Jul 18, 2026

All Israel will be saved

Paul’s Declaration and Its Interpretive Complexity

Paul reveals a “mystery” to prevent Gentile believers from becoming conceited: Israel has experienced partial hardening until the full number of Gentiles enters God’s people, and “all Israel will be saved.” (Rom 11:25–32) However, this statement has generated substantial scholarly debate about what “all Israel” actually means.

Three Primary Interpretations

Some interpreters argue the phrase means every Jewish person who ever lived will be saved, but this cannot be correct since Christ indicated it would have been better for Judas never to have been born.[1] Scripture insists all people must be saved through faith in Jesus Christ.[1]

A second view interprets “Israel” as God’s people regardless of ethnicity, but Paul clearly has ethnic Israel in view throughout Romans 9–11, contrasting “Israel” with “Gentiles,” and “all Israel” follows directly from his reference to the partial hardening of “Israel,” which refers to the Jewish people.[1]

A third interpretation holds that “all Israel” refers to all the elect among Jacob’s physical descendants—the salvation of all elect Israelites.[1] However, this view faces difficulties, as Paul’s doctrine that election always leads effectually to salvation makes it hardly worthy of mention that all elect Jews will be saved.[1]

The Majority Scholarly Position

Most scholars agree Paul has ethnic Israel in mind when stating “all Israel shall be saved.”[2] Many suggest this prophesies a large-scale conversion of Jews who will accept Jesus as Messiah before the end, with “all” referring to Israel as a whole rather than each individual.[3] The mystery encompasses three elements: Israel’s partial hardening throughout history, the influx of Gentiles into Christ’s church, and the future salvation of ethnic Israel—with the focal point being the timing and manner of Israel’s salvation after the full number of Gentiles have entered God’s people.[2]

God’s gifts and call to Israel are irrevocable, and just as Gentiles received mercy through Israel’s disobedience, Israel too will receive mercy as a result of God’s mercy extended to Gentiles. (Rom 11:25–32)

[1] Joel R. Beeke and Paul M. Smalley, Reformed Systematic Theology: Church and Last Things, Reformed Systematic Theology (Wheaton, IL: Crossway, 2024), 4:890–891.
[2] Thomas R. Schreiner, Paul, Apostle of God’s Glory in Christ: A Pauline Theology (Westmont, IL: IVP Academic, 2006), 477–478.
[3] Eckhard J. Schnabel, 40 Questions about the End Times, ed. Benjamin L. Merkle, 40 Questions Series (Grand Rapids, MI: Kregel Academic & Professional, 2011), 126.



Babylon

Babylon’s End-Time Role and Destruction

In Revelation, Babylon functions symbolically as the archetypal enemy of God’s people—a representation of worldly power opposed to divine rule that crushes and oppresses the faithful.[1] Rather than referring to the ancient Mesopotamian city, early Christians understood Babylon as Rome, which embodied the same pattern of domination and persecution that had characterized the historical Babylonian empire.[1] The reference to “seven mountains” in Revelation 17 aligns geographically with Rome rather than ancient Babylon.[1]

In Revelation’s end-time vision, Babylon represents apostate religious organizations in opposition to Christ and His people, particularly during the final conflict between good and evil.[2] This figurative Babylon embodies every form of power abuse—from the arrogance of defying God to the murder of martyrs, exploitation of the vulnerable, and widespread moral corruption.[1] God calls His people to abandon Babylon to avoid sharing in her sins and the judgment He will inflict upon her.[2]

The Fall and Ultimate Judgment

Revelation employs Babylon as a symbol for whatever seat of power represents humanity’s final rebellion against God’s kingdom—the gathered multitude insisting on making its last stand against Him.[1] Once God finishes using Babylon as an instrument of judgment, He will cast her down, ultimately ruling in justice and destroying everything that opposes Him.[1] The kings of the earth, disillusioned with Babylon, turn against her and destroy her, through which God avenges His people.[2]

Revelation contrasts Babylon’s hopelessness with God’s redemptive triumph: a remnant from every tribe, tongue, and nation will dwell eternally with Him in the New Jerusalem—a city representing everything Babylon could never be.[1]

[1] Neil Wilson and Nancy Ryken Taylor, in The A to Z Guide to Bible Signs and Symbols: Understanding Their Meaning and Significance (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Books, 2015), 22–23.
[2] The Seventh-Day Adventist Encyclopedia (Review and Herald Publishing Association, 1996). [See here, here, here, here.]



