I am refuting the article posted on https://www.truthbpc.com/v4/main.php?menu=resources&page=resources/vpp_06
Introduction: A Biblical Response to the Misuse of Matthew 5:17-19
The Heart of the Matter
Few things are more serious than claiming to speak for Jesus Christ while misrepresenting His words. Yet this is precisely what occurs when Matthew 5:17-19 is twisted to teach a doctrine that Scripture itself never affirms—the doctrine of "Verbal Plenary Preservation" (VPP), which claims that God has preserved every single letter of the Bible in identical form throughout all manuscripts across all history.
The article under examination makes bold claims: that rejecting VPP means calling Jesus a liar, undermining the entire Christian faith, and rendering all preaching vain. It insists that anyone who questions "perfect preservation" "cannot be considered a faithful Christian, let alone a faithful Bible teacher." These are severe accusations that demand careful theological examination.
Why This Matters
This is not merely an academic debate about ancient manuscripts. At stake are several critical issues:
First, the integrity of biblical interpretation. When we force Scripture to teach doctrines it does not actually affirm, we violate the very Word we claim to defend. As those who hold Scripture as our final authority, we must be especially careful not to read our theological preferences into the text—a practice known as eisegesis.
Second, the unity of the church. The VPP teaching divides faithful Christians into two camps: those who accept an unbiblical doctrine about preservation, and those who are labeled unfaithful, deceivers, and enemies of God's Word. Such division over a doctrine that Scripture never explicitly teaches is tragic and unnecessary.
Third, the confidence of believers. Ironically, VPP claims to strengthen faith in Scripture, but it actually undermines it. When Christians discover that manuscripts do contain variations (as any honest examination of textual history reveals), and when they've been told this reality contradicts Jesus' promises, their faith is shaken—not because Scripture failed, but because they were taught a false doctrine about Scripture.
Fourth, the character of God. The article suggests that if we don't accept VPP, we are essentially saying God is "incapacitated," "unfaithful," and unable to keep His promises. This is a serious charge that misrepresents both God's character and His actual promises in Scripture.
What Jesus Actually Said
When our Lord spoke the words recorded in Matthew 5:17-19, He was addressing a specific situation with a specific purpose. He was not delivering a technical doctrine about manuscript transmission. He was confronting the Pharisees' distortion of God's law and affirming the enduring authority and reliability of Scripture.
The article claims that Jesus promised "absolutely perfect preservation of the Scripture in its originals" and that "not even the tiniest Hebrew letter shall pass from this law." But notice the subtle shift: Jesus spoke about the law not passing away "till all be fulfilled"—He was speaking of the permanence and authority of God's revelation, not promising that every manuscript copy would be miraculously identical.
The Irony of VPP's Position
There is a profound irony in the VPP argument. The article appeals to the "Hebrew and Greek texts underlying the King James Bible" as the "perfectly preserved texts." Yet:
These texts themselves are compiled from various manuscripts that contain differences
The Textus Receptus behind the KJV was based on only a handful of late medieval manuscripts
Earlier and more numerous manuscripts show variations
Even editions of the Textus Receptus differ from one another
If Jesus promised perfect letter-by-letter preservation in every manuscript, which manuscript is the perfect one? The VPP position cannot answer this question without undermining its own claims.
Our Approach in This Refutation
In the pages that follow, we will examine the article's claims systematically and biblically. We will demonstrate that:
Matthew 5:17-19 does not teach VPP. Jesus' words affirm the authority and enduring nature of God's revelation, not identical manuscript preservation.
The article misrepresents what "fulfillment" means. Jesus fulfilled the law and prophets in His person and work—this is not a statement about manuscript copying.
The "jot and tittle" statement refers to authority, not textual transmission. Jesus was emphasizing that even the smallest commandment matters, not making promises about copying processes.
The article creates false dilemmas. It presents only two options: accept VPP or deny Christ's promises. In reality, we can fully trust Christ's words while honestly acknowledging historical manuscript variation.
The consequences listed are manipulative and false. Rejecting VPP does not mean rejecting inspiration, inerrancy, God's faithfulness, or scriptural authority. This is a classic example of the "straw man" fallacy.
