Jun 23, 2026

Our interpretation of the Bible is not inerrant

The Bible is without error, but our interpretation of the Bible is not inerrant. We need to be humble as we approach the Scripture. God's thoughts are not our thoughts, and not all has been revealed to us (Deut. 29:29). Sometimes we are prone to resist the truth taught be a text. And even Peter said that some of the things that Paul wrote are hard to understand (2 Peter 3:15-16).

This principle distinguishes between the nature of Scripture itself and the human process of understanding it—a crucial theological boundary.

Scripture’s infallibility and inerrancy do not guarantee that any interpretation or interpreter of that teaching is infallible or inerrant.[1] The Bible’s truthfulness flows from God’s character, but our comprehension of it remains limited by human finitude, cultural distance, and interpretive frameworks. Determining what Scripture actually asserts requires careful Bible study, allowing Scripture itself to define the scope and limits of its teaching.[1]

When determining what the biblical writer is asserting, we must pay careful attention to Scripture’s character as a human production, recognizing that God utilized the culture and conventions of the writer’s own time.[2] This means history must be treated as history, poetry as poetry, hyperbole as hyperbole, and we must observe differences between ancient literary conventions and modern ones—nonchronological narration and imprecise citation were acceptable in biblical times and violated no expectations.[2]

The danger lies in claiming infallibility for interpretations. Too often the infallibility belonging to God’s Word has been claimed for interpretations of Scripture which are uncertain and which make Scripture pronounce on subjects it does not claim to teach.[1] The Bible is not an exhaustive reference work; it claims to teach all things necessary to salvation but nowhere claims to give instruction in natural sciences or grammar, and it would be improper to treat it as making pronouncements on these matters.[1]

Scripture is inerrant not in the sense of being absolutely precise by modern standards, but in the sense of making good its claims and achieving that measure of focused truth at which its authors aimed.[2] Your interpretation may be wrong; the Bible cannot be.

[1] J. I. Packer, “Fundamentalism” and the Word of God: Some Evangelical Principles (Grand Rapids, MI: William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company, 1958), 96.
[2] Carl F. H. Henry, God, Revelation, and Authority (Wheaton, IL: Crossway Books, 1999), 4:217.













The ben Chayyim and ben Asher texts

The ben Asher text, represented in the oldest complete Hebrew manuscript from A.D. 1008, became the standard through the Tiberian Masoretes’ “strict consistency in indicating pronunciation.”[1] By the late eleventh century, the ben Asher vocalization system had triumphed over its rival, the ben Naphtali family, partly because Moses Maimonides endorsed it as the authoritative standard.[2]

Jacob ben Chayyim’s printed Rabbinic Bibles (1516/17 and 1524/25) compiled multiple manuscripts with extensive Masoretic notes and variant readings from other texts.[1] For four centuries, ben Chayyim’s edition served as the standard Hebrew text and formed the basis for the first two editions of Kittel’s Biblia Hebraica.[1] However, ben Chayyim’s text was a hybrid combining both ben Asher and ben Naphtali readings.[2]

The critical shift came in modern scholarship. The 1937 edition of Biblia Hebraica returned exclusively to the ben Asher text as its primary source.[1] Today’s standard scholarly text, Biblia Hebraica Stuttgartensia, is based on the Leningrad Codex (A.D. 1009)—a ben Asher manuscript.[3]

Despite these differences, the ben Chayyim and ben Asher texts remain substantially in agreement, both belonging to the Masoretic tradition.[1] While some argue for ben Chayyim’s priority as the Old Testament’s textus receptus, this position lacks conviction since ben Chayyim’s stated goal was recovering the ben Asher Masoretic text—precisely what the Leningrad and Aleppo Codexes preserve.[3] The practical distinction matters primarily for scholars; the theological content remains essentially identical across both traditions.

[1] James B. Williams and Randolph Shaylor, eds., God’s Word in Our Hands: The Bible Preserved for Us (Greenville, SC; Belfast, Northern Ireland: Ambassador Emerald International, 2003), 198.
[2] Stephen J. Vicchio, Job in the Ancient World: Image of the Biblical Job: A History (Eugene, OR: Wipf and Stock, 2006). [See here, here.]
[3] Charles W. Draper, “Textual Criticism, Old Testament,” in Holman Illustrated Bible Dictionary, ed. Chad Brand et al. (Nashville, TN: Holman Bible Publishers, 2003), 1576–1577.

















Which KJV is better, 1611 or 1769...later revision or NKJV?

The choice depends on your priorities regarding readability versus textual basis.

The 1769 edition differs significantly from the 1611 edition[1], primarily due to language standardization. By the time the 1762 Cambridge and 1769 Oxford editions were printed, English spelling was standardized, with nearly 24,000 changes from the 1611 editions.[2] While advocates argue that only punctuation, spelling, and printer errors changed, the 24,000 alterations included around 1,500 significant changes.[2] The 1769 version reads more naturally to modern eyes without archaic language like “thee,” “thou,” and ”-eth” verb forms.

However, the KJV translators used only about a half dozen very late Greek manuscripts for the New Testament, whereas today scholars can translate from a Greek text drawing on almost six thousand manuscripts, some dating to the second century.[1] This textual limitation affects both the 1611 and 1769 editions equally.

