child’s account as validating heaven’s reality, when Scripture itself already establishes that foundation. The book’s real problem is offering anecdotal comfort where theological grounding should suffice—and worse, potentially enabling the very grief-avoidance that healthy Christian mourning must resist.

[1] S. G. Lebhar, “Heaven,” in New Dictionary of Christian Apologetics, ed. Campbell Campbell-Jack and Gavin J. McGrath (Leicester, England: Inter-Varsity Press, 2006), 298.
[2] Clarissa Moll and Rob Moll, The Art of Dying: Living Fully into the Life to Come (Downers Grove, IL: IVP, 2021), 132–133.












Roman Catholic penitential theology

Roman Catholic penitential theology fundamentally contradicts Scripture by fragmenting Christ’s redemptive work into stages and requiring human performance to complete what Christ allegedly left unfinished. This represents a categorical denial of the gospel.

The Core Problem: Incomplete Redemption

Catholic doctrine teaches that penitents must perform “works of satisfaction” as necessary components for forgiveness, with the Council of Trent declaring it “absolutely false and contrary to the word of God” that guilt is remitted without the entire punishment also being remitted[1]. This framework treats Christ’s sacrifice as incomplete—sufficient only to remove eternal guilt while leaving temporal punishment unresolved. Scripture teaches no such division. Hebrews 10:10–14 declares that believers are “made holy through the sacrifice of the body of Jesus Christ once for all,” and “by one sacrifice he has made perfect forever those who are being made holy.” The work is finished, not staged.

The Sufficiency of Christ’s Work

The Reformers understood Christ’s redemptive work as totally sufficient in both negative and positive respects—his atonement fully expiates sin and satisfies God’s justice, while his perfect obedience fulfills all righteousness, and nothing can be added to enhance the value of his atonement or righteousness[1]. Christ has so perfectly satisfied divine justice for all sins by one offering that no propitiatory offerings remain necessary, and though God chastises believers for sanctification, no satisfaction is required from them in this life or the next[2].

The Sacramental Mediation Problem

Roman Catholicism teaches that salvation is mediated through sacraments, with the Sacrament of Penance consisting of contrition, confession, and satisfaction—where the priest assigns penance to expiate temporal punishment[3]. This interposes ecclesiastical machinery between the believer and Christ’s finished work. Scripture presents no priestly mediation for post-baptismal sins; 1 John 1:9 promises direct forgiveness: “If we confess our sins, he is faithful and just and will forgive us our sins and purify us from all unrighteousness.”

Catholic penitential theology denies Christ’s sufficiency by requiring human works to complete redemption, contradicting the apostolic proclamation that his sacrifice is eternally complete.

[1] R.C. Sproul, Faith Alone: The Evangelical Doctrine of Justification (Grand Rapids: Baker Books, 2000), 143–144.
[2] James R. Willson and Francis Turrettin, A Historical Sketch of Opinions on the Atonement, Interspersed with Biographical Notices of the Leading Doctors (Philadelphia: Edward Earle; William Fry, 1817), 256.
[3] James R. White, The Roman Catholic Controversy (Minneapolis, MN: Bethany House Publishers, 1996), 128–130.












Anti-Jewish theology

Anti-Jewish theology, particularly supersessionism, fundamentally contradicts Paul’s explicit teaching in Romans 9–11 and has historically generated Christian antisemitism that persists as a theological barrier to justice and reconciliation.

The Scriptural Refutation

Romans 9–11 powerfully addresses and corrects the ancient Christian tendency to write the Jewish people out of salvation history.[1] Paul’s argument is unambiguous: The Jews “are [still] loved on account of the patriarchs, for God’s gifts and his call are irrevocable,” and the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ has not forgotten his ancient, covenant commitment to the descendants of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob.[1] This directly refutes the supersessionist claim that God had rejected Israel as punishment for the nation’s rejection of Christ, and consequently all of God’s covenantal promises have been transferred from the Jews to the gentile church.[1]

The Problem of Allegorical Supersessionism

Even Paul’s universalism, when interpreted allegorically, can mask supersessionist logic. When Paul’s theology “deprives Jewish ethnicity and concrete historical memory of value by replacing these embodied signs with spiritual signifiers,” it effectively transcends Israel’s role in history, leaving “no Jew or Greek” in a community where the only promise to Jews is that “in the end they will see the error of their ways.”[2] This demonstrates how even non-explicitly anti-Jewish theology can function supersessionally by spiritualizing away Jewish particularity.