The article confuses different theological categories. Inspiration (how God originally gave Scripture), preservation (how God has maintained His Word through history), and textual transmission (how manuscripts were copied) are related but distinct concepts that must not be conflated.
God's actual method of preservation is more glorious than VPP admits. Through thousands of manuscripts, the providence of church history, and faithful scholarship, God has given us His Word with remarkable reliability—without requiring the miraculous mechanical perfection VPP demands.
A Word About Tone and Charity
Before proceeding, we must address the uncharitable spirit of the article we are refuting. It questions the salvation of fellow believers ("cannot be considered a faithful Christian"), attributes evil motives to those who disagree ("undermining the very foundation of the Christian faith"), and uses inflammatory rhetoric throughout.
This is not how Christians should engage in theological discussion. Scripture calls us to "speak the truth in love" (Ephesians 4:15) and to be "ready always to give an answer to every man that asketh you a reason of the hope that is in you with meekness and fear" (1 Peter 3:15).
Many godly, orthodox, Bible-believing Christians throughout church history have not held to VPP. Men who loved God's Word deeply, defended it faithfully, and died for their faith have recognized manuscript variations while maintaining full confidence in Scripture's authority. To suggest these believers were unfaithful or that their faith was false is both historically ignorant and spiritually proud.
What We Are NOT Saying
Let us be absolutely clear about what this refutation does NOT claim:
We are NOT denying biblical inspiration
We are NOT denying biblical inerrancy in the original autographs
We are NOT denying God's sovereignty or faithfulness
We are NOT denying that God has preserved His Word
We are NOT denying the authority and sufficiency of Scripture
We are NOT suggesting that we cannot trust our Bibles
What we ARE saying is that VPP adds to Scripture a doctrine it does not teach, misinterprets key passages, and creates unnecessary obstacles to faith.
What We ARE Affirming
As we refute VPP, we simultaneously affirm the glorious truth of God's faithful preservation:
We affirm that God has sovereignly and providentially preserved His Word through the centuries through multiple manuscripts and faithful transmission.
We affirm that the essential message, doctrines, and teachings of Scripture have been preserved with remarkable consistency and clarity.
We affirm that through the abundance of manuscript evidence (far exceeding any other ancient text), we can know with great confidence what the original authors wrote.
We affirm that our English translations, whether KJV, NKJV, NASB, ESV, NIV or other scholarly translations, faithfully communicate God's Word to us.
We affirm that Scripture is living, active, powerful, and fully sufficient for all matters of faith and practice (2 Timothy 3:16-17; Hebrews 4:12).
We affirm that the Holy Spirit illuminates Scripture and guides believers into truth (John 16:13).
The Greater Danger
The real danger is not in acknowledging manuscript variations—scholars have known about these for centuries without losing faith. The real danger is in teaching doctrines that Scripture does not support and then making those doctrines tests of orthodoxy.
When we claim that Jesus promised something He did not promise, we set up believers for a crisis of faith. When they inevitably discover the historical realities of textual transmission, they may conclude that Jesus failed to keep His word—when in fact, He never made the promise VPP claims He made.
The true test of faithfulness is not whether we accept VPP, but whether we believe, obey, and proclaim God's Word as He has actually given it to us.
Our Prayer
As we undertake this theological refutation, we pray for several things:
That God would be glorified as we handle His Word with care and precision.
That truth would prevail over tradition and presupposition.
That believers would be strengthened in their confidence in Scripture—not because of false claims about perfect preservation, but because of the actual, demonstrable faithfulness of God in preserving His Word through providence.
That the church would be united around what Scripture actually teaches rather than divided over doctrines it does not teach.
That those who have been troubled by VPP's claims would find peace in understanding God's actual promises and methods.
Moving Forward
In the chapters that follow, we will examine each major claim of the article in detail, testing every assertion against Scripture itself. We will see that Matthew 5:17-19, when properly understood in its context, does not teach VPP. We will see that Jesus' words can be fully trusted without accepting a doctrine that adds to what He actually said.