The NKJV addresses both concerns more effectively. The NKJV’s translation process was “very similar to the one which produced the beloved 1611 King James Version, but today’s technology allowed for higher levels of accuracy and easier communication among the scholars.”[3] The NKJV’s stylists were careful to eliminate archaic English while deliberately keeping the good things about the KJV’s style and manner.[3] Notably, the NKJV is one of the few modern translations still based on the “Byzantine” manuscript tradition[3], preserving the textual philosophy of the KJV while updating its language.

For practical study, the 1769 KJV works if you prefer traditional KJV language, but the NKJV offers superior readability and marginally better textual support without abandoning the KJV’s translation philosophy.

[1] Karen H. Jobes, “The Septuagint,” in The Baker Illustrated Bible Handbook, ed. J. Daniel. Hays and J. Scott Duvall (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Books, 2011), 1052.
[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] Jessica Parks, “New King James Version,” in Major English Bible Translations, Faithlife Biblical and Theological Lists (Bellingham, WA: Faithlife, 2022). [See here, here, here.]



























Gethsemane BPC's Erroneous Position on the Preservation of Scripture

https://gethsemanebpc.com/pastoral/preservation-of-scripture/


We have analyzed this article carefully for theological and exegetical problems.


Errors and False Teaching in This Article

1. Misinterpretation of Psalm 12:6-7

This is the article's most foundational exegetical error. The text uses Psalm 12:6-7 as a proof text for manuscript preservation, but in context, "them" refers to the poor and needy mentioned in verse 5, not to "words." The Hebrew pronoun agrees with the people God promises to protect, not the words. Nearly all Hebrew scholars and commentators (Calvin, Spurgeon, etc.) recognized this. Building a doctrine on a demonstrably mistranslated proof text is a serious error.


2. Conflating Preservation of Scripture's Message with Preservation of Specific Manuscripts

The biblical promises cited (Isaiah 40:8, Matthew 24:35, 1 Peter 1:25, etc.) affirm that God's word will not ultimately fail or be abolished — they are statements about the enduring authority and truth of God's revelation, not promises about the textual purity of any particular manuscript tradition. The article silently commits a category error, treating promises about theological permanence as promises about text-critical manuscripts.


3. Misrepresentation of the Westminster Confession

The WCF 1.8 says the scriptures are "kept pure in all ages" — this is a statement about general providential preservation, not a claim that any single manuscript tradition is inerrant. The article weaponizes the WCF against the very kind of careful textual scholarship the Westminster divines themselves practiced. William Ames, John Owen, and others in that tradition acknowledged textual variants.

Notably, John Owen — perhaps the greatest Westminster-era theologian — wrote extensively on textual criticism and acknowledged variant readings, while still affirming preservation. The article's use of the WCF is therefore historically dishonest.


4. The Textus Receptus Was Not the Unanimous Choice of the Reformers

The article claims the TR is the preserved text "identified and propagated by the Reformers." This is historically false:

  • The TR is essentially Erasmus's 1516 edition, compiled hastily, with the last six verses of Revelation back-translated from the Latin Vulgate because Erasmus lacked a Greek manuscript for that section
  • Calvin, Luther, and others used it by default of availability, not by confessional declaration
  • The TR itself exists in multiple competing editions (Erasmus, Stephanus, Beza, Elzevir) that differ from one another — so which TR is the "preserved" text?

5. The Masoretic Text Was Finalized Centuries After the New Testament

The article presents the Masoretic Text as the unambiguous preserved Hebrew scriptures, but:

  • The Masoretic Text was standardized by Jewish scholars around AD 700–1000, long after Christ and the Apostles
  • The Dead Sea Scrolls demonstrated that multiple Hebrew text traditions existed in the Second Temple period
  • The New Testament authors and Jesus himself frequently cite the Septuagint (Greek OT), which often differs from the MT
  • The early church's Old Testament was largely the Septuagint, not the MT

To claim the MT is the uniquely preserved Hebrew text requires ignoring significant contrary evidence.


6. Verbal Plenary Preservation Is Not Equivalent to Verbal Plenary Inspiration

The article draws a direct parallel: since we affirm VPI (verbal plenary inspiration), we must affirm VPP (verbal plenary preservation). This is a logical non-sequitur. Inspiration is a theological claim about the original act of divine revelation (2 Tim. 3:16). Preservation is a historical and providential claim about what happened afterward. These are categorically different claims requiring different types of evidence. One cannot simply assume that the same degree of divine superintendence applies to both.


7. The KJV-Only Conclusion Does Not Follow From the Premises

Even if one granted every prior claim in the article, the conclusion that the KJV is the uniquely authoritative English Bible does not follow, because:

  • The KJV is a translation, not an original language text — the article's own doctrine is about Hebrew and Greek preservation
  • The KJV translators themselves acknowledged in their preface that no single translation is perfect and that variety of translations is profitable
  • The KJV has undergone multiple revisions (1611, 1629, 1638, 1762, 1769) — today's KJV is largely the 1769 Blayney revision, not the 1611 original
  • Many KJV readings reflect the translators' theological preferences rather than the underlying text

8. The Argument Commits the "Appeal to Age" Fallacy

The article repeatedly argues that because the Westminster divines used the MT and TR without acknowledging errors, we should too. But the age or longevity of a belief does not establish its truth. Furthermore, subsequent manuscript discoveries (particularly the Dead Sea Scrolls in 1947 and the wealth of papyri discovered in Egypt) have given us access to evidence the Westminster divines simply did not have. Refusing to update one's understanding in light of new evidence is not faithfulness — it is obscurantism.


