Jul 6, 2026

1 Timothy 5:20-21

"But those elders who are sinning you are to reprove before everyone, so that the others may take warning. I charge you, in the sight of God and Christ Jesus and the elect angels, to keep these instructions without partiality, and to do nothing out of favoritism."

The passage establishes a graduated approach to addressing pastoral misconduct, not a blanket call for immediate public rebuke. The principle distinguishes between protecting leaders from false accusations and confronting those who genuinely persist in sin.

Before any disciplinary action, accusations against elders require corroboration from two or three witnesses (1 Tim 5:19–21)—a safeguard against rumor and malice. This protection was particularly relevant given false teachers in the early church, some of whom held leadership positions, making it essential to guard innocent leaders against unfounded charges[1].

However, when elders are genuinely guilty—establishing a pattern of sin rather than isolated lapses—they should be publicly rebuked[1]. The public dimension serves a deterrent function: the reproof occurs “before everyone” so that others will fear similar consequences[1]. For false teachers specifically, the rebuke is reserved for those who “persist in sin,” contradict sound doctrine, or deceive entire families through deception[2].

Critically, church discipline aims at restoration through public rebuke—calling the person to repentance and bringing them back into fellowship, not necessarily toward excommunication[2]. This aligns with the broader biblical pattern: private correction precedes public intervention, with escalation only if the person refuses to listen at each stage (Matt 18:15–17).

So yes, openly addressing false teachers and wayward pastors is biblical—but only after establishing genuine wrongdoing and attempting private correction. The goal remains redemptive, not punitive. Criticism should aim at correction and encouragement, making the person a better Christian, not punishment alone[3].

[1] Candi Finch, ed., “1 Timothy,” in The Study Bible for Women, Holman Christian Standard Bible (Nashville, TN: Holman Bible Publishers, 2014). [See here, here, here.]
[2] Gregory J. Stiekes, “Liturgy in the Pastoral Epistles,” Artistic Theologian (2013), 2:42–43.
[3] Ron Teed, The Book of First Timothy, Teed Commentary (Wheaton, IL: Ron and Betty Teed, 2010), 283–284.
















Jul 5, 2026

Variants between Matthew, Luke and Mark

The variants fall into several patterns. Matthew and Luke frequently agree against Mark in word choice across numerous passages, from Matt 4:1//Mark 1:13//Luke 4:2 through Matt 27:59//Mark 15:46//Luke 23:53[1]. More significant differences occur where Matthew and Luke use different word forms than Mark, including passages like Matt 9:17//Mark 2:22//Luke 5:37 and Matt 26:14//Mark 14:10//Luke 22:3[1].

Matthew and Luke also rearrange material from Mark, creating transpositional minor agreements[1]. A striking example involves Jesus’ language about “this generation.” Both Matthew and Luke removed Mark’s phrase “in this adulterous and sinful generation” from Mark 8:38, altered the wording—Matthew to “an evil and adulterous generation” and Luke to “an evil generation”—and then conflated it with Mark 8:12, where Mark has “this generation” without those descriptors[1].

Gospel manuscripts contain numerous harmonizations where scribes altered parallel passages in Mark, Matthew, and Luke to match one another, with the Western and Byzantine textual traditions especially prone to this practice[2]. For instance, in Matthew 9:11, some manuscripts add “and drink” after “eat” to conform to Luke 5:30, while in Mark 2:16 the majority of later manuscripts add “and drink,” yet Luke 5:30 appears in only one manuscript without these words[2].

[1] Ward B. Powers, The Progressive Publication of Matthew (Nashville, TN: B&H Academic, 2010). [See here, here, here, here.]

[2] J. Ed Komoszewski, M. James Sawyer, and Daniel B. Wallace, Reinventing Jesus: How Contemporary Skeptics Miss the Real Jesus and Mislead Popular Culture (Grand Rapids, MI: Kregel Publications, 2006), 59–60.









The Synoptic Problem (2)

The Synoptic Problem concerns the literary relationships among Matthew, Mark, and Luke, which share substantial subject matter and wording patterns yet display significant variations.[1] While shared oral traditions might explain some similarities, the close parallels in Greek suggest direct literary dependence.[1]

The dominant scholarly solution for over a century has been the Two-Source Theory. This approach proposes that Matthew and Luke independently used Mark’s Gospel, while also drawing on a lost document scholars call ‘Q’ to explain passages where Matthew and Luke agree but Mark does not.[2] The term ‘Q’ derives from the German word Quelle, meaning “source.”[2] Mark’s priority fits well with his comparative brevity, vivid narrative style, unpolished language, and the fact that Marcan material appears in substantially the same order in Matthew and Luke.[1]

However, the scholarly consensus has fractured in recent decades. The existence and nature of ‘Q’ has incurred sustained criticism in the 21st century from scholars including Mark Goodacre and Francis Watson.[1] An increasingly popular alternative, pioneered by Austin Farrer, proposes that Matthew used Mark while Luke used both Mark and Matthew, restructuring the latter to suit his preferred sequential arrangement.[1] This approach’s appeal lies in its simplicity—it eliminates the need for the unattested hypothetical source ‘Q’ and the requirement that neither Luke nor Matthew knew the other.[1]

The debate today is more open and diverse than throughout much of the 20th century, with many scholars accepting that no single ‘solution’ may account neatly for a composition history involving hybrid written and oral traditions.[1]

[1] Markus Bockmuehl, “Synoptic Problem,” in The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church, ed. Andrew Louth (Oxford, United Kingdom; New York: Oxford University Press, 2022), 1877–1878.
[2] Mark Goodacre, The Synoptic Problem: A Way through the Maze (London: T&T Clark, 2005), 20–21.




