Grace and peace in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ.
Paul’s final exhortation to Timothy still speaks with unbending relevance:
“Guard what has been entrusted to your care. Turn away from godless chatter and the opposing ideas of what is falsely called knowledge, which some have professed and in so doing have departed from the faith” (1 Timothy 6:20–21).
The treasure entrusted to us is the gospel itself—the saving truth revealed in Christ. Yet in our time, that treasure is being obscured by pride and quarrels about human preferences. Some have claimed that they alone possess the “perfect Bible,” declaring that only one translation, the King James Version, and only one textual stream, the Textus Receptus, are truly perfect and inspired. They have spoken as though mastery of manuscripts were the mark of holiness, and they have turned their certainty into a test of fellowship.
Such confidence is not faith; it is conceit disguised as knowledge. Paul warned that those who chase after “falsely called knowledge” lose sight of the faith they claim to defend. The fruit of their teaching is plain: envy, suspicion, division, and the expulsion of faithful believers who refuse to bow to a human standard. In exalting one translation above all others, they have forgotten the Author of all Scripture.
Let it be said plainly: The Word of God is not bound to one edition, language, or culture. God has preserved His truth through centuries of translation and transmission, guiding His people in every tongue. To claim monopoly over that preservation is to shrink the majesty of divine providence into a narrow human system. The Spirit who inspired the Word still speaks through every faithful rendering of it.
Therefore, this letter serves as a public reproof.
Those who have divided the body of Christ through arrogance and harsh judgment must repent. Restore the unity you have broken. Cease calling “devilish” what God has used to bring millions to faith. Turn from quarrels about words and return to the Word made flesh.
To the wounded—those driven out for reading another translation—take courage. You have not left the truth; the truth stands with you. Scripture remains living and active, whatever language carries it.
The church’s strength is not in uniformity of version but in unity of Spirit. Guard, then, what has been truly entrusted: the gospel of grace, the love of Christ, and the peace that binds us together. May we lift up holy hands, not in argument, but in prayer.
Grace be with you all.