9. A Subtle but Serious Ecclesiological Error

By identifying the KJV as the uniquely authoritative Bible, this position effectively unchurches most of global Christianity — the vast majority of Christians throughout history have not had access to an English Bible, and most of the world's Christians today read translations based on the critical text. The article's logic implies that the church in China, Ethiopia, Korea, or Latin America does not have God's Word unless they use a KJV-dependent translation. This is an untenable and historically bizarre conclusion.


10. Proof-Texting Without Contextual Exegesis

Throughout, the article strings together verses about the endurance of God's word as if they self-evidently support a specific manuscript theory. This is classic proof-texting — asserting a theological conclusion first, then gathering verses that sound supportive without engaging their actual context, genre, or Hebrew/Greek meaning.


Summary

The article's core error is conflating the theological truth that God's Word is eternally authoritative with the text-critical claim that one particular manuscript tradition is errorless. These are very different claims. The first is orthodox Christianity. The second is a 20th-century fundamentalist innovation dressed in the language of the Westminster Confession. The result is a position that requires:

  • Misreading Psalm 12
  • Ignoring textual history
  • Misrepresenting the Reformers
  • Dismissing the Dead Sea Scrolls
  • Contradicting the KJV translators themselves

Affirming the full inspiration, authority, and trustworthiness of Scripture does not require any of this — and in fact the effort to defend Scripture this way ultimately undermines confidence in the careful, honest scholarship that genuine biblical fidelity requires.

Did God Promise To Preserve His Words?

Scripture contains multiple affirmations that God’s Word will endure eternally and remain authoritative, though these passages require careful interpretation regarding what “preservation” actually entails.

Jesus made the most direct claim about permanence: “My words will never pass away,” (Matt 24:35) a statement echoed in parallel Gospel accounts. Isaiah similarly declares that “the word of our God endures forever,” (Isa 40:8) and the psalmist affirms that God’s “word stands firm in the heavens.” (Ps 119:89) These passages establish that God’s Word possesses an indestructible quality—it will not ultimately fail or disappear from existence.

However, these passages address the permanence and authority of God’s Word rather than the textual transmission of Scripture. They promise that God’s purposes through His Word will accomplish what He intends, not necessarily that every manuscript copy will be error-free. God covenants that His words “will always be on your lips, on the lips of your children and on the lips of their descendants,” (Isa 59:21) emphasizing the Word’s living transmission through God’s people rather than mechanical preservation of documents.

The biblical warnings against altering Scripture—the command not to “add to what I command you and do not subtract from it,” (Deut 4:2) and Revelation’s stern warnings against adding to or taking away from the prophecy (Rev 22:18–19)—address intentional corruption, not the inevitable variations that arise from human copying.

So God has promised that His Word will endure and accomplish its purposes eternally. But Scripture nowhere explicitly promises that every handwritten copy would be preserved without error, or that a particular textual tradition would be divinely protected from all scribal variation. The promise concerns the Word’s ultimate efficacy and authority, not the mechanics of textual transmission.



Has the Bible been kept pure?

Yes, the Bible has been kept pure in the sense that matters theologically.

Evangelical scholars widely agree that Scripture has been preserved, and many non-evangelical scholars acknowledge that the biblical books as we have them have been essentially preserved as originally written.[1] However, what “purity” actually means requires careful definition.

The theological requirement is that Scripture be preserved in its purity—meaning the biblical texts we possess accurately reflect what was originally written, and textual variants that leave scholars uncertain about exact wording in some cases don’t alter any doctrine the passage teaches.[1] This is a more modest claim than VPP demands. Purity doesn’t require knowing every single word exactly as the biblical authors penned it.[1]

The mechanism of preservation also differs from what VPP assumes. Rather than miraculous intervention, God has preserved Scripture through providential control of secondary means—especially the actions of ordinary human beings.[1] This acknowledges that human scribes made errors while affirming that God’s providence ensured Scripture’s essential message survived intact.

Importantly, this doctrine says nothing about a particular version of Scripture being the one that best represents the original, and presumably various versions and translations could fit the requirements of this doctrine.[1] This directly contradicts VPP’s insistence on a single preserved textual tradition.

The evidence supports this understanding: despite textual variations across manuscripts, no doctrine of Christian faith depends on a single disputed word. The core truths—Christ’s deity, redemption through His work, the authority of Scripture for salvation—remain unambiguous across all major textual traditions. The Bible has been kept pure in its essential theological content, even if not in every scribal detail.

[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), 716–717.






Is the VPP doctrine actually closely related to the VPI doctrine?

Yes, VPP and VPI are closely related but fundamentally distinct doctrines that are often confused.

Verbal Plenary Inspiration affirms that all of Scripture is inspired and authoritative, with the words themselves—not merely the ideas—coming from God.[1] This doctrine concerns the original autographs and their divine origin.

VPP, by contrast, extends this claim forward through time. VPP argues that the Textus Receptus represents both divinely inspired and divinely preserved text, requiring that handwritten copies be produced without error across generations from the original autographs.[2] The critical problem emerges here: VPP falsely presupposes that God’s inspiration of Scripture necessarily requires His divine preservation of every word ever written by scribes.[2]

The relationship between the two doctrines reveals their incompatibility. VPP proponents incorrectly link the doctrine of inerrancy with inspiration and “providential preservation,”[2] treating them as a single package. But VPI makes no claim about preservation—it addresses only the original writers’ work. A theologian can affirm VPI while rejecting VPP, maintaining that God inspired the autographs perfectly while allowing that subsequent copying introduced variations.