How does the doctrine account for church history before 1611

How does the doctrine account for church history before 1611 — was Scripture not "preserved" for believers using other textual traditions?

VPP doctrine has no coherent answer to this devastating historical problem, and the silence is telling.

VPP proponents conclude that all New Testament manuscripts from any location, language, or time period other than the Textus Receptus are not inspired of God and therefore unworthy of use.[1][2] This creates an impossible historical situation: for roughly 1,500 years before Erasmus compiled the TR in the early 16th century, and for another century before the KJV appeared in 1611, believers across the Christian world relied on textual traditions that VPP doctrine now declares to be uninspired and corrupt.

The doctrine cannot escape this dilemma. If the Byzantine/Majority Text alone was divinely preserved, then the Alexandrian manuscripts used by the early church fathers, the Old Latin versions, the Syriac Peshitta, the Coptic versions, and the Greek manuscripts underlying the Vulgate were all defective—yet God’s people used them faithfully for centuries. Did believers in Egypt, Syria, North Africa, and Rome lack access to Scripture? Were their Bibles spiritually inferior? The doctrine offers no answer except to declare retroactively that they were using corrupted texts.

Alternatively, if preservation applies to multiple textual traditions simultaneously, then VPP collapses entirely, since it rests on the claim that only one text-type is preserved. The Majority Text represents only a selection of Greek texts from a particular area of the world during a particular time period in only one of the many languages in which the New Testament had been preserved.[2]

The historical reality is that God’s Word circulated in multiple textual forms across centuries and continents—a fact that VPP doctrine cannot accommodate. Rather than acknowledging this, VPP advocates simply declare all pre-Reformation manuscripts and translations spiritually deficient, effectively rewriting church history to fit their theological presupposition. This move reveals VPP as an argument working backward from conclusion to evidence, not forward from evidence to conclusion.

[1] Got Questions Ministries, Got Questions? Bible Questions Answered (Bellingham, WA: Faithlife, 2014–2021). [See here.]
[2] Got Questions Ministries, Got Questions? Bible Questions Answered (Bellingham, WA: Logos Bible Software, 2002–2013). [See here, here.]













Derivative one - Byzantine/Received Text

What's the textual/historical basis for treating the Byzantine/Received Text tradition as uniquely preserved, given that the earliest manuscript evidence (papyri, Vaticanus, Sinaiticus) predates it?

VPP advocates have no textual or historical basis for treating the Byzantine tradition as uniquely preserved—and the search results expose the fundamental incoherence of their position.

The Byzantine textual tradition is a revision and amalgamation of earlier texts, carried out from the fourth century AD and propagated from Byzantium (Constantinople).[1] This is not an original text but a derivative one, created through deliberate editorial conflation centuries after the apostolic era. The circumstances under which this text seems to have originated, the fact that it is not represented in quotations in writers of the first three centuries AD, and the secondary relation which it appears to bear to other early forms of NT text suggest that, where it differs from those earlier texts, the earlier are usually to be preferred.[1]

The chronological evidence is decisive. The dry climate in Egypt preserved the oldest extant copies of the New Testament, which were written on papyrus. The textual complexion of the papyri supports the supposition that their early dates and the careful scribal traditions of the region resulted in the preservation of the most reliable manuscripts of the NT.[2] Earlier than the Byzantine text are the Alexandrian, the “Western”, and one or two other types of text, while earlier still are the types of text represented by the oldest known papyri, which are dated between the middle of the second and middle of the third centuries.[3]

VPP proponents attempt to explain away this evidence through demographic arguments—claiming the Byzantine text’s numerical dominance reflects original reliability. But the fuller readings characteristic of the Byzantine textual tradition began to emerge as early as the third or fourth century. As time went on, it became common for professional scribes to collect and conflate readings, and prolific copying in Byzantine monasteries led to this textual tradition becoming dominant in the East.[2] Numerical dominance reflects later scribal practices, not preservation of originals.

Despite the overwhelming similarity between the Byzantine or Majority text-type and the Alexandrian text-type, it appears that the Alexandrian is the earliest text-type and gets closer to the original autograph as published by the author.[4] VPP collapses when forced to explain why God would preserve His Word through a secondary, conflated revision while allowing the earlier, more reliable manuscripts to survive in Egypt—only to be dismissed as corrupted.

[1] David G. Peterson, The Acts of the Apostles, The Pillar New Testament Commentary (Grand Rapids, MI; Nottingham, England: William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company, 2009), 49–50.
[2] Amy Anderson and Wendy Widder, Textual Criticism of the Bible, ed. Douglas Mangum, Lexham Methods Series (Bellingham, WA: Lexham Press, 2018), 116–117.
[3] F. F. Bruce, Tradition: Old and New: Tradition in the Christian Church—Then and Now (Nashville, TN: F.F. Bruce Copyright Intl, 2024), 153.
[4] Stanley E. Porter, How We Got the New Testament: Text, Transmission, Translation, ed. Lee Martin McDonald and Craig A. Evans, Acadia Studies in Bible and Theology (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Academic, 2013), 76.