The Millennium

The Thousand-Year Reign: Structure and Events

Satan is bound and imprisoned in the Abyss for a thousand years, preventing him from deceiving the nations during this period. (Rev 20:1–15) Those who have been granted authority to judge—including believers who were martyred for their faith—come to life and reign with Christ throughout this thousand-year span. (Rev 20:1–15) The remaining dead do not experience resurrection until after the thousand years conclude, making this the first resurrection. (Rev 20:1–15)

Following this period, Satan is released to deceive the nations one final time, gathering them for battle, but fire descends from heaven to consume them, and Satan is cast into the lake of burning sulfur where the beast and false prophet already reside. (Rev 20:1–15)

Three Major Interpretive Frameworks

Christian interpreters have developed fundamentally different understandings of this passage. Premillennialism teaches that Christ will physically return before the millennium—understood as a literal thousand-year period—during which he reigns on earth.[1] Postmillennialism proposes instead that the millennium represents an era (not necessarily literal) when Christ reigns spiritually from heaven, with the current age gradually transitioning into this period as the Church’s influence expands, followed by Christ’s return.[1] Amillennialism interprets the thousand years symbolically as the present church age between Christ’s first and second comings, viewing his reign as spiritual and occurring now within believers’ hearts.[1]

Regardless of whether the thousand years represents a precise period of time or a comprehensive symbol, its theological significance remains consistent: it expresses hope for Christ’s final triumph over evil and vindication of his persecuted people.[2] The ultimate focus of Christian hope, however, centers not on the millennium itself but on the new creation described in Revelation 21.[2]

[1] Barry L. Davis, Revelation: Chapter-by-Chapter Bible Studies for Small Groups (GodSpeed Publishing, 2023), 11.
[2] R. J. Bauckham, “Eschatology,” in New Bible Dictionary, ed. D. R. W. Wood et al. (Leicester, England; Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press, 1996), 338.


Sinim

The Bible contains no direct mention of Chinese people. However, Isaiah 49:12 references “the land of Sinim,”[1] which has sparked considerable scholarly debate about whether this designation refers to China.

The Sinim Identification Debate

Interpreters have proposed two competing theories. Some modern commentators have identified Sinim with China, the land of the Sinæ,[2] reasoning that the name Tsin was known as early as the 12th century B.C. and was not improbably familiar to the Phœnicians.[2] Additionally, there was trade at a very early date between the extreme east and southern Arabia and the Persian Gulf.[2]

However, this identification faces substantial objections. No Jews had gone to China at this time,[3] and the name Tsin (derived from a dynasty of 255 B.C.) could not have been yet in use in Babylon.[2]

The Prevailing View

Most scholars now favor a southern Egyptian location. Rashi and Jonathan interpret it “from a southern land,” while modern scholars identify Sinim with Syene near modern Aswan on the southern Egyptian border of Sudan.[1] It probably refers to Syene on the southern Egyptian frontier where there was a Jewish garrison.[4] The Hebrew manuscript 1QIsa among the Dead Sea Scrolls reads seweniyim (the people of Seweni), which definitely favors an identification with Syene.[3]

In context, the passage means that God will gather in the exiles of Israel from the four corners of the earth and bring them back to Zion.[1] The reference to Sinim functions symbolically—whether China or Egypt—to emphasize the vast distances from which God’s scattered people would be restored.

[1] Menashe Har-El, What God Created: Landscape, Nature and Man in the Bible (Jerusalem: Carta, Jerusalem, 2022), 255.
[2] Charles William Wilson, “SINIM,” in A Dictionary of the Bible: Dealing with Its Language, Literature, and Contents Including the Biblical Theology, ed. James Hastings et al. (New York; Edinburgh: Charles Scribner’s Sons; T. & T. Clark, 1911–1912), 4:538.
[3] Charles F. Pfeiffer, Howard Frederic Vos, and John Rea, in The Wycliffe Bible Encyclopedia (Moody Press, 1975). [See here, here.]
[4] J.I. Packer, Merrill Chapin Tenney, and William White Jr., Nelson’s Illustrated Manners and Customs of the Bible (Nashville, TN: Thomas Nelson, 1997), 741.



Armageddon

The Nature and Outcome of Armageddon

Demonic spirits gather the kings of the world for battle on the great day of God Almighty at a place called Armageddon (Rev 16:12–16). However, scholars interpret this final conflict differently. Some argue there is no literal military battle at a specific location, but rather a symbolic description of Jesus returning to judge the unrighteous with the justice of the word of God[1]. The victory is accomplished not with military weapons but with the word of God, which comes from Christ’s mouth[1].