Historically, this distinction matters enormously. The early church had no doctrine of preservation, and no form of preservation doctrine appeared in any creed until the seventeenth century—long after the earliest manuscripts and well after Erasmus created the Textus Receptus.[3] This suggests VPP represents a later theological development, not a necessary implication of VPI itself.

The confusion arises because advocates treat them as inseparable, but they answer different questions: VPI asks “Was Scripture divinely inspired?” while VPP asks “Has every copy been divinely preserved?” These require separate justification.

[1] Mark L. Strauss, “The Inspiration of the Bible,” in The Baker Illustrated Bible Handbook, ed. J. Daniel. Hays and J. Scott Duvall (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Books, 2011), 1000.
[2] Got Questions Ministries, Got Questions? Bible Questions Answered (Bellingham, WA: Faithlife, 2014–2021). [See here, here, here.]
[3] Got Questions Ministries, Got Questions? Bible Questions Answered (Bellingham, WA: Logos Bible Software, 2002–2013). [See here.]














VPP represents a departure from Westminster’s original principles

We clarify this through historical analysis: Princeton Theology’s doctrine of verbal inspiration was itself a deviation from Reformation faith, as expressed in the Westminster Confession. Calvin taught that Scripture is the infallible rule of faith and practice on matters pertaining to salvation, not a perfectly errorless revelation in all incidental details.[1]

The Westminster Assembly composed the Confession to uphold Reformation doctrine against an ascending scholastic trend. Luther and Calvin recognized that the Bible contains errors, whereas Reformed scholasticism extended the test of infallibility to matters of science and historical details, jeopardizing Christian belief in the name of defending it.[1]

The critical distinction lies in what “preservation” meant to Westminster’s framers versus what VPP advocates claim today. The Westminster divines described the Scriptures as lamps or vessels of the Word, not the Word itself. Resting the authority of Scripture on the denial of a single error denies the Confession of Faith.[1] This means Westminster affirmed Scripture’s functional authority for salvation without requiring textual perfection.

VPP, by contrast, insists on the inerrancy of preserved manuscripts—a position that imperils the doctrine of inspiration by bringing it into conflict with objections along the whole line of Scripture and History.[1] The doctrine developed later through figures like Warfield, not from Westminster itself.

A college adopting VPP is therefore not extending Westminster’s principles but rather embracing a 19th-century scholastic development that earlier Reformed theology explicitly rejected. The confusion arises because later theologians equated their innovations with Westminster’s teaching, but the historical record shows Westminster was more modest in its claims about textual perfection.

[1] Gary Dorrien, The Spirit of American Liberal Theology: A History (Louisville, KY: Westminster John Knox Press, 2023), 165.




Are we making the Word of God of None Effect?

Rejecting Verbal Plenary Preservation doesn’t undermine Scripture’s authority or effectiveness. The issue hinges on distinguishing between inspiration and preservation—two separate theological claims.

The fundamental problem with VPP is that it assumes God’s inspiration of Scripture necessarily requires His divine preservation of every word ever copied by scribes.[1][2] This conflates two distinct doctrines. Since God has nowhere promised an inerrant transmission of Scripture, only the original autographs were inspired, making textual criticism necessary to detect errors that may have entered during copying.[3] Yet the evidence indicates the Hebrew and Greek texts are remarkably well preserved, affirming God’s providential care without requiring perfect preservation of every manuscript.[3]

The practical consequence is reassuring rather than troubling. English-speaking Christians have access to excellent translations, and because Scripture repeats its central themes and the Holy Spirit witnesses through the Word, no serious translation will so distort meaning as to prevent readers from becoming “wise for salvation through faith in Christ Jesus.”[3] Authority doesn’t depend on textual perfection.

Historically, this distinction matters. Luther and Calvin themselves didn’t equate biblical words with God’s Word; rather, the text discloses God’s Word to faithful interpreters.[4] Later theologians developed stricter verbal inspiration doctrines, but the Reformers’ original insight preserved interpretive freedom while maintaining scriptural authority.

Rejecting VPP simply acknowledges that God’s Word accomplishes its purpose through imperfect copies and translations—a position consistent with both historical theology and textual evidence. The Word of God remains effective not because transmission is flawless, but because God’s purposes transcend human scribal limitations.

[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.]
[3] R. C. Sproul, Can I Trust the Bible?, The Crucial Questions Series (Lake Mary, FL: Reformation Trust Publishing, 2009), 2:xxviii–xxix.
[4] William Lamb, Scripture: A Guide for the Perplexed, Guides for the Perplexed (New Delhi; London; New York; Sydney: Bloomsbury, 2013), 155.





















Jun 22, 2026

Can Verbal Plenary Inspiration Do Without Verbal Plenary Preservation?:

The relationship between verbal plenary inspiration and verbal plenary preservation represents a fundamental theological distinction that deserves careful attention.

The core problem with verbal plenary preservation is its false assumption that God’s inspiration of Scripture necessarily requires His divine preservation of every word ever written by scribes[1]. This conflates two separate theological claims: that God superintended the original composition and that He miraculously protected every subsequent copy from error.

Classical evangelical theology has long acknowledged this distinction, asserting infallibility “only for the original autographic text”[2]. The doctrine of verbal plenary inspiration concerns God’s work in the original writers—how He guided their selection of words to communicate His purposes. Inspiration means authors were guided to choose words corresponding with God’s Word, but these human words are not identical with God’s Word, since no human language can encompass divine reality[3].