If not one “jot” or “tittle” could be changed, which KJV?

VPP advocates face a devastating logical problem when confronted with the KJV’s textual history: they cannot coherently identify which edition is “preserved” without abandoning their core doctrine.

The KJV that most modern advocates use looks dramatically different from the 1611 original, with changes affecting both wording and form over time.[1] Between the 1762 Cambridge and 1769 Oxford editions, nearly 24,000 alterations were introduced, including around 1,500 significant textual changes beyond mere spelling and punctuation.[2] These weren’t trivial cosmetic updates—they include substantive shifts like “Thou art Christ” becoming “Thou art the Christ” (Matthew 16:16), “seek good” becoming “seek God” (Psalm 69:32), and “approved unto death” becoming “appointed unto death” (1 Corinthians 4:9).[1]

The trap closes on VPP doctrine here: advocates claim verbal, plenary preservation of the Bible’s words, yet they don’t actually take their own standard literally—if not one “jot” or “tittle” could be changed, they should insist on the 1611 edition alone, since spelling changes certainly involve jots and tittles.[3] Moreover, if preservation is absolute, they should also accept the Apocrypha, which was part of the original 1611 printing.[3]

For those asserting the KJV’s absolute inerrancy, the question becomes acute: which KJV? These textual changes present a sticky problem for radical KJV-Only proponents, who cannot determine the “right” reading when the English translation is made the absolute standard—a route that forecloses recourse to the original Greek and Hebrew manuscripts.[1] VPP collapses under its own weight: preservation cannot simultaneously apply to an unstable, repeatedly revised English translation while maintaining the doctrine’s theological coherence.

[1] James R. White, The King James Only Controversy: Can You Trust Modern Translations? (Minneapolis, MN: Bethany House, 2009), 124–125.
[2] Ray E. Clendenen and David K. Stabnow, HCSB - Bible Translation: Navigating the Horizons in Bible Translations (Nashville, TN: Holman Reference, 2013). [See here, here.]
[3] William W. Combs, “The Preservation of Scripture,” Detroit Baptist Seminary Journal Volume 5 (2000), 5:21–22.
















To make a good one better

The KJV translators explicitly identified five earlier English translations whose wording they would consult when it proved more accurate than the Bishops’ Bible. These were Tyndale, Matthew, Coverdale, Whitchurch, and Geneva.[1]

However, the KJV's preface itself—“The Translators to the Readers”—frames their task differently than simply endorsing prior versions. The translators stated their goal: “We never thought … that we should need to make a new Translation, nor yet to make of a bad one a good one …, but to make a good one better, or out of many good ones, one principal good one.”[1] This language suggests they viewed multiple existing translations as legitimate but sought to synthesize them into a superior single version rather than merely affirming each predecessor as equally authoritative.

The translators’ actual methodology reveals their pragmatic rather than ideological approach. They began with existing versions, consulted other renderings and commentaries, and used the Hebrew and Greek texts as their ultimate court of reference.[2] The preface modestly admitted imperfection and stressed the need for continuous revision, especially where meanings were uncertain.[2]

The historical weight fell heaviest on Tyndale, the earliest and most influential predecessor. The voice most commonly heard in the KJV is that of a man who lived seventy years earlier and was considered a heretic and outlaw in his day, with one recent study concluding that 83% of the KJV text is Tyndale.[1] Yet this dominance was practical rather than theological—Tyndale’s translation simply proved superior in quality, not divinely inspired in a way others were not.

[1] Rodney J. Decker, “400 Years of the KJV,” Journal of Ministry and Theology (2012), 16:1:20–22.
[2] David S. Dockery, ed., Holman Bible Handbook (Nashville, TN: Holman Bible Publishers, 1992), 101.






Translations explicitly endorsed in “The Translators to the Reader” KJV's preface

The KJV translators explicitly stated their purpose was not to create an entirely new translation, but rather to improve an existing good translation or to synthesize multiple good ones into a single principal version[1].

Which translations King James I authorized them to consult? For additional textual support beyond the Bishop’s Bible (which served as the primary guide), the King permitted the translators to use the Tyndale Bible, the Coverdale Bible, Matthew’s Bible, the Great Bible, and the Geneva Bible[2]. These were the official sources they were allowed to reference.

The translators themselves praised their sixteenth-century predecessors, declaring they “deserve to be had of us and of posterity in everlasting remembrance” and calling them “Blessed” for breaking ground “upon that which helpeth forward to the saving of souls”[1]. This language suggests broad affirmation of earlier translation work, though the preface doesn’t systematically list every version they considered authoritative.

The translators also drew from non-English sources: all existing English versions lay before them, along with every available foreign version, Latin translations both ancient and recent, the Targums, and the Peshitta—all as aids to understanding the Hebrew and Greek originals[1]. By the time of the KJV, versions in several modern languages had appeared, including a revised French Bible (1587–8), an Italian translation by Diodati (1607), and two Spanish versions[3].

[1] F. F. Bruce, The Books and the Parchments: The Original Languages, the Canon, Transmission and How We Got Our English Bible (Nashville, TN; Bath, England: Kingsley Books, 2018), 221.