Christ appears as a rider on a white horse called Faithful and True, who judges and wages war with justice (Rev 19:11–21). The armies of heaven follow him, riding on white horses and dressed in fine linen (Rev 19:11–21). Armageddon represents the final contest between the combined forces of Satan and Christ with His chosen and faithful followers[2]. Notably, God’s faithful people stand at the center of this battle[2], not as passive observers but as vindicated witnesses.

The Defeat of Evil Forces

The beast and the false prophet are captured and thrown alive into the fiery lake of burning sulfur (Rev 19:11–21). The rest are killed with the sword coming from Christ’s mouth, and birds gorge themselves on their flesh (Rev 19:11–21). After the thousand-year period, Satan is released to deceive the nations one final time, but fire comes down from heaven and devours them, and the devil is thrown into the lake of burning sulfur where the beast and false prophet had been thrown (Rev 20:7–10).

Old Testament Foreshadowing

The symbolic name Armageddon can be translated as “Mountain of Slaughter” or “Mountain of Megiddo,” reminding us of Israel’s holy war against Sisera near the waters of Megiddo[3]. Israel’s salvation history implies the assurance that at the end of the church age, God will intervene on behalf of His faithful worshipers[3].

[1] Eckhard J. Schnabel, 40 Questions about the End Times, ed. Benjamin L. Merkle, 40 Questions Series (Grand Rapids, MI: Kregel Academic & Professional, 2011), 236.
[2] Hans K. LaRondelle, “Armageddon: Sixth and Seventh Plagues,” in Symposium on Revelation: Exegetical and General Studies, Book 2, ed. Frank B. Holbrook, Daniel and Revelation Committee Series (Silver Spring, MD: Biblical Research Institute of the General Conference of Seventh-day Adventists, 1992), 7:377.
[3] Hans K. LaRondelle, Light for the Last Days: Jesus’ End-Time Prophecies Made Plain in the Book of Revelation, ed. David C. Jarnes (Bradenton, FL: First Impressions, 2013), 90–91.



The Trinity in Revelation 5

Revelation introduces the divine trinity from its opening, with grace and peace flowing from God the Father (described as “him who is and who was and who is to come”), the Holy Spirit (represented as “the seven spirits before his throne”), and Jesus Christ[1]. Chapter 5 crystallizes this trinitarian vision through the dramatic unveiling of Christ’s role.

The passage presents Christ as both “the Lion of the tribe of Judah” and “a Lamb, looking as if it had been slain” (Rev 5)—a paradox that reveals the Trinity’s redemptive purpose. The Lamb is explicitly linked to the Holy Spirit, and Jesus’ messages to the seven churches are simultaneously messages of the Holy Spirit[1]. The Lamb’s seven horns and seven eyes represent “the seven spirits of God sent out into all the earth” (Rev 5), demonstrating the Spirit’s universal operation through Christ’s authority.

Christ achieves trinitarian significance through practical inclusion in the “monotheistic liturgy” of heavenly worship—he is worshipped as God[2]. The heavenly chorus declares Christ “worthy to take the scroll and to open its seals” because of his redemptive sacrifice, celebrating how “with your blood you purchased for God persons from every tribe and language and people and nation,” making them “a kingdom and priests to serve our God” (Rev 5).

The World’s Ending and Israel’s Destiny

The sealed scroll represents God’s plan to bring about the new creation through judgment and redemption, with Christ as the one who makes this plan become reality[3]. Satan and the oppressors of God’s people will find their end in the lake of fire, while God’s people will triumphantly find their rest in New Jerusalem[4].

For Israel specifically, based on broader Revelation theology, the book presents a redeemed community transcending ethnic boundaries—those “purchased for God” come “from every tribe and language and people and nation” (Rev 5)—suggesting the fulfillment of God’s covenant purposes through Christ encompasses both Jewish and Gentile believers within the renewed creation.

[1] Ekkehardt Mueller, “Christological Concepts in the Book of Revelation—Part 2: Christ’s Divinity,” Journal of the Adventist Theological Society (2011), 22:1:79–80.
[2] Francesca Aran Murphy, “Revelation (‘The Apocalypse of Saint John the Divine’),” in Theological Interpretation of the New Testament: A Book-by-Book Survey, ed. Kevin J. Vanhoozer (Grand Rapids, MI; London: Baker Academic; SPCK, 2008), 246.
[3] Sigurd Grindheim, Introducing Biblical Theology (London; New Delhi; New York; Sydney: Bloomsbury, 2013), 222.
[4] Ranko Stefanovic, Revelation of Jesus Christ: Commentary on the Book of Revelation (Berrien Springs, MI: Andrews University Press, 2009), 43.