Preservation, by contrast, addresses what happened after the autographs. The original manuscripts are lost, and variations in surviving copies seem inconsistent with the claim that literal inspiration required errorless preservation—especially since most Christians depend on translations for which infallible accuracy is not claimed[2]. While divine inspiration does entail preservation, God preserves the actual testimony of His herald as the medium of His continual self-disclosure in the community, not necessarily every scribal detail[3].

We suggest that verbal plenary inspiration can coherently stand without verbal plenary preservation. Inspiration addresses the origin of Scripture; preservation addresses its transmission. God can guarantee the reliability of the original message without guaranteeing flawless copying—a distinction that protects both the authority of Scripture and the integrity of textual criticism as a legitimate scholarly discipline.

[1] Got Questions Ministries, Got Questions? Bible Questions Answered (Bellingham, WA: Faithlife, 2014–2021). [See here.]
[2] Samuel Macauley Jackson, ed., in The New Schaff-Herzog Encyclopedia of Religious Knowledge (New York; London: Funk & Wagnalls, 1908–1914), 6:17–18.
[3] Donald G. Bloesch, Holy Scripture: Revelation, Inspiration & Interpretation (Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press, 1994), 121.





















Jun 20, 2026

1 Corinthians 14:1-2

Paul opens chapter 14 by directing believers to pursue love as their primary orientation while simultaneously seeking spiritual gifts, with particular emphasis on prophecy. (1 Cor 14:1–2) This dual exhortation frames everything that follows—spiritual gifts matter, but only when exercised within the framework of love established in chapter 13.

When someone speaks in an unknown tongue, their words bypass human comprehension and address God alone, conveying spiritual truths that remain hidden from listeners. (1 Cor 14:1–2) These are not earthly languages like those at Pentecost, but rather ecstatic utterances unknown to speaker and audience alike.[1] Through this gift, believers engage in prayer and praise directed toward God.[1]

The tension Paul establishes here becomes clear through comparison: prophecy involves delivering a message from God to the congregation, providing insight, warning, correction, and encouragement.[1] While tongues primarily benefit the speaker spiritually, prophecy strengthens the entire church.[1] Public worship must remain intelligible and edifying to all participants.[1]

Paul’s point isn’t that tongues lack validity—he affirms it as a genuine spiritual gift from the Holy Spirit.[1] Rather, he calls believers to pursue gifts that edify the church community.[1] This pivot from discussing spiritual gifts and love to worship instructions reflects Paul’s integrated theological vision, where these concepts frame his specific mandates.[2] The foundation of love transforms how gifts should function: not for personal spiritual experience alone, but for building up the body of Christ.

[1] Bruce Barton, Philip Comfort, et al., Life Application New Testament Commentary (Wheaton, IL: Tyndale, 2001), 691–692.
[2] David M. Toledo, “Freedom and Order in Worship: Paul’s Instructions in 1 Corinthians,” Artistic Theologian (2017), 5:5.












Visions

Visionary experiences through meditation, dreams, and closed-eye prayer represent a phenomenon with deep biblical roots but also significant theological complications that require careful discernment.

Biblical Foundation and Historical Pattern

Dreams functioned as an important mode of divine communication in Genesis, appearing in the stories of Abraham, Jacob, and especially Joseph, who not only received personal guidance through dreams but also interpreted them for others.[1] Both the Bible and church history attest that God speaks through dreams and visions.[2] However, Scripture itself establishes a developmental pattern: Moses represented a shift in divine communication, where “the LORD would speak to Moses face to face, as one speaks to a friend,” making dreams and visions apparently unnecessary.[1] Jesus—fulfilling the pattern of Moses—presumably did not require divine communication through dreams, since as Immanuel, “God with us,” Jesus himself constitutes the divine communication.[1]

The Critical Theological Caution

Colossians warns against overreliance on visionary experiences, cautioning those “puffed up without cause” who “dwell on visions” rather than “holding fast to the head” of the church, Jesus Christ.[1] This reflects a fundamental principle: visions should never supersede or compete with Christ’s authority or Scripture’s truth.

Distinguishing Psychological from Theological Issues

Psychological explanations of visionary experiences carry no necessary implications for their theological “truth” or “faithfulness”—these must be ascertained by theological criteria.[2] A vision may have psychological origins while still conveying genuine spiritual insight, or it may be purely psychological without divine significance. The believer’s responsibility is to test experiences against Scripture rather than treat them as self-validating.

A Balanced Framework

When visions align with God’s Word and never undermine Scripture’s authority, they represent healthy spiritual manifestations.[3] The phenomenon itself isn’t problematic; the danger lies in treating visions as authoritative revelation equivalent to Scripture, or allowing subjective experience to override biblical truth.

[1] Michael Lodahl, “Dreams and Visions,” in Dictionary of Christian Spirituality, ed. Glen G. Scorgie (Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan, 2011), 413–414.
[2] Esther E. Acolatse, For Freedom or Bondage? A Critique of African Pastoral Practices (Grand Rapids, MI; Cambridge, U.K.: William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company, 2014), 136–137.
[3] Rod W. Larkins, Possessed: Living Fully Abandoned to God’s Glory (Shippensburg, PA: Destiny Image, 2010). [See here.]















Do we have prophets today?

The question requires distinguishing between the prophetic office as it functioned in Scripture and how prophecy operates in the contemporary church.