[2] Modern English Version (Lake Mary, FL: Passio, 2014), x.
[3] J. H. Lupton, “Versions (English),” 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), 5:256.















The original KJV translators made no claims

The original KJV translators made no claims for divine inspiration and frankly conceded theirs was not a perfect translation[1]. However, the documents don’t provide the actual list of which prior English translations they explicitly referenced or endorsed in “The Translators to the Reader” preface.

It indicates that the Bishop’s Bible of 1568 served as the base text for the KJV, which itself relied on the Great Bible of 1539, based on Coverdale’s revision of Matthew’s Bible (1535), which was a revision of William Tyndale’s translations (circa 1525), with the vast bulk of Tyndale’s translation incorporated into the KJV[2]. Additionally, the translators used a variety of sources including foreign translations, Latin translations, the Septuagint, the Targums, and the Syriac Peshitta in determining the best readings[2].

[1] John Ankerberg and John Weldon, The Facts on the King James Only Debate (Chattanooga, TN: ATRI Publishing, 2011). [See here.]

[2] Tania Fenwick, “The King James Bible and the Importance of Textual Criticism,” Bible and Spade, ed. Bryant G. Wood (2011). [See here, here.]









The Hebrew/Greek text is preserved, or that the 1611 English translation is inspired/preserved?

Is the claim that the Hebrew/Greek text is preserved, or that the 1611 English translation is inspired/preserved?

KJV-Only advocates do indeed slide between these fundamentally different claims, and we expose the logical incoherence of doing so.

The most extreme position—what scholars call “reinspiration”—holds that the 1611 King James Bible surpasses the original languages and that its translators received near-divine inspiration when producing the English text.[1] This represents a categorical claim about the translation itself, not the underlying Hebrew and Greek texts. Peter Ruckman is the primary advocate for this view.[1]

Yet this position immediately collapses when confronted with textual history. The KJV has undergone major revisions since 1611—the original included the Apocrypha and Church feast days, whereas the version used today is an 18th-century revision that removed these elements.[1] More specifically, between the 1611 edition and the 1762 Cambridge and 1769 Oxford editions, nearly 24,000 changes were made, including around 1,500 significant alterations beyond mere spelling and punctuation.[2] If the 1611 translation was divinely inspired, which edition is preserved? The answer exposes the doctrine’s incoherence.

A more moderate KJV-Only position claims preservation applies to the original Hebrew and Greek texts, not the English translation. This view holds that the original text and message have been preserved across the totality of Hebrew, Aramaic, and Greek manuscripts, and that no particular translation, manuscript, or text family can claim exclusive rights to preservation.[3] Notably, the original KJV translators themselves acknowledged in their preface that all translations by fallible humans are imperfect and can be improved, and they respected other translations as God’s Word.[3]

The critical move: advocates who slide between these positions begin with a theological claim about preservation, then identify whichever text (TR, Majority Text, or KJV) fits their conclusion—without establishing which entity was actually preserved. This rhetorical flexibility allows them to shift ground when challenged on specifics.

[1] Richard G. Fisher, “The Cultic Root System of David Otis Fuller and King James Onlyism,” The Journal of Modern Ministry, ed. Kurt Goedelman (2011), 8:1:86.
[2] Ray E. Clendenen and David K. Stabnow, HCSB - Bible Translation: Navigating the Horizons in Bible Translations (Nashville, TN: Holman Reference, 2013). [See here, here.]
[3] 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), 343.


















The originals as copied

If perfect preservation applies to "the originals as copied," how does that square with the real, documented variants among Textus Receptus editions (Erasmus's own five editions differ from each other)?

This is precisely where VPP claims collapse under scrutiny. The doctrine cannot coherently maintain that “the originals as copied” were preserved when the very editions VPP proponents champion demonstrably differ from one another.

There exist approximately 30 editions of the Textus Receptus, all varying slightly[1], yet VPP advocates treat the TR as if it were a single, stable text. The closest TR manuscripts differ from each other six to ten times per chapter[1]—a frequency that makes the notion of perfect preservation incoherent. The problem deepens when you examine specific variants: Luke 2:22 reads “their purification” in Erasmus, Stephanus, and the Majority Text but “her purification” in Beza and the KJV; Luke 17:36 is omitted entirely in early Stephanus editions and the Majority Text but included in Stephanus’s fourth edition and the KJV; John 1:28 reads “Bethabara” in later Stephanus editions and Beza but “Bethany” in earlier editions and the Majority Text[1].

The deeper logical problem: Erasmus was forced to back-translate his own Greek text from Latin manuscripts when the Majority Text lacked entire passages, and in other places where the Majority Text contained so many variants that Erasmus could not determine which reading to use, he made up his own[2]. This means the TR itself is not a “copy” of originals but a reconstruction involving editorial decisions and invention.

VPP proponents are forced to conclude either that the Textus Receptus was not divinely preserved or that God’s inspiration of Scripture continued for another 1,500 years after Christ’s resurrection, placing Erasmus in the category of inspired biblical authors with Peter, Paul, and John[2]. The doctrine cannot escape this dilemma by appealing to “the originals as copied”—because Erasmus’s own five editions prove there was no stable original to copy from, and his editorial choices contradict any claim to mechanical preservation.