We will discover that God's actual method of preservation—through multiple manuscripts, providential history, and faithful scholarship—is more remarkable and more worthy of our praise than the mechanical perfection VPP imagines.
Most importantly, we will see that we can have complete confidence in the Bible we hold in our hands today, not because every manuscript is identical, but because God has faithfully preserved His truth through the abundance of witnesses He has provided.
Let us proceed, then, with reverence for God's Word, commitment to sound interpretation, and love for the truth—wherever it may lead us.
1. The Interpretation of "Jot and Tittle" (Matthew 5:18)
The Document's Claim: The author argues that Jesus’ mention of the "jot" and "tittle" is a literal promise that every tiny stroke of the Hebrew alphabet would be physically preserved in manuscripts throughout history.
The Refutation: In biblical interpretation (hermeneutics), we must look at the intent of the speaker. In the context of the Sermon on the Mount, Jesus is not giving a lecture on textual criticism or how books are copied. He is speaking about the authority and fulfillment of the Law.
Fulfillment vs. Transmission: When Jesus says nothing will pass until "all be fulfilled," He is referring to the requirements and purpose of the Law being met in His own life and sacrifice.
Hyperbole for Authority: Jesus often used vivid imagery to make a point. By mentioning the smallest marks (the yodh and the tittle), He is emphasizing that the authority of God’s commands remains absolute. He is saying that God’s plan described in the Law will never fail; He is not necessarily promising that every scribe in a dark room in 800 A.D. would never make a typo.
2. The Confusion Between "Originals" and "Copies"
The Document's Claim: The document admits there are "scribal errors in manuscripts" but then claims God keeps His Word "free from all such human errors" for His people.
The Refutation: This is a logical contradiction.
The Reality of Variants: We have thousands of ancient manuscripts, and they contain thousands of small differences (variants)—mostly spelling or word order. If God had "perfectly preserved" one single, error-free stream of ink and paper, these variants would not exist.
Providential Preservation: Most theologians distinguish between Verbal Plenary Inspiration (the original "autographs" written by Moses or Paul were perfect) and Providential Preservation (God has made sure the meaning and message of His Word are kept safe across the many thousands of copies we have). By claiming a "perfectly preserved text" in one specific set of manuscripts, the author ignores the reality of how God chose to transmit the Bible through human hands.
3. The Leap to the King James Bible (KJV)
The Document's Claim: The author claims that the specific Hebrew and Greek texts used for the King James Bible are the "perfectly preserved texts".
The Refutation: This is a historical error known as circular reasoning.
The Textus Receptus: The Greek text underlying the KJV (the Textus Receptus) was compiled by Erasmus in the 16th century. Erasmus only had access to a handful of late-medieval manuscripts. In some places, he actually had to translate the Latin Vulgate back into Greek because his Greek manuscripts were missing verses.
Historical Gap: If the KJV underlying text is the "only" perfect one, this implies that for 1,500 years before the Reformation, the Church did not have a "perfect" Bible. This contradicts the author's own claim that God preserves His Word "in all ages".
Better Evidence: Since the 1600s, archaeologists have found much older manuscripts (like the Dead Sea Scrolls or Codex Vaticanus) that are closer to the time of Jesus than the ones Erasmus used.
4. Misusing the Westminster Confession
The Document's Claim: The author cites the Westminster Confession to say that the Bible was "kept pure in all ages" to support VPP.
The Refutation: The writers of the Westminster Confession (1647) were not arguing for "Verbal Plenary Preservation" in the way this document defines it.
Meaning of "Pure": To the Reformers, "kept pure" meant that the Church always had access to the authentic Word of God and that no major doctrine had been lost or corrupted.
No Single Edition: They did not believe one specific printed edition (like the KJV) was the only perfect one. They believed the truth was found in the sum of the original language manuscripts available.
5. The "Slippery Slope" Fallacy
The Document's Claim: The author claims that if you don't believe in VPP, you are calling God "unfaithful," "incapacitated," and "unreliable".
The Refutation: This is an emotional argument, not a theological one.