The 21st century heresies

The 21st century has witnessed the emergence and proliferation of theological departures from historic Christian orthodoxy across multiple fronts. New religious movements—groups that have broken away from their host religions and maintain theological distinctives that necessitate classification as unique religious systems—have continued to grow and spread since the turn of the century.[1] Major examples include the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, approaching 12 million members worldwide, and the Watchtower Bible and Tract Society with over five million adherents.[1]

Beyond these well-known movements, numerous other growing movements often escape mainstream evangelical attention, including Iglesia Ni Cristo, Mahikari, the Brotherhood of the Cross and the Star, Rastafarianism, Neo-Paganism, the New Age, various Do-It-Yourself Spiritualities, Umbanda, Santeria, and Siddha Yoga.[1] Missionary statisticians estimated approximately 104 million adherents to new religious movements by 2001, with projections reaching 115 million by 2025—figures that exclude biblically-based heretical groups like the Latter-day Saints and Jehovah’s Witnesses.[1]

Within Christian contexts specifically, contemporary heresies take distinctive forms. Various theological movements—including liberationist, feminist, neomystical, and process approaches—converge toward a religion of radical immanence in which human experience and imagination supersede biblical revelation as the standard for truth.[2] Attempts to downgrade the Old Testament persist, with radical feminists viewing it as irredeemably patriarchal.[2] Within Pentecostalism itself, oneness Pentecostalism—which emphasizes regenerational baptism and distinctive theology of the Godhead—is considered heretical by many trinitarian Pentecostals.[3] These departures collectively represent a significant spiritual and cultural phenomenon reshaping religious landscape in the contemporary world.

[1] Enoch Wan, Christian Witness in Pluralistic Contexts in the Twenty-First Century: Evangelical Missiological Society Series (Pasadena, CA: William Carey Library, 2004). [See here, here, here, here.]
[2] Donald G. Bloesch, Jesus Christ: Savior & Lord (Westmont, IL: IVP Academic, 1997), 244–245.
[3] David E. Daniels, “Foreword,” in Black Fire: One Hundred Years of African American Pentecostalism (Downers Grove, IL: IVP Academic: An Imprint of InterVarsity Press, 2011), 9.













Jul 17, 2026

Slave of Christ Jesus

The paradox of spiritual slavery resolves when we recognize that Christian servitude operates in an entirely different sphere than the historical institution you’re referencing. When you commit yourself to obedience, you become enslaved to whatever you obey—either sin leading to death or obedience producing righteousness. (Rom 6:16–18) This framework presents a fundamental choice: all humans serve something, and the question is merely whom.

Having been freed from sin’s dominion, believers become slaves of God, with holiness and eternal life as the outcome. (Rom 6:22) This represents liberation, not oppression. Whether someone was socially enslaved or free when called to faith, both find their true identity in Christ—the formerly enslaved person becomes “the Lord’s freed person,” while the free person becomes “Christ’s slave.” (1 Cor 7:22) The reversal is intentional: worldly status becomes irrelevant when measured against allegiance to Christ.

The apostles themselves modeled this willingly embraced servitude. Paul and Timothy identified themselves as servants of Christ Jesus, (Rom 1:1; Phil 1:1) and Paul, James, Peter, and Jude declared themselves “bond-slaves” of Jesus Christ to express their complete submission and devotion to the Lord.[1] Paul, though free and belonging to no one, made himself a slave to everyone to win as many as possible. (1 Cor 9:19)

This voluntary servitude carries dignity. Whoever wants to be great must become a servant, and whoever wants to be first must be a slave—just as the Son of Man came not to be served but to serve and give his life as a ransom for many. (Matt 20:26–28) Whoever serves Christ must follow him, and the Father honors those who serve him. (John 12:26) Believers live as free people, yet not using freedom as a cover for evil but rather living as God’s slaves. (1 Pet 2:16)

[1] Eugene E. Carpenter and Philip W. Comfort, in Holman Treasury of Key Bible Words: 200 Greek and 200 Hebrew Words Defined and Explained (Nashville, TN: Broadman & Holman Publishers, 2000), 393.


An atomic/nuclear bomb for Tehran?

To neutralize threats to global shipping lanes like the Strait of Hormuz and the Red Sea without resorting to nuclear weapons, modern military doctrine relies on highly precise, conventional stand-off weapons.

If President Trump ordered conventional strikes directly on leadership, command infrastructure, or air defenses located in or around the capital city of Tehran, the objective would be to dismantle the decision-making apparatus while strictly minimizing civilian casualties.

The conventional arsenal built for this specific type of high-value, heavily fortified operation includes the following technologies:


1. Hard-Target and Bunker Defeat Weapons

Many of the key command-and-control bunkers and intelligence centers in Tehran are buried deeply underground or carved into mountains to withstand standard bombardment.