The Prophetic Office Was Time-Bound

The prophetic office itself was limited to a particular historical period in God’s plan[1]. When apostles validated their authority to write Scripture, they appealed to apostleship rather than prophecy, and Jesus distinctively called his twelve disciples apostles, not prophets[2]. This shift matters because the meaning of “prophet” acquired new significance during the New Testament era that differs from Old Testament understanding[2].

Prophecy in the Early Church

The New Testament represents the age of the Holy Spirit as foretold by Old Testament prophets, and prophetic ministry became widespread among early Christians, with local congregations containing those who ministered as prophets[2]. However, this New Testament prophetic office carried lesser authority than its Old Testament counterpart—prophetic words were not equivalent to Scripture but were spontaneous utterances subject to scrutiny by mature believers[2]. Significantly, no acclaimed New Testament prophet wrote Scripture because their words lacked the authority to be inscribed as God’s Word[2].

Contemporary Application

The contemporary church should treat prophecy as spontaneous human words, not equal to God’s Word, and subject them to the judgment of canonical Scripture[2]. Gospel ministers joined to Christ and possessed by his Spirit may be called prophets—those sent by God with a message grounded in past truth, applied freshly to present circumstances[3]. This describes faithful preaching and teaching, not the claim to receive new authoritative revelations.

The answer is nuanced: prophecy as a gift continues, but the prophetic office as a foundational authority ceased with the apostolic era.

[1] Brevard S. Childs, Introduction to the Old Testament as Scripture (Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1979), 410.
[2] Matthew Michael, Christian Theology and African Traditions (Eugene, Oregon: Resource Publications, 2013). [See here, here, here, here, here, here.]
[3] Augustus Hopkins Strong, Systematic Theology (Philadelphia: American Baptist Publication Society, 1907), 713.













The self-edification of tongue-speakers

The self-edification of tongue-speakers occurs within a specific framework that Paul carefully establishes.

The Nature of Personal Edification

When someone speaks in tongues, they communicate directly with God rather than addressing others, and their utterance remains incomprehensible to listeners (1 Cor 14:1–5). A person speaking in an unlearned language edifies themselves because they possess the knowledge that their ability originates from God’s gift[1]—the strengthening comes from knowing one has exercised a divine capability, not from understanding the content of what was spoken.

This personal benefit, however, operates within strict boundaries. Spiritual gifts are distributed for the common good (1 Cor 12:7), and believers should prioritize gifts that build up the church (1 Cor 14:12–17). Paul doesn’t prohibit tongue-speaking; rather, he establishes a hierarchy of value based on usefulness to the community.

The Critical Limitation

When praying in tongues, the spirit prays but the mind remains unfruitful (1 Cor 14:12–17). This creates the paradox: personal edification occurs, but it’s limited to the speaker’s spirit. If tongues are spoken in corporate worship, at most three should speak one at a time with interpretation, and if no interpreter is present, the speaker should remain silent and speak privately to God (1 Cor 14:26–28). The restriction isn’t arbitrary—it reflects Paul’s conviction that without interpretation, others cannot affirm what is said, and the congregation remains unedified (1 Cor 14:12–17).

The Principle

God grants gifts for the church’s benefit, not merely individual benefit, and while tongues edify the speaker, proclaiming God’s Word in an intelligible language edifies the entire body[1]. The “mystery” Paul addresses isn’t mystical—it’s practical: personal spiritual benefit is real but subordinate to communal edification.

[1] Knofel Staton, First Corinthians: Unlocking the Scriptures for You, Standard Bible Studies (Cincinnati, OH: Standard, 1987), 234.








Is Textus Receptus closest to the Original Autograph?

The King James Only position rests on three interconnected claims that deserve careful examination, though the search results address only the first two directly.

The Theological Argument and Its Problems

King James Only advocates begin with a theological premise: God must have both inspired the original biblical texts and preserved them through the copying process to ensure believers can have certainty about salvation[1]. This sounds reasonable on the surface, but it conflates two distinct theological claims. The original manuscripts are what carry inspiration and inerrancy, and translations are inspired insofar as they accurately represent those originals[2]—a crucial distinction. The movement’s error lies in attributing to copyists the same degree of divine inspiration as the original authors themselves[2], which is theologically unfounded.

The Textual Evidence Problem

The movement’s claim about manuscript uniformity collapses under scrutiny. No two historical manuscripts in the Textus Receptus (the Greek text underlying the KJV) are precisely identical[2], undermining assertions about discovering “pure uniformity.” Additionally, the 1611 KJV itself was revised in 1769, and King James translators consulted the fifth-century Latin Vulgate[2]—facts that contradict claims of pristine preservation.

The Real Issue: Certainty Versus Truth

Fundamentally, the movement pursues an unachievable certainty that “blows apart in light of the evidence”[2]. The appropriate response recognizes that God’s promise to preserve His Word applies to faithful translations produced by godly scholars across every era[2], not to a single English version. Modern translations based on earlier manuscript evidence actually reflect better stewardship of textual scholarship than reliance on later, derivative texts. While newer translations like the NIV contain no doctrinal problems with their manuscript basis[2], the KJV remains a legitimate translation—simply not the only faithful one.

The conversation should shift from defending textual criticism as “objective” to acknowledging that the movement prioritizes certainty over truth[2], a fundamentally different pursuit.