[1] Rod Mattoon, Treasures from Numbers, Treasures from Scripture Series (Springfield, IL: Rod Mattoon, 2004), 532–533.
[2] Got Questions Ministries, Got Questions? Bible Questions Answered (Bellingham, WA: Faithlife, 2014–2021). [See here, here.]












The Greek TR, the Byzantine manuscript tradition, the English KJV translation are demonstrably not identical

VPP advocates argue that the Textus Receptus (TR) is the only New Testament text that is both divinely inspired and divinely preserved.[1][2] However, we reveal a critical ambiguity in how VPP proponents actually define what has been preserved.

For defenders of the Textus Receptus, the doctrine of preservation extends to the Authorized (King James) Version as well.[3] This represents a significant escalation—moving from claiming preservation of the Greek text itself to claiming preservation of an English translation. This viewpoint extends inspiration to translation, even apparently translation by Erasmus from Latin back into Greek.[3]

We suggest VPP advocates conflate these distinct entities without acknowledging the distinction. Their conclusion is that the Textus Receptus and the Majority Text are not only faithful, inerrant, and identical replicas of the original autographs, but that all other New Testament manuscripts are not inspired of God and therefore unworthy of use.[1][2] Yet they simultaneously claim the KJV translation itself shares this preservation status—a move that compounds the logical problem.

The points adduced in favor of the TR are theological rather than historical and are related to an extreme form of the doctrine of divine preservation, with advocates claiming that those who believe in verbal, plenary inspiration must believe in providential preservation of the Scriptures through the centuries.[4] The circularity here is telling: they begin with a theological presupposition about what must be preserved, then identify the TR (and sometimes the KJV) as that preserved text, without establishing it historically.

Our instinct to press on this conflation is sound. VPP proponents rarely distinguish between the Greek TR, the Byzantine manuscript tradition from which it derives, and the English KJV translation—treating them as interchangeable when they are demonstrably not identical. This slippage allows them to shift ground when challenged on any particular claim.

[1] Got Questions Ministries, Got Questions? Bible Questions Answered (Bellingham, WA: Faithlife, 2014–2021). [See here, here.]
[2] Got Questions Ministries, Got Questions? Bible Questions Answered (Bellingham, WA: Logos Bible Software, 2002–2013). [See here, here.]
[3] Stanley E. Porter, How We Got the New Testament: Text, Transmission, Translation, ed. Lee Martin McDonald and Craig A. Evans, Acadia Studies in Bible and Theology (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Academic, 2013), 55.
[4] Michael W. Holmes, “The ‘Majority Text Debate’: New Form of an Old Issue,” Themelios (1983), 8:2:13–14.






















Jul 3, 2026

God’s Sovereignty Over Scripture:


God’s Sovereignty Over Scripture: The Authority and Power of the Enthroned God


God sits on his throne in heaven[1], and this reality extends far beyond the cosmic order into the very transmission and preservation of his written Word. The vision John received in Revelation 4 reveals a foundational truth that transforms how Christians understand Scripture itself: the God who sovereignly controls all creation also sovereignly controls every manuscript, translation, and interpretation of his Word. His power and authority encompass not merely the events of history but the preservation and propagation of the record that interprets those events.


The Throne as the Center of All Authority


The theme of Revelation, and of the whole Bible, is the absolute authority of the throne of God.[1] This throne represents more than symbolic imagery—it establishes God’s actual governance over all existence. The image of the throne room in chapter 4 highlights God’s sovereignty over all, as does also the word ‘Almighty’ (pantokratōr).[2] Pantokratōr means not only power over, but power for, that is, enabling power.[2] This distinction proves crucial: God’s authority over Scripture is not merely restrictive or controlling but generative and sustaining—he actively enables the transmission of his Word across centuries, languages, and cultures.


Even when the church is feeble, even when the world seems to turn its back on God completely, the ultimate place of authority in the universe is his throne.[1] This principle applies directly to the preservation of Scripture. When manuscripts were copied by hand, when translations were crafted in unfamiliar languages, when interpretations emerged from different theological traditions, God’s sovereignty remained undiminished. He was not wringing his hands in frustration at textual variants or competing interpretations—he was working his purposes through the very process of transmission.


God as Creator and Sustainer of All Things


God’s sovereignty rests upon him being the Creator and sustainer of the world. Revelation affirms God as both.[3] This creative and sustaining power extends to the words themselves. God is worthy of glory, honor, and power “because” he “created all things” and by his will “they were created and have their being”—the imperfect tense points to the ongoing preservation of creation and the aorist to the initial act of creation.[3] Scripture, as God’s inscripturated Word, falls within this ongoing preservation. Every manuscript that survived antiquity, every translation that conveyed meaning across linguistic barriers, every interpretation that illuminated Scripture’s depths—all exist within God’s sustaining power.


Our sovereign God holds the destiny of the world in the palm of his hand. This is what John is telling us in Revelation 5:1 when he refers to the “scroll” in God’s right hand. This scroll contains God’s foreordained plans for the future. More specifically, it contains the course of history leading up to the end of the world and the consummation of God’s kingdom.[4] If God holds history itself in his hand, he certainly holds the textual record through which that history is interpreted and understood.