GBU-57A/B Massive Ordnance Penetrator (MOP): This is a 30,000-pound, GPS-guided precision bomb designed specifically to defeat deeply buried or reinforced concrete facilities. Carried by stealth bombers like the B-2 Spirit or the B-21 Raider, it can penetrate dozens of feet of reinforced concrete before detonating.

GBU-28 and GBU-39/B (SDB): For smaller but deeply buried installations, laser-guided or GPS-guided "bunker busters" use dense, heavy-metal casing noses to punch through protective overhead cover before the main explosive charge triggers.


2. Stealth and Long-Range Precision Cruise Missiles

To strike targets deep inside highly contested airspace like Tehran's without risking pilots, military forces utilize low-observable (stealth) stand-off missiles launched from hundreds of miles away.

AGM-158B JASSM-ER (Joint Air-to-Surface Standoff Missile - Extended Range): A stealthy cruise missile with a range of over 600 miles. It carries a 1,000-pound penetrator and blast-fragmentation warhead, designed to slip past advanced radar detection to destroy high-value buildings.

Tomahawk Land Attack Missiles (TLAM): Launched from navy destroyers or submarines operating safely out at sea, modern Tomahawks can navigate using terrain matching and GPS to strike specific windows or radar antennas with surgical precision.


3. Suppression of Enemy Air Defenses (SEAD)

Before striking major command nodes in a capital city, the surrounding airspace must be cleared of Surface-to-Air Missile (SAM) systems.

AGM-88G AARGM-ER (Advanced Anti-Radiation Guided Missile): These weapons are designed to locate and destroy enemy air defense radars. If a radar turns on to track incoming aircraft or missiles, the AARGM homes in on the electronic signal and destroys the transmitter.

MALD (Miniature Air-Launched Decoy): Small, programmable flight vehicles that replicate the radar signatures of actual bombers or jets. They confuse air defense networks, forcing them to waste ammunition or reveal their locations.


4. Kinetic Non-Explosive Weapons

To eliminate specific leaders or targets inside an urban center like Tehran without causing the collateral blast damage that destroys city blocks, specialized kinetic munitions are used.

AGM-114R9X "Ninja" Hellfire: Instead of an explosive warhead, this missile deploys a set of six extendable, heavy steel blades just before impact. It relies purely on the kinetic energy of its high-velocity impact to neutralize a highly specific target (such as a vehicle or a room) while leaving nearby structures completely untouched.


The Tactical Approach: Parallel Warfare

Rather than trying to destroy an entire city, modern conventional strategy focuses on systemic paralysis. By using electronic warfare and cyber attacks to temporarily blind air defense radars, a military force can precisely thread stealth cruise missiles directly into command buildings. This removes the tactical capability to direct or enforce a maritime blockade while avoiding the mass civilian casualties, humanitarian fallout, and international blowback of a wide-scale urban bombing campaign.


The Utility of Lesser Means Remained Unchanged

Because the objective is specifically to unblock the shipping lanes in the Strait of Hormuz and the Red Sea, the most efficient path to maximizing well-being remains targeted conventional operations.

Neutralizing the specific naval vessels, drone factories, and missile batteries enforcing the blockade achieves the exact desired outcome within days, costs zero civilian lives, requires no mass refugee crises, and eliminates the risk of global nuclear war. When a highly effective alternative exists that causes a fraction of the harm, the utilitarian framework dictates that the nuclear option—warned or unwarned—must be rejected.


In the end, the Iran will be given an atomic/neclear bomb, Tehran destroyed!

Jul 15, 2026

The Healthiest Position

Affirm high Scripture (inspiration, authority, reliability) while being honest about evidence (manuscripts vary, we're blessed with abundance of witnesses, early manuscripts are more reliable).

This gives us genuine confidence in Scripture without false claims we can't prove.

We’ve articulated the evangelical consensus strongly affirm. Evangelicals employ standard textual-critical methodology to determine Scripture’s text, recognizing it as the only viable approach available[1]—and this methodology is fundamentally neutral.

Because conservative Christians place high value on the biblical text, determining its exact reading is very important to them; consequently, evangelical biblical scholars have been leaders in textual criticism[2]. This isn’t a departure from evangelical convictions but an expression of them. Despite evangelicalism’s high view of Scripture, evangelicals have often failed to lead in biblical scholarship, whereas those with similar high views have demonstrated in practice what evangelicals confess in principle—dedicating their lives to understanding biblical languages and text[3].