[1] Jason A. Hentschel, “The King James Only Movement,” in The Oxford Handbook of the Bible in America, ed. Paul C. Gutjahr, Oxford Handbooks (New York: Oxford University Press, 2017), 233–234.
[2] Joe Maxwell, “Bible Versions: King James—Only Advocates Experiences Renaissance,” Christianity Today (Carol Stream, IL: Christianity Today, 1995), 39:12:86–87.












Is KJV the best English Bible?

The question of whether the KJV represents the finest English Bible requires distinguishing between historical achievement and contemporary utility.

The KJV’s Genuine Excellence

The KJV demonstrated superior clarity compared to its sixteenth-century predecessors[1], which was a legitimate accomplishment for its era. Where earlier translations rendered Isaiah 53:3 as “a man as hath good experience of sorrows and infirmities” or “a man full of sorrows and hath experience of infirmities,” the KJV achieved “a man of sorrows, and acquainted with grief”[1]—a marked improvement in both precision and elegance. The KJV was indeed “the best translation of many great translations in its own day”[2], and its cultural and literary influence remains undeniable.

The Problem of Historical Obsolescence

However, every good translation has been clear in its own generation and when judged by the audience for which it was intended[1]. The KJV’s archaic language—once a strength—now obscures meaning for modern readers. The KJV at times interprets the Greek or Hebrew in ways ambiguous or misleading to modern readers, while modern translations attempt to clarify the wording and, in some cases, correct instances where the KJV simply missed the original meaning[3].

Manuscript Evidence Matters

Crucially, the KJV is based on later manuscripts, while modern translations utilize manuscripts that are many centuries older[3]. This represents genuine textual progress, not corruption.

The Honest Assessment

The KJV deserves respect as a historical achievement and literary masterpiece, but “best” depends on purpose. For personal study by modern readers seeking accuracy and clarity, contemporary translations grounded in earlier manuscripts serve believers more faithfully. The KJV remains a legitimate translation—simply not the only faithful one, nor the optimal choice for most contemporary contexts.

[1] Leland Ryken, The Word of God in English: Criteria for Excellence in Bible Translation (Wheaton, IL: Crossway Books, 2002), 229–230.
[2] Leland Ryken, The Legacy of the King James Bible: Celebrating 400 Years of the Most Influential English Translation (Wheaton, IL: Crossway Books, 2011). [See here.]
[3] 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), 24.


















Jun 19, 2026

Tu quoque / parity argument

The Argument Being Made

The challenger's logic:

"If you can claim the KJV's underlying text (the Textus Receptus / Masoretic Text) is perfectly preserved, then by the same reasoning I can claim the underlying texts of the ESV or NIV (the Nestle-Aland / UBS critical text) are equally perfect."

This is essentially a tu quoque / parity argument — "your logic applies equally to my position."


Who Has the Stronger Logical Position?

The challenger wins the logical exchange — but with important qualifications.

Here is why:

1. The Argument Exposes an Inconsistency

The KJV-Only advocate who claims perfect, error-free preservation for the TR is making an extraordinary epistemological claim that goes beyond what manuscript evidence alone can establish. If that standard of claim is valid, there is no principled reason to deny the same claim for the NA28/UBS5. The challenger correctly identifies this inconsistency.

2. The KJV-Only Position Has an Additional Burden

The TR-preservation argument typically requires claiming:

  • God specifically promised to preserve His Word perfectly
  • That preservation was uniquely channeled through one textual tradition
  • All other manuscript traditions are therefore corrupt

This is a theological assertion, not just a textual one. The challenger is right that asserting this without further argument is arbitrary.

3. However, the Challenger's Argument is Also Incomplete

Winning this particular exchange doesn't mean the ESV/NIV underlying text is perfect. The challenger has only demonstrated that the KJV-Only argument as stated proves too much — it doesn't positively establish the perfection of any text. The argument is defensive, not constructive.


The Real Theological & Textual Issues

Issue KJV-Only Claim Critical Text Position
Manuscript basis Textus Receptus (later, fewer MSS) Earlier, more numerous MSS
Preservation doctrine Specific, providential channeling General providential superintendence
Inerrancy claim Original and transmitted text Original autographs only
Scholarly consensus Minority position Broad consensus
Theological grounding Psalm 12:6-7; Matt 5:18 Same passages, different application

The Theologically Honest Answer

Most conservative evangelical and Reformed scholars would say:

No transmitted manuscript tradition is "100% error-free." The doctrine of inerrancy applies to the original autographs, not to any copy or translation. Textual criticism exists precisely because scribal transmission introduced minor variations — none of which affect any doctrine.

The Westminster Confession (1.8), often cited by KJV defenders, says the Scriptures are "kept pure in all ages" — but most Reformed scholars interpret this as substantial preservation of all essential content, not the perfect errorlessness of one specific edition.


Bottom Line

Winner?
Logical exchange ✅ The challenger wins — the parity argument is valid
Positive case for any text being "perfect" ❌ Neither side establishes this
Best theological position Inerrancy of autographs + substantial providential preservation across manuscript traditions

The strongest ground is not to claim any copied text is "100% without error," but to affirm that God has preserved His Word sufficiently and faithfully across all major manuscript traditions, such that no Christian doctrine hangs by a textual thread.




Bible Witness (Vol. 2, Issue 4, Oct–Dec 2002)

(Click here) This issue of Bible Witness (Vol. 2, Issue 4, Oct–Dec 2002) is published by Gethsemane Bible-Presbyterian Church, Singapore, and represents a particular conservative Reformed/Fundamentalist position. From a broader evangelical and Reformed theological perspective, several claims in the magazine warrant critical scrutiny.