The Sovereignty of God Over Knowledge and Truth


Revelation is authoritative because it is rooted in the very nature of God. The God of the biblical tradition is sovereign, in firm command of heaven and earth.[5] God’s knowledge is exhaustive and eternal—he knew before the foundation of the world which manuscripts would survive, which translations would emerge, which interpretations would guide believers in different eras. He creates all things, sustains all things, knows all things, ordains all things, and owns all things.[4]


This omniscience means God knew every Bible translation before it was conceived. He foreknew the King James Version, the NIV, the ESV, the NASB, and countless others. He knew which interpretive frameworks would dominate different periods and regions. He understood which textual variants would trouble scholars and which would fade into obscurity. None of this caught him by surprise or forced him to adjust his purposes. Rather, God as Creator becomes the basis of eschatological hope. If God was the transcendent source of all things, he could also be the source of quite new possibilities for his creation in the future.[3] Similarly, God’s creative power ensures that his Word reaches those who need it, in forms they can understand, through channels he sovereignly directs.


The Slain Lamb and Sacrificial Authority


Significantly, the picture and image of the slain Lamb, who shares absolute sovereignty with God, softens the image of the sovereignty of God, as not one of sheer force as such, because sovereignty is also through self-sacrifice.[2] This transforms how we understand God’s authority over Scripture. His control is not tyrannical but redemptive. He preserves his Word not to dominate but to save. Every translation represents an act of grace, making God’s truth accessible. Every interpretation that faithfully seeks to understand Scripture participates in God’s redemptive purposes.


Conclusion: Rest in Divine Sovereignty


God is still on the throne—you are in God’s hands; your children are in God’s hands; and your church is in God’s hands. There is a God in heaven who reigns, and he loves you. The sovereignty of God is the softest pillow on which Christians can lay their heads.[1] This extends to the text itself. Christians need not fear that Scripture has slipped from God’s grasp through the centuries of copying, translating, and interpreting. The God whose throne endures from generation to generation has ensured that his Word reaches his people. Every Bible in every language, every translation reflecting different theological emphases, every scholarly interpretation wrestling with difficult passages—all exist within the scope of God’s sovereign care. He knew what we would need to hear and ensured we could hear it.


[1] Ray Ortlund et al., Hope: Food for the Journey - Themes (Oxford, England: IVP, 2022).

[2] Anthony C. Thiselton, The Power of Pictures in Christian Thought: The Use and Abuse of Images in the Bible and Theology (London: SPCK, 2018), 173–174.

[3] J. Scott Duvall, A Theology of Revelation: God’s Grand Plan to Defeat Evil, Rescue His People, and Transform His Creation, ed. Andreas J. Köstenberger, Biblical Theology of the New Testament (Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan Academic, 2025), 275–276.

[4] Jonathan Leeman et al., The Underestimated Gospel (Nashville, TN: B&H Books, 2014).

[5] R. W. Yarbrough, “Revelation,” in New Dictionary of Biblical Theology, ed. T. Desmond Alexander and Brian S. Rosner (Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press, 2000), 736.


Because of Christ, We Are United as One

Because of Christ, We Are United as One


The foundation of Christian unity rests not on human effort, organizational structure, or doctrinal uniformity alone, but on a singular, transformative reality: the person and work of Jesus Christ. This truth stands as the cornerstone of New Testament ecclesiology, woven throughout Paul’s epistles and Jesus’s own teaching. To understand Christian unity is to understand Christ himself—his incarnation, crucifixion, resurrection, and ongoing headship of the church. Unity is not merely an ideal to pursue or a goal to achieve; it is a fundamental reality already accomplished in Christ that believers are called to recognize, protect, and embody.



The Indivisible Christ as Foundation


The world contains fundamentally two categories of people: those united to God and thereby automatically united to each other, and those separated from God and consequently divided from one another.[1] This binary reality establishes the theological framework within which Christian unity must be understood. Christ himself serves as the primary unifying factor, having come to bring all people under one head.[1] Yet this raises a critical question that Paul poses with rhetorical force: “Is Christ divided?”[1]


The question carries profound implications. The Greek term here means to cut into pieces for distribution, emphasizing that Christ is not parceled out in fragments to various groups—he is either wholly present in a people or not present at all.[1] When Christians divide from one another while claiming allegiance to Christ, they implicitly deny the very foundation of their faith. When Christ is present in a people, those who belong to him also belong to each other, and if Christ cannot be divided, neither can his body—it is indeed one body.[1]


This principle transcends denominational boundaries and theological preferences. The church as the body of Christ is “one” because Christ cannot be divided, though divisions and quarrels may exist within particular congregations.[2] The unity is ontological—grounded in Christ’s nature—rather than merely organizational. It precedes and supersedes human divisions.



The Crucifixion as Unifying Event


The cross stands as the historical event through which Christ accomplished reconciliation and established the basis for Christian unity. Crucifixion represents another unifying factor, as Christ’s body was broken on the cross so that his ongoing body, the church, could be united.[1] This was not incidental to Christ’s redemptive work; it was central to his purpose. Through the blood of Christ, those who were once far away have been brought near.[1]


The crucifixion accomplishes what human effort cannot: the removal of barriers that separate people from God and from each other. “The one man, Jesus Christ,” is decisive for the salvation of “the many,” having died the one decisive death for all; by way of contrast to Adam, whose sin brought curse to humanity, the one man Jesus Christ brought righteousness and life for those who receive God’s abundant provision of grace.[3] This substitutionary work creates the possibility of genuine community transcending every human division.



