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Bible Highlighter

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After over a decade of (KJ) Bible reading I find myself consulting modern versions less and less…

Other than satisfying my minds curiosity and the appearance of “increasing knowledge” I find that it just adds wasted time to my reading.

The same with Commentaries…

Just vain exercises.

The King James Holy Bible changed my life when I just read it alone without being double minded about what other versions and commentators said.

I find myself going back to my first love of just listening to God through his holy word.

I can understand that totally.
God's Word is powerful.
 
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Bible Highlighter

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Honestly, I've read and studied the KJV so much and only quote from it. I can pick up any bible translation, and read from it, then say, this doesn't agree with what the KJV says. I've done that in my Sunday school class. I almost asked what bible someone had read a passage from, because I could not follow along. That happened four years ago at another bible study and some of us asked what bible you are reading from, and It was a passion bible paraphrase. I say, if the language changes so much, from the KJV, it can't be a good translation. for instance, you can have a room of people with NIV, NKJ, NASB, NRSV, ESV, and CSB bibles and most everyone can follow along. Bring in a message bible paraphrase and nobody can follow along.
Well said.
 
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Nancy

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Yes, that is my assessment, as well.
Jeff Dollar is for the Majority Text position.
This is the view that one looks to the majority of extant Greek manuscripts (5,800 Byzantine Greek manuscripts that is in existence today) so as to determine what are God's words. But there has never been a perfect collated Greek text for the Majority Text. There are many manuscripts that have not been added to this so-called Majority Text printed edition today (unlike the TR or Textus Receptus). In other words, because 1 John 5:7 in the KJV is not in the Majority of Greek manuscript witnesses today, he does not accept it. Granted, Jeff has to ignore all the other evidences for the Johannine Comma (i.e., 1 John 5:7 KJV), though.

Not all Majority Text believers are the same. Dean Burgon was Majority Text but he was appalled at Westcott and Hort's English Revised Version (ERV or RV) because it changed the Textus Receptus Greek for their so-called KJV update. Westcott and Hort snuck in their own Greek text into the KJV readings of the ERV. Westcott and Hort's 1881 Greek text was based on the Vaticanus and Sinaiticus manuscripts. These two manuscripts are still given priority in the Nestle and Aland Greek text apparatus that underlies all Modern English Bibles today. A critical text advocate, named Epp, did a comparative study between the Westcott and Hort Greek (1881), and the Nestle and Aland 28th edition and said there is barely any difference. So, the Greek used today is still basically the Westcott and Hort Greek. This was an artificial never-before-seen Greek text that was never used by the church until 1881. This is what Dean William Burgon was trying to expose.




Looking at the New Testament Greek, there are two lines of Bibles.

#1. The Traditional Text or Received Text (Erasmus, Stephanus, Beza, KJV Translators), and​
#2. the Critical Text (Westcott and Hort, Nestle and Aland).​

One line is pure, and the other is corrupted. Most Modern English Bibles today are based on the Critical Text (including the paraphrased ones).

But at the end of the day, it is a spiritual issue.
It takes a revelation from God to reveal this to them and they have to be open to such a truth.
I think if a person is a truth seeker or a detective type Christian who truly cares about real truth, they will know of this truth.




I believe God is amazing and He is capable of changing some people who may be initially stubborn or hard hearted in this area.
Now, the devil is out to destroy 2 Timothy 2:15 in the KJV. The enemy wants nothing more than for God's people to not study His Word and be destroyed for lack of knowledge.

This video captures the war on words we are up against.


Note: Brandon Peterson does mostly put out Biblical Numerics videos defending the perfection of the KJV. If you are offended by Biblical Numerics, this video does not promote them (to my knowledge). Also, please check out his videos that are not related to Biblical Numerics on his channel, as well. They are still a huge blessing regardless. I know Nick Sayers, and the larger KJV Community at large are strongly against Biblical Numerics. So, I do not strive to promote such a thing anymore. Personally, I do not lead my life by numbers. I see Biblical Numerics as merely evidence that the KJV is perfect or divine and nothing more.



Thank you. I am glad you enjoyed it.
I plan on releasing my Powerpoint slide(s) as a free download once I update some things on it.
The purpose of this is so that a person can check the textual differences in the doctrinal section or look up the verses that are in my slide, etcetera.

I also plan on uploading a longer video presentation of my slide with a more well rehearsed reading of it.
I will take the time to explain more things in my slide.

I also plan to upload a video where I critique certain things my opponent (Jeff Dollar) said that I did not get time to address.

After this, I will then go back to writing my sub-articles for my upcoming free PDF writeup titled, "150 Reasons for the KJV Being the Pure Word of God for Today."
These changes are making the Word no easier to understand, plus they change the whole meaning. And, the last verse take, Matthew 5:44 totally missing in the NIV, ESV, NASB, LSB, NLT etc...!!

Very easy to understand and is of much importance!

You share a very important message and I pray that others will be mature enough to at least look into what you have to say HL!

Have a great day and looking forward to your new slides!
 