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Claims That Are Theologically Problematic or Overstated

1. Verbal Plenary Preservation (VPP) as Equivalent to Verbal Plenary Inspiration (VPI)

The magazine repeatedly equates the inspiration of the original autographs with the preservation of a specific text — the Textus Receptus underlying the KJV. This is a significant theological leap.

The problem: The Westminster Confession of Faith (I.VIII), which they frequently cite, says the Scriptures are "kept pure in all ages" — but this is a general providential claim, not an identification of any specific manuscript tradition as the uniquely preserved text. Mainstream Reformed scholarship (Warfield, Hodge, Machen, Bavinck) affirmed inerrancy of the autographs while acknowledging the legitimate work of textual criticism in recovering the original text. The VPP position as articulated here essentially invests a specific printed edition (the 1633 Elzevir Textus Receptus) with divine authority — something the Confession itself does not do.

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2. KJV-Onlyism Presented as the Only Faithful Position

Jeffrey Khoo's comparison chart ("The Perfection of the Bible: 3 Views," p. 21) places KJV-Onlyism under "All Perfect — Biblical & Reformed Fundamentalism" and treats all other positions as compromised or liberal. This is a false trichotomy.

The problem: This dismisses the vast majority of faithful, inerrantist evangelical scholarship. Scholars like B.B. Warfield, J. Gresham Machen, John Piper, D.A. Carson, and Wayne Grudem all affirm full inerrancy while rejecting KJV-Onlyism. The NASB, ESV, and other translations based on the critical text are not "corrupt" in any doctrinally meaningful sense — the actual textual differences affect no core Christian doctrine. Calling the NIV and other translations "perversions" (as the review of Waite's book does) is polemically excessive and not historically or textually defensible.

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3. The Textus Receptus as the Uniquely "Received" and Preserved Text

Timothy Tow and others argue that the Textus Receptus is the providentially preserved text and that manuscripts underlying modern versions (Westcott-Hort, Nestle-Aland) are "corrupt."

The problem: The Textus Receptus was compiled by Erasmus (1516) from a handful of late Byzantine manuscripts, some of which he back-translated from the Latin Vulgate. It contains readings found in no Greek manuscript (e.g., Revelation 22:19). The claim that God uniquely preserved His Word in this specific tradition is an assertion without clear biblical warrant. The manuscript tradition underlying modern critical texts (Codex Sinaiticus, Codex Vaticanus, Papyrus 46, etc.) is in fact earlier and in many cases more reliable by standard text-critical methodology. The charge that the Nestle-Aland editors were "unbelievers and apostates" does not automatically invalidate their textual work.

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4. Ad Hominem Against Eugene Nida and Westcott & Hort

Tow Siang Hwa calls Eugene Nida "an unregenerate man" and attributes corruption of the Bible to his personal unbelief. The magazine repeatedly frames textual criticism as Satanic conspiracy.

The problem: While Dynamic Equivalence translation theory has legitimate critiques (and formal equivalence has real advantages), dismissing all such work as demonic or the fruit of unbelief is not a sound theological argument. One may critique a methodology without impugning the soul of its proponent. Furthermore, Westcott and Hort, whatever their theological weaknesses, were careful textual scholars whose work has been significantly refined — not simply "corrupt." This kind of rhetoric substitutes invective for argument.

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5. Conflating Preservation Promises with a Specific English Translation

The articles use passages like Psalm 12:6-7, Matthew 5:18, and Matthew 24:35 as proof-texts for the KJV being the perfectly preserved Word of God in English.

The problem: These passages speak to the eternal authority and indestructibility of God's Word — they do not specify which manuscript tradition or which translation God has preserved. Psalm 12:6-7, grammatically, may refer to the preservation of God's people rather than His words (a legitimate exegetical alternative). Using these texts to endorse a specific 17th-century English translation involves a hermeneutical move that the texts themselves do not support.

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6. The Dismissal of Textual Scholarship as "Intellectualism" Opposing Faith

Prabhudas Koshy's article "Faith Guides, Intellectualism Beguiles" sets up a false antithesis between faith in God's Word and scholarly inquiry into manuscripts.

The problem: This is a form of fideism that has historically harmed the church. The Reformers — Calvin, Luther, Beza — were humanist scholars who engaged deeply with the original languages precisely because they had high regard for Scripture. Careful textual study serves faith; it is not its enemy. The suggestion that questioning the KJV's textual base is equivalent to doubting God is a form of intellectual coercion that conflates a theological position with Scripture itself.

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What the Magazine Gets Right

To be fair, the magazine correctly affirms:

Verbal Plenary Inspiration of the autographs (2 Tim. 3:16; 2 Pet. 1:20-21) — this is orthodox

The indestructibility and authority of Scripture as a general principle

The danger of liberal/neo-orthodox views that deny inerrancy

The importance of formal equivalence in translation as a general principle

Jesus' high view of Scripture in Matthew 5:17-19 — the exposition is largely sound

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Summary

The core theological error is this: VPP/KJV-Onlyism elevates a particular textual tradition and translation to the level of inspired Scripture itself, which neither the Bible nor the Westminster Standards actually teach. It creates a secondary canon — not the autographs, not even the manuscript traditions, but a 1611 English translation — and then treats any questioning of it as apostasy. This goes beyond what Scripture claims for itself and beyond what the Reformed confessional tradition actually teaches.


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