The Historical Consequence

Supersessionist thinking has nurtured Christian antisemitism as “the church turned hostile to the Jewish people” and “began to reject Jewishness itself as well as the Jew.”[1] Because tradition can render supersessionism “sacrosanct,” it maintains a barrier to full ecumenical relations.[3]

The thesis stands: Anti-Jewish theology violates Paul’s explicit affirmation of God’s irrevocable covenant with Israel, generates historical injustice, and must be rejected as incompatible with apostolic teaching.

[1] David Crump and Gary M. Burge, Like Birds in a Cage: Christian Zionism’s Collusion in Israel’s Oppression of the Palestinian People (New York, NY: Cascade Books, 2021). [See here, here, here, here, here.]
[2] Neil Elliott, Paul against the Nations: Soundings in Romans (New York, NY: Cascade Books, 2023). [See here.]
[3] William L. Krewson, Jerome and the Jews: Innovative Supersessionism (Eugene, OR: Wipf and Stock, 2017). [See here.]


















The elevation of tradition beyond Scripture

How Reformed churches specifically elevate tradition beyond Scripture’s commands?

Reformed churches theoretically reject the elevation of tradition beyond Scripture because they built on the principle of sola Scriptura—Scripture alone—as the supreme standard of truth[1][2]. The Reformers drew a clear distinction between apostolic tradition (the New Testament books themselves) and ecclesiastical tradition (church practices), establishing apostolic tradition as the measuring rule by which all church traditions must be tested[1].

However, Reformed practice sometimes contradicts this principle in several ways:

Confessional Authority

Reformed churches are confessional bodies identified by public statements of faith, with confessions appearing throughout the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries marking a distinctive feature of the tradition[2]. While confessions should subordinate to Scripture, some Reformed congregations treat their particular confessions (Westminster, Heidelberg, Belgic) with near-scriptural weight, making adherence to confessional formulations a test of orthodoxy rather than Scripture itself being the test.

Covenant Framework

The Reformed increasingly incorporated the doctrine of covenants as the framework within which other doctrines were explained[2]. While biblically rooted, this theological lens can become a tradition that filters how Scripture is read, potentially elevating the framework above the text itself.

Philosophical Systematization

Reformed scholasticism developed elaborate philosophical structures (compatibilism, federal theology, ordo salutis) that, while attempting to explain Scripture, sometimes function as interpretive traditions that constrain rather than illuminate biblical teaching.

The tension remains: Reformed churches affirm Scripture’s supremacy while developing traditions that, in practice, gain quasi-authoritative status.

[1] John Stott, “But I Say to You …”: Christ the Controversialist (Nottingham: Inter-Varsity Press, 2013), 75.
[2] H. N. Perkins, “Reformed Churches,” in The Essential Lexham Dictionary of Church History, ed. Michael A. G. Haykin (Bellingham, WA: Lexham Press, 2022). [See here, here, here, here.]













The New Perspective on Paul

The New Perspective on Paul, particularly Wright’s formulation, fundamentally misrepresents Paul’s teaching on justification by relocating it from soteriological (salvation) to ecclesiological (church unity) concerns. This thesis can be established through three critical failures in Wright’s framework.

The False Dichotomy Problem

Wright claims Paul’s mission was proclaiming Christ’s lordship rather than justification by faith, yet this presents a false either-or when both appear together in Paul’s teaching[1]. Romans 10:9–10 explicitly links lordship proclamation with belief and justification: “If you declare with your mouth, ‘Jesus is Lord,’ and believe in your heart that God raised him from the dead, you will be saved. For it is with your heart that you believe and are justified, and it is with your mouth that you profess your faith and are saved”[1]. Wright’s separation artificially divorces what Paul intentionally unified.

The Soteriological Necessity

Wright joins liberal critics in rejecting justification by faith and shifts it from a soteriological to an ecclesiastical truth, moving toward a Catholic rather than Protestant understanding[1]. Yet justification at its essence concerns being saved—salvation occurs when Jesus and justification come together[1]. Paul declares that through Jesus “everyone who believes is set free from every sin, a justification you were not able to obtain under the law of Moses”[1], demonstrating justification’s salvific character. By making justification an ecclesiological reality, the New Perspective actually weakens its ecclesiological impact, since the ecclesiological implications of justification are rooted in its soteriological nature—in the gospel. The New Perspective makes justification merely recognition of salvation rather than God’s act declaring us righteous through faith, separating justification from salvation whereas Paul sees justification as the basis of reconciliation with God[2].

The thesis stands: Paul teaches justification by faith as the central soteriological doctrine through which believers receive right standing with God, not merely as a polemical tool addressing Jewish ethnic boundaries.