The Theological Architecture of Unity


The New Testament presents Christian unity as resting on multiple theological pillars that reinforce one another. The one God and Father serves as the ultimate foundation of unity, having created all things and being the source of every spiritual blessing, with unity as his goal, and the one God representing the last and deepest ground of unity as creator and redeemer.[4] From this foundation emerges the role of Christ and the Spirit.


The one Lord Jesus Christ functions as the instrument of God’s creation and redemption and the one in whom God’s people are called in the new dispensation.[4] Unity in the New Testament is always seen from the standpoint of Christ, with Paul writing that “for us there is but one God, the Father, from whom all things came and for whom we live; and there is but one Lord, Jesus Christ, through whom all things came and through whom we live.”[3] This formulation represents a revolutionary theological development—the integration of Christ into the very heart of monotheistic confession.


There is one Spirit who unites all in baptism, gives gifts, and seeks to fill believers.[4] The Holy Spirit is particularly set forth in the New Testament as the source and principle of unity, with many things potentially dividing human beings from one another, yet out of their diversity the Spirit creates a unity, and the church is one people because it is filled with the one Holy Spirit of God.[4]



Baptism and the Gospel as Unifying Practices


Baptism represents another unifying factor, with all who are baptized into Christ having clothed themselves with Christ, and therefore those who have put on Christ are one in Christ.[1] Yet Paul emphasizes that the identity of the baptizer matters far less than the reality into which one is baptized. Paul is not suggesting that baptism is unimportant, but rather that there is no mystical relationship between the baptized and the baptizer—who does the baptizing is inconsequential, but why a person is baptized and into whom (Christ) a person is baptized is essential.[1]


The gospel itself functions as a unifying proclamation. Paul writes, “I am not ashamed of the gospel, because it is the power of God for the salvation of everyone who believes: first for the Jew, then for the Gentile.”[1] This universal scope of the gospel’s saving power transcends ethnic, social, and cultural boundaries. The urgent need for humility, interdependence, and love within the Christian community is grounded in dynamic horizontal unity between members of the body of Christ, a union that overcomes even the most imposing racial and social barriers.[5]



The Body Metaphor: Diversity Within Unity


Paul’s extended treatment of the body metaphor in 1 Corinthians 12 provides the most vivid articulation of how Christian unity accommodates genuine diversity. Paul’s fullest treatment of the theme consists of an extended comparison between the human body and the church in order to emphasize horizontal union among the members of Christ’s body and to demonstrate dramatically both diversity within unity and unity out of diversity.[5] This was not merely rhetorical flourish; the Corinthian congregation desperately needed this teaching.


A church well known both for the giftedness of its members and its toleration of divisions needed to heed warnings against both groundless inferiority and disdainful superiority.[5] Each member of the body has an important, although not always glamorous, contribution to make, and no member experiences humiliation or honor without somehow affecting the rest.[5]


Crucially, horizontal, social relations between members are grounded in the vertical union each member enjoys with Christ, not merely in a memorable metaphor describing community relations.[5] This vertical dimension prevents unity from becoming merely pragmatic or organizational. It is fundamentally christological.



The Eschatological Character of Unity


Christian unity possesses a unique temporal character that deserves careful attention. The passage absolutizes the unity of the church by linking it doctrinally to the one Spirit, Lord and God, yet other parts emphasize the need for Christians to make efforts to preserve their unity and grow into greater unity, perspectives that are not incompatible as long as the unity of the church is understood as an eschatological anticipation of a future reality rather than a present dogmatic fact—something given and yet also something to be striven for.[2]


This paradox resolves the apparent tension between declaration and exhortation throughout the New Testament. Christians should be eager to maintain the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace[1]—not because unity must be created, but because it must be preserved and expressed. The unity already exists in Christ; believers are called to live into that reality.



The Cost of Violating Unity


The severity with which Scripture addresses division cannot be overstated. Whenever Christians divide from one another in attitude and activities, they violate the purpose and meaning of Christ, the crucifixion, baptism, and the preached gospel—it is quite serious to claim to stand for Christ in principles when in practice one stands against what he stands for in his life, crucifixion, baptism, and gospel.[1]


Christians acknowledge allegiance to one Lord, and not to keep the unity of the church means to deny that there is one Lord and that loyalty is only to him.[4] Division becomes a form of disloyalty to Christ himself.



Conclusion: The Imperative of Unity


The foundation and continuity of the church’s unity are grounded in Christ as the one shepherd of the one flock, with Paul expressing this truth through his picture of the one body, in which the members are linked and mutually dependent—the several members cannot live in diversity without the one head.[3]


Christian unity is not an achievement of human ingenuity or organizational skill. It is the gift of Christ, purchased by his blood, established by his resurrection, and maintained by his Spirit. It is time that believers affirm the four foundations for unity—Christ, crucifixion, baptism, and gospel—by changing attitudes toward brothers and sisters in Christ who may have differences in opinions and who may be meeting in different places, but who are indeed united to Christ and are our brothers and sisters in Christ.[1] Because of Christ, we are united as one—not as an aspiration, but as a present reality to be recognized, protected, and lived out in the concrete relationships of Christian community.