Faith in God, Not Scribes: A Christian can have total confidence that the Bible is the Word of God without believing that every copyist was divinely prevented from making a spelling error.
Inerrancy of the Message: We believe the Bible is inerrant (without error) in everything it teaches. However, recognizing that a scribe might have skipped a word doesn't change the fact that the Gospel message is perfectly preserved. Our faith rests on the God who speaks, not on the perfection of a 16th-century printing press.
Summary of the Theological Error
The document makes the mistake of turning a spiritual truth (God's Word is eternal) into a mechanical requirement (God must provide a 100% letter-perfect copy in a specific language/version).
Conclusion: Evaluation of False Teachings in the article
While the document presents itself as a defense of biblical authority and preservation, a careful theological and exegetical analysis reveals that it advances several doctrinally unsound and historically indefensible claims under the banner of Verbal Plenary Preservation. These errors do not stem from a high view of Scripture itself—which is commendable—but from overreaching assertions that exceed what Scripture teaches and what church history affirms.
1. Conflation of Biblical Authority with a Single Textual Tradition
The document repeatedly asserts that Jesus’ promise in Matthew 5:18 guarantees the perfect, word-for-word preservation of Scripture in a specific extant textual form, ultimately identifying this preservation with the Hebrew and Greek texts underlying the King James Version. This is a false equivalence.
Christ’s affirmation that God’s Word will not fail speaks to its divine authority, enduring validity, and covenantal faithfulness, not to the immutability of every manuscript transmission or later printed edition. Scripture itself demonstrates awareness of textual transmission (e.g., Jeremiah 36; Luke 1:1–4) without suggesting mechanical preservation free from copyist variation.
2. Misuse of “Jot and Tittle” as a Text-Critical Claim
The article interprets “jot and tittle” (Matthew 5:18) as a technical promise of perfect orthographic preservation across all time. This interpretation is exegetically strained.
In context, Jesus is emphasizing the unchangeable authority and fulfillment of God’s revealed will, not making a statement about future scribal transmission. To press this metaphor into a doctrine of flawless manuscript preservation imports modern debates into an ancient sermon and violates sound hermeneutical principles.
3. Denial of Legitimate Textual Criticism
The article implies that acknowledging scribal errors or textual variants undermines divine inspiration and God’s faithfulness. This is historically and theologically false.
The church has always recognized the reality of variants while still affirming inspiration, inerrancy (properly defined), and authority. The Westminster Confession itself distinguishes between the original inspiration of Scripture and its providential preservation, without claiming absolute uniformity in all copies.
4. False Dichotomy Between Faithfulness and Scholarship
By portraying those who question “perfect preservation” as unfaithful Christians or false teachers, the document creates a harmful false dichotomy: either one accepts its narrow doctrine or one rejects Christ’s authority .
This rhetoric is theologically irresponsible. Many godly, orthodox believers—past and present—affirm Scripture’s full authority while recognizing the realities of textual transmission. The document’s position risks confusing loyalty to Christ with loyalty to a particular textual theory.
5. Elevation of a Secondary Doctrine to a Test of Orthodoxy
Most seriously, the document treats belief in its version of Verbal Plenary Preservation as essential to Christian faithfulness, effectively redefining orthodoxy . This is a classic mark of doctrinal error.
The historic church has confessed:
The inspiration of Scripture as essential
The authority of Scripture as binding
The sufficiency of Scripture for faith and life
But it has never required belief in a single perfect post-apostolic textual form as a condition of faith.
Final Assessment
The article’s central error lies not in reverence for Scripture, but in confusing the nature of Scripture’s authority with an absolutized theory of its transmission. By doing so, it:
Overextends Christ’s words beyond their intent
Undermines legitimate biblical scholarship
Divides the church unnecessarily
Risks replacing confidence in God’s truth with confidence in a particular edition
True faithfulness to Christ upholds Scripture as inspired, authoritative, sufficient, and trustworthy, while humbly acknowledging God’s providential use of human means in its preservation. Any doctrine that goes beyond what Scripture itself claims—and then anathematizes fellow believers for disagreement—must be corrected for the sake of truth and unity in the body of Christ.
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