The crucial distinction we’ve identified is that evangelicals may believe God has remarkably preserved Scripture’s text, but determining the precise text is a problem for scientific criticism—this is the essence of the evangelical position, leaving no place for obscurantism[1]. Mainline evangelicals accept verbal inspiration, divine authority, and inerrancy[4]—but this confidence in Scripture’s reliability coexists with rigorous scholarship examining the evidence.

Our position avoids both extremes: it neither demands false claims about textual perfection nor surrenders confidence in Scripture’s authority and reliability. As Warfield affirmed, “processes that are valid for ascertainment of a secular text are equally valid for ascertainment of a sacred text”[1]. Honest engagement with manuscript evidence strengthens rather than weakens evangelical faith.

[1] Bernard Ramm, “Are We Obscurantists?,” Christianity Today (Washington, D.C.: Christianity Today, 1957), 1:10:14.
[2] Millard J. Erickson, The Evangelical Left: Encountering Postconservative Evangelical Theology (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Books, 1997), 72.
[3] Norman L. Geisler, Systematic Theology, Volume One: Introduction, Bible (Minneapolis, MN: Bethany House Publishers, 2002), 362.
[4] Norman L. Geisler and William E. Nix, A General Introduction to the Bible (Chicago: Moody Press, 1986), 180–181.





















Not all modern scholarship is humanistic

We have identified a crucial distinction that evangelical scholarship affirms: evangelicals employ standard textual-critical methodology to determine Scripture’s text, recognizing it as the only viable approach[1]. The methodology itself remains neutral—what matters is the interpretive framework applied to the results.

Textual criticism over the past two centuries prompted evangelicals to reformulate their doctrine of Scripture, leading most to abandon claims for the inerrancy of particular texts or translations and instead locate inerrancy in the autographs[2]. This represents a sophisticated evangelical position, not a capitulation to skepticism.

Textual criticism involves careful examination of ancient manuscript copies to determine the purest form of the original text; while the process itself is scientific, fundamental valuation decisions involving human judgment factor into choosing one reading over another[3]. Evangelical scholars apply these same methods but reach conclusions supporting biblical reliability.

The results are striking: most scholars affirm the Bible agrees word-for-word with the original across both Testaments, with most variants readily identifiable and easily resolvable—consisting of spelling errors, incidental word omissions, transpositions, and similar insignificant matters[3]. More significantly, no significant readings are in doubt, and none alter or bring into doubt any biblical doctrine[3].

Christian scholars recognize that while God inspired Scripture’s content, He entrusted human authors with composition and copyists with transmission; despite textual variation from hand-copying across millennia, nearly all variants involve no significant doctrinal issues[4]. This isn’t humanistic skepticism—it’s evangelical confidence grounded in rigorous evidence.

[1] Bernard Ramm, “Are We Obscurantists?,” Christianity Today (Washington, D.C.: Christianity Today, 1957), 1:10:14.
[2] Vincent Bacote, Laura C. Miguélez, and Dennis L. Okholm, Evangelicals & Scripture: Tradition, Authority, and Hermeneutics (Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press, 2004), 106.
[3] John MacArthur and Richard Mayhue, eds., Biblical Doctrine: A Systematic Summary of Bible Truth (Wheaton, IL: Crossway, 2017), 128.
[4] Amy Anderson and Wendy Widder, Textual Criticism of the Bible, ed. Douglas Mangum, Lexham Methods Series (Bellingham, WA: Lexham Press, 2018), 184.



















The early church used whatever manuscripts were available

Early manuscripts (Alexandria, Antioch) show us what the ORIGINAL text was like

Byzantine manuscripts are LATER developments from the original

"What the church used" ≠ "What is original"

We’ve identified a critical distinction that textual scholars recognize: what the early church used doesn’t necessarily reflect what the apostles wrote. Early church fathers from the second to third century did not quote a text anything like the Textus Receptus, and most early manuscripts are vastly different from it in significant ways.[1]

The Byzantine manuscripts represent a later standardization process. Beginning in the fourth and fifth centuries, Greek-speaking churches in Greece and Byzantium made copies based on a recension produced by Lucian of Antioch, and from the sixth to the fourteenth centuries, the great majority of New Testament manuscripts were produced in Byzantium bearing the same text—which does not preserve the original text but rather Lucian’s recension.[1] This explains why the majority of surviving manuscripts share similar readings: they descend from a single editorial revision, not from apostolic originals.