[1] Knofel Staton, First Corinthians: Unlocking the Scriptures for You, Standard Bible Studies (Cincinnati, OH: Standard, 1987), 35–37.

[2] John Muddiman, The Epistle to the Ephesians, Black’s New Testament Commentary (London: Continuum, 2001), 183.

[3] Christopher A. Beetham, ed., “Εἷς,” in Concise New International Dictionary of New Testament Theology and Exegesis (Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan Academic, 2021), 266.

[4] Everett Ferguson, The Church of Christ: A Biblical Ecclesiology for Today (Grand Rapids, MI: Wm. B. Eerdmans Pub. Co., 1996), 401–402.

[5] Bruce N. Fisk, “Body of Christ,” in Evangelical Dictionary of Biblical Theology, Baker Reference Library (Grand Rapids: Baker Book House, 1996), 73.


The essence of Christians

The essence of Christians centers on a shared identity rooted in Christ and a transformed way of living that distinguishes them from pagan society. This isn’t merely an intellectual agreement but a fundamental reorientation of existence.

Christians possess a special relationship with God through faith in Christ, which grants them honorific titles and eschatological hope[1]. More profoundly, this identity is grounded in Christ’s own election, whose experience as a rejected resident-alien on earth becomes the necessary pattern for Christians themselves[1]. This creates what might be called a christological-ecclesiastical unity—Christians don’t merely believe similar doctrines; they participate in Christ’s own reality and destiny.

This shared essence demands a distinctive way of life. Christians function as “elect exiles of Diaspora,” which creates a fundamental tension: they must resist anything compromising their exclusive allegiance to God while simultaneously living responsibly within their earthly communities[1]. They cannot simply withdraw from the world or adopt pagan values wholesale. Instead, Christians dedicate themselves to proper social behavior by following Christ’s steps, which itself constitutes spiritual sacrifice and proclamation of God’s excellencies[1].

The unity we mention operates on two levels. First, all Christians share the same foundation—faith in Christ and participation in his redemptive work. Second, this shared essence produces behavioral consistency: Christians shape their social behavior in the face of pagan rejection by following Christ’s example through “doing good”[1]. They live as children of God precisely by embodying values fundamentally opposed to pagan worldviews—prioritizing spiritual allegiance, moral transformation, and sacrificial service over the pursuit of wealth, status, and worldly pleasure that characterizes pagan society. The body of Christ functions as one because its members share not just doctrine but a transformed identity and purpose.

[1] Joyce Wai-Lan Sun, This Is True Grace: The Shaping of Social Behavioural Instructions by Theology in 1 Peter (Carlisle, Cumbria: Langham Monographs, 2016), 63, 65–66.







Divine election and human responsibility

The tension between divine election and human responsibility represents one of Scripture’s most profound paradoxes—and we suggest this isn’t a problem to solve but a biblical reality to embrace.

Scripture never resolves the apparent contradiction between God’s sovereignty and human free will, but instead affirms both simultaneously.[1][2] Rather than viewing these as enemies locked in theological combat, they function more like complementary truths.[3] The key to understanding human responsibility lies in recognizing that the covenant framework unites God’s initiative and sovereign agenda-setting with humanity’s mandatory response of repentance and faith.[1][2]

Your responsibility in believing operates on several levels. First, Romans 9 emphasizes God’s sovereign choice while Romans 10 stresses humanity’s necessary response[1][2]—suggesting these aren’t sequential but simultaneous. You’re called to respond; the fact that God foreknew your response doesn’t eliminate your genuine choice. Second, salvation depends entirely on God’s grace through faith alone, yet grace transforms those who receive it.[4] Your responsibility includes not merely initial belief but ongoing perseverance and spiritual transformation. Third, the ultimate goal of predestination isn’t simply heaven but holiness—becoming Christlike.[1][2] This means your responsibility extends beyond a single moment of conversion to a lifetime of growing in obedience.

Critically, election isn’t a call to passive favoritism but to active service as a channel of redemption for others.[1][2] Your belief matters because it positions you to participate in God’s redemptive purposes. The tension you experience isn’t a contradiction in God’s perspective but arises from attempting to reflect biblical teaching about the new covenant community.[4] Rather than resolving this paradox intellectually, embrace it as the framework within which genuine faith operates—God’s sovereignty and your responsibility work together, not against each other.

[1] Robert James Utley, Luke the Historian: The Book of Acts, Study Guide Commentary Series (Marshall, TX: Bible Lessons International, 2003), 3b:46.
[2] Robert James Dr. Utley, The Gospel according to Peter: Mark and I & II Peter, Study Guide Commentary Series (Marshall, Texas: Bible Lessons International, 2000), 2:163.
[3] Steven A. Kreloff, God’s Plan for Israel: A Study of Romans 9–11 (The Woodlands, TX: Kress Christian Publications, 2006), 39.
[4] Daniel J. Treier, Introducing Evangelical Theology (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Academic: A Division of Baker Publishing Group, 2019), 289–290.


























1 Timothy 5:20-21

"But those elders who are sinning you are to reprove before everyone, so that the others may take warning. I charge you, in the sight o...