[1] Norman R. Gulley, Systematic Theology: God as Trinity (Berrien Springs, MI: Andrews University Press, 2011), 393–394.
[2] Themelios (2005), 30:2:5–20.








Is pope legit?

The papacy cannot be biblically legitimated because it rests on two foundational claims that Scripture explicitly contradicts: apostolic succession and a single authoritative leader above other elders.

The Apostolic Succession Problem

Scripture contains no teaching about an unbroken line of leaders descending from Peter to the present day.[1] The original apostolic commission included no provision for successors, nor were any instructions given for their appointment.[2] When Paul charged the Ephesian elders with church care, there was no hint of transferring apostolic authority.[2] The New Testament shows elders and bishops assuming the apostles’ role, but precisely as elders and bishops—not as apostles—succeeding them in a fundamentally different position.[2]

More problematically, monarchical succession first appears in Irenaeus at the end of the second century without any doctrine of transmitted grace or authority, and the doctrine of succession through ordination doesn’t emerge until the third century, developed by Latin Church lawyers seeking to connect growing ecclesiastical authority with apostolic authority.[2]

The Authority Problem

Roman theology claims apostolic authority was transmitted through a succession of leaders whose teachings carry equal weight with the apostles.[1] This inverts biblical authority structures. The biblical view establishes apostolic teaching as the standard by which all subsequent teaching must be evaluated.[1] In Roman theology, office determines acceptability rather than agreement with Scripture.[1]

The Collegial Model vs. Monarchy

The episcopal polity foundational to papal authority cannot be sustained biblically because the distinction between bishop and presbyter isn’t supported by New Testament usage, and the plural form of “bishops” excludes the idea of one bishop supervising other elders.[2] Churches determine elders based on biblical qualifications that God has clearly delineated—men whom God selects meet these standards.[3]

The pope’s legitimacy fails at every critical juncture: no biblical succession, no scriptural authorization for a single supreme leader, and a model that contradicts the collegial, qualification-based elder leadership Scripture establishes.

[1] Norman R. Gulley, Systematic Theology: The Church and The Last Things (Berrien Springs, MI: Andrews University Press, 2016), 184.
[2] Simon V. Goncharenko, Church Government according to the Bible (Eugene, OR: Wipf & Stock, 2014). [See here, here, here, here, here.]
[3] Daniel Akin et al., Perspectives on Church Government: Five Views of Church Polity (Nashville, TN: Broadman & Holman Publishers, 2004), 68.
















Bishops=Elders=Pastors

The correct thesis emerges from understanding that Paul uses “elder,” “overseer” (bishop), and “pastor” (shepherd) as functional descriptions of the same office rather than distinct hierarchical ranks.

The Terminological Unity

Paul summoned the elders from Ephesus and instructed them as overseers (Acts 20:17–28), demonstrating that these terms describe identical leadership roles. In Titus, Paul directs the appointment of elders in every town, then immediately refers to them as overseers managing God’s household (Titus 1:5–9)—the interchangeability is unmistakable. Ephesians 4:11 lists “pastors and teachers” as gifts Christ gave to the church, indicating that shepherding (pastoring) is a function of the overseer/elder role, not a separate office above it.

The Functional Distinction

Rather than creating hierarchy, Paul distinguishes between elders based on their work, not their rank. Some elders direct church affairs well, especially those whose labor involves preaching and teaching, and they deserve double honor (1 Tim 5:17–19). This honors those with teaching gifts without establishing them as bishops over other elders. Peter appeals to elders as a fellow elder and instructs them to shepherd God’s flock, not by lording authority over those entrusted to them, but by being examples (1 Pet 5:1–4)—explicitly rejecting hierarchical dominance.

The Collegial Model

The body of elders collectively laid hands on Timothy (1 Tim 4:14), suggesting corporate leadership and shared authority. The overseer aspires to a noble task and must meet specific character qualifications (1 Tim 3:1–13), but these standards apply to all elders equally, not to a single bishop above others. Paul addresses the Philippian church with its overseers and deacons (Phil 1:1) using plural forms, indicating multiple overseers sharing leadership.

The Thesis

In Pauline doctrine, elder, overseer (bishop), and pastor are synonymous terms describing the same office—a collegial leadership structure where multiple qualified men shepherd the local congregation. Distinctions emerge based on function (teaching vs. administrative) and gifting, not rank. One elder may be more prominent due to preaching ability, but all possess equal authority and accountability. This model prevents the hierarchical episcopacy that later developed in post-apostolic Christianity.



Other translations are corrupted ?

One can certainly make this claim, but it rests on theological and historical assumptions that don’t withstand scrutiny. The King James Only...