The Alexandrian manuscripts tell a different story. The Alexandrian Christians were probably the first to attempt recovering the original wording, working from the second to fourth centuries to purify the text from corruption, as exemplified in manuscripts like P66 and P75, with this textual tradition perpetuated in later manuscripts such as Codex Sinaiticus and Codex Vaticanus.[1] The copies that preserve a purer form of the original text are the early Alexandrian manuscripts, all of which have been discovered in the past 150 years.[1]

The logic is straightforward: earlier manuscripts geographically and chronologically closer to the originals provide better access to apostolic wording than later, geographically concentrated copies. Every original reading has survived in some manuscripts, which is why textual critics study as many manuscripts as possible.[2]

[1] Philip Wesley Comfort, “Textual Criticism,” in Evangelical Dictionary of Theology, ed. Daniel J. Treier and Walter A. Elwell (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Academic: A Division of Baker Publishing Group, 2017), 866.
[2] Charles W. Draper, “Textual Criticism, New Testament,” in Holman Illustrated Bible Dictionary, ed. Chad Brand et al. (Nashville, TN: Holman Bible Publishers, 2003), 1573.













If you reject perfect preservation, where does it end?

The concern about a “slippery slope” misunderstands what rejecting Verbal Plenary Preservation actually means. Rejecting VPP doesn’t mean abandoning Scripture’s authority—it means distinguishing between God’s inspiration of the original writings and the copyist process that followed.

Inspiration guarantees the factuality of biblical events through the supernatural influence of the Holy Spirit upon divinely chosen prophets and apostles, assuring the truth and trustworthiness of their oral and written proclamation, limited to the full original autographs of the Old and New Testament.[1] That’s a robust claim about Scripture’s reliability. But VPP’s fundamental problem is its false presupposition that God’s inspiration of Scripture at a particular point in human history also requires His divine preservation of every jot and tittle ever written down by anyone who ever sought to do the work of a scribe.[2]

We show that evangelical scholars maintain a high view of Scripture without accepting VPP. Evangelical Christianity need not regard those who don’t share inerrancy as hopelessly apostate—J. Gresham Machen acknowledged that many true Christian men accept the central message of the Bible and believe it is right at the central point regarding Christ’s redeeming work, even while believing it contains errors in other areas.[3]

Practically, 90 percent of the Old Testament text is not in question, and absolutely nothing essential to the major doctrines of the Bible would be affected by any responsible decision in textual criticism.[4] The slope doesn’t end in skepticism—it ends in careful scholarship that strengthens our confidence in what Scripture actually teaches.

[1] Richard A. Purdy, “Carl F. H. Henry,” in Handbook of Evangelical Theologians, ed. Walter A. Elwell (Grand Rapids: Baker Book House, 1998), 268.
[2] Got Questions Ministries, Got Questions? Bible Questions Answered (Bellingham, WA: Faithlife, 2014–2021). [See here.]
[3] Carl F.H. Henry, “Bible, Authority of The,” in Baker Encyclopedia of the Bible (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Book House, 1988), 1:298–299.
[4] Peter T. Vogt, Interpreting the Pentateuch: An Exegetical Handbook, ed. David M. Howard Jr., Handbooks for Old Testament Exegesis (Grand Rapids, MI: Kregel Academic & Professional, 2009), 98–99.

























We're not attacking God's Word

Honest examination of manuscripts is DEFENDING God's Word.

The Bereans "searched the scriptures" (Acts 17:11).

Jesus praised those who verify teaching (John 20:24-29).

Good scholarship CONFIRMS Scripture's reliability.

We’ve articulated a crucial principle: rigorous textual examination strengthens rather than undermines Scripture’s authority.

Manuscript evidence demonstrates God’s supernatural preservation of His Word, with stronger attestation than any other classical literature—including Homer, Plato, Aristotle, Caesar, and Tacitus.[1] This abundance of evidence is precisely what enables scholars to verify authenticity. Over 66,000 biblical manuscripts exist (more than 42,000 Old Testament, over 24,000 New Testament), making the Bible the most-supported ancient book by far—the next closest being Homer’s Iliad with roughly 1,800 manuscripts.[2]

The Dead Sea Scrolls provide particularly compelling evidence. When scholars compared Hebrew manuscripts a thousand years earlier than the great Masoretic texts, they found word-for-word identity in more than 95 percent of cases, with the 5 percent variation consisting mostly of slips of the pen and spelling.[3] Of the 166 Hebrew words in Isaiah 53, only seventeen Hebrew letters differ from the Masoretic Text—ten are spelling matters, four are stylistic changes, and three compose a single word that doesn’t significantly affect meaning.[3]

My point about the Bereans parallels scholarly method itself. Three primary tests establish historical veracity: the bibliographical test (manuscript abundance and proximity to originals), the internal evidence test (internal consistency), and the external evidence test (archaeological and historical corroboration).[2] The evidence for Scripture’s reliability is so overwhelming that examining it with an open mind, desiring truth, leads to conviction in its authenticity.[1] Honest scholarship doesn’t attack God’s Word—it vindicates it.

[1] Hank Hanegraaff, Christianity in Crisis: 21st Century (Nashville, TN: Thomas Nelson, 2012), 308.
[2] Todd Hampson, The Non-Prophet’s Guide to the Bible: A Visual Journey Through God's Story...and Where You Fit In (Eugene, OR: Harvest House Publishers, 2022), 29.
[3] Norman L. Geisler and William E. Nix, A General Introduction to the Bible (Chicago: Moody Press, 1986), 382.















Modern versions don't remove verses

Modern versions don't remove verses—they note where they don't appear in early manuscripts. When modern translations omit verses like Matthew 17:21—which appears only in the KJV—they do so because textual evidence suggests later copyists added it to align with parallel accounts, and modern translations note this omission in footnotes rather than silently removing it[1].

The distinction matters significantly. While most modern translations omit words or phrases that the KJV retains, the KJV itself occasionally omits material that other versions include[2]—meaning the conversation isn’t simply “modern versions removing verses” but rather different translations reflecting different underlying manuscript traditions.

Scholars systematically evaluate textual variants, grading each possibility with the highest-rated reading incorporated into the Greek text[1]. This transparency is crucial: modern translations explain omissions in footnotes, and if there were anything to conceal, this practice wouldn’t make sense[1].

The practical impact is minimal. No cardinal doctrine is altered by these variants, and textual critics agree that remaining uncertainties affect no material question of Christian faith and practice[1]. The leading textual controversies comprise well under one percent of the text, with manuscripts agreeing on the essential correctness of 99 percent of New Testament verses[1].

The KJV’s own revision history—those 1629, 1638, 1762, and 1769 updates—reflects the same principle: as knowledge improves, translations benefit from refinement. Modern versions simply extend this practice with greater transparency about why changes occur, grounding decisions in manuscript evidence rather than assumption.

[1] E. Johnson and Warner J. Wallace, Introducing Christianity to Mormons: A Practical and Comparative Guide to What the Bible Teaches (Eugene, OR: Harvest House Publishers, 2022), 60–62.
[2] D. A. Carson, The King James Version Debate: A Plea for Realism (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Book House, 1979), 58.













If KJV is perfect, why was it revised in 1629, 1638, 1762, and 1769?

The premise that the KJV is “perfect” doesn’t align with its actual history. Early editions contained misprints, spelling variations, and inconsistencies due to printing technology limitations, necessitating updates in 1629 and 1638, while the 1762 and 1769 revisions standardized the text[1].

The 1629 revision by original translators Samuel Ward and John Bois introduced over 200 changes[2], and the 1638 edition by Ward, Bois, Thomas Goad, and Joseph Mead became the standard for more than a century[2]. However, the period between 1638 and 1762 produced numerous error-ridden editions with notorious mistakes—the “Wicked Bible” omitting “not” from the seventh commandment, the “Unrighteous Bible” reversing another prohibition, and others similarly flawed[2].

In 1762, Dr. F. S. Paris updated language, spelling, grammar, punctuation, and italics while correcting many printer errors[2]. Benjamin Blayney’s 1769 revision expanded Paris’ work and became the basis for all subsequent King James Bibles, with Blayney marking 75,000 places where the text differed from the 1611 edition[2].

Regarding the NKJV, it represents a different approach entirely. The NKJV was translated by 130 scholars using a process similar to the original 1611 translation but with modern technology enabling greater accuracy and scholar communication[3]. The NKJV deliberately eliminated archaic language while preserving the KJV’s stylistic strengths[3]. Rather than claiming perfection, the NKJV acknowledges that language evolves and readability matters—principles the KJV’s own revision history demonstrates were always operative.

[1] Jessica Parks, “King James Version, 1900,” in Major English Bible Translations, Faithlife Biblical and Theological Lists (Bellingham, WA: Faithlife, 2022). [See here.]
[2] Ross H. McLaren, “Revisions of the King James Version,” in Bible Studies for Life, Fall 2011, Herschel Hobbs Commentary (LifeWay Christian Resources, n.d.), 7–8.
[3] Jessica Parks, “New King James Version,” in Major English Bible Translations, Faithlife Biblical and Theological Lists (Bellingham, WA: Faithlife, 2022). [See here, here.]
























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.

















All Israel will be saved

Paul’s Declaration and Its Interpretive Complexity Paul reveals a “mystery” to prevent Gentile believers from becoming conceited: Israel has...