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Bible Highlighter

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But what if all the other Christians are using the NIV?
I would not attend a church or fellowship in a group of 3 or more that uses a Modern Bible.
Now, if it is was a close friend or something, I would allow them to use their own translation choice, but I see that as more of a potential outreach situation. Fellowshipping with 3 ore more calls for a situation of being on the same page in my humble opinion. 1 Corinthians 1:10 says we are all to speak the same thing. This is only possible if we have a standard. There are major differences even in the different NIV editions over the years. Earlier editions of the NIV describe Jesus healing a leper with compassion (Mark 1:41). However, one of the latest NIV edition reveals Jesus healing the leper with indignation (anger). In context, no reason is provided for Jesus' anger. This NIV update contradicts Jesus' words elsewhere. In Matthew 5:22, Jesus warns that being angry without a cause puts us in danger of the judgment.

Bringing out a KJV only causes confusion.

This is not a problem if the Pastor or Christian leader of the Bible study gives the sense and or explains the uncommon words in the KJV. This is a part of the excitement of learning Gods Word. There are spiritual meanings attached to the archaic wording in the KJV that is lost in the Modern Bibles.

Proverbs 25:2 (KJV):
"It is the glory of God to conceal a thing: but the honour of kings is to search out a matter."

Psalm 78:2 (KJV):
"I will open my mouth in a parable: I will utter dark sayings of old."

Hardly anyone in the UK uses the KJV these days - I rarely see a copy.

1 Corinthians 1:27 (KJV):
"But God hath chosen the foolish things of the world to confound the wise; and God hath chosen the weak things of the world to confound the things which are mighty;"
 
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Deborah_

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The modern bibles have many very important verses either missing, or partially missing; changing the whole meaning.
I've heard this many times. It simply isn't true - as anyone who is truly familiar with the NIV will know.

The NIV changed so much, bowing to the woke crowd and removing the word "fornication", and phrases that "tone down" other sins.
If the word 'fornication' has been removed it's because it's hardly used these days. The NIV is a translation into modern English, after all! Language evolves continuously, unfortunately we Christians have a tendency to be ultra-conservative.
 

Bible Highlighter

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"Westcott and Hort snuck in their own Greek text into the KJV readings of the ERV. Westcott and Hort's 1881 Greek text was based on the Vaticanus and Sinaiticus manuscripts. These two manuscripts are still given priority in the Nestle and Aland Greek text apparatus that underlies all Modern English Bibles today. A critical text advocate, named Epp, did a comparative study between the Westcott and Hort Greek (1881), and the Nestle and Aland 28th edition and said there is barely any difference. So, the Greek used today is still basically the Westcott and Hort Greek. This was an artificial never-before-seen Greek text that was never used by the church until 1881. This is what Dean William Burgon was trying to expose."

Are these not koine Greek? Sorry, I've much to chew on here, lol. It will take time to sort all of this out but, from what I do for sure understand, despite King James's controversy in his day, commissioning the KJV was, IMO, his greatest accomplishment.

Yes, the KJV is God's perfect Word in English. No doubt about it. I see it settled with the Pure Cambridge KJV edition in circa 1900 (When English was standardized). As for the New Testament Greek: 99.99% of the Greek in Beza's 5th major edition (1598) is what underlies the KJV. There are only 20 or so translatable differences in the Beza Greek that does not line up with what the KJV translators chose.

I have leaned towards the Greek in the last year because of Nick Sayers channel. While I do not agree with everything Nick Sayers says, I do appreciate him going into the Greek that underlies the KJV. Nick is for defending the KJV by looking to the original languages.

The Greek while it does not contradict the KJV English, can sometimes offer an added depth or meaning that is not present in the English, which fits the context and the rest of the Bible. I mention this a little in my debate when I referred to the English word "hell" and the English word "LORD."

The original languages is sort of like an additional safeguard that we are understanding the correct meaning of the uncommon words (archaic words) in the KJV. I would love to one day do an improved version of something like the Defined King James Bible put out by D.A. Waite. Here are some pics of the Defined KJV::

Screenshot 2025-02-24 at 1.50.01 PM.png

Screenshot 2025-02-24 at 1.49.39 PM.png

As you can see in this above page, D.A. Waite (who is passed away now) has added the definitions for certain uncommon words at the bottom of the page to correspond with the bolded text with a specific number.

My hope is to do a project like this but offer the reader a deep dive into going into 17th century literature that backs up that word, and the Hebrew and Greek supporting literature (translated into English). I also would add words he did not define and improve a small number of his definitions.

"I believe God is amazing and He is capable of changing some people who may be initially stubborn or hard hearted in this area.
Now, the devil is out to destroy 2 Timothy 2:15 in the KJV.
The enemy wants nothing more than for God's people to not study His Word and be destroyed for lack of knowledge."

That is very evident to me seeing that not one church I have attended in decades ever used the KJV...even a reformed Baptist church I attended for over two years...I was not at all happy there as folks were not so friendly, but I tried despite not being a fan of Calvinism.

I will now watch the video, thank you!

Yes, I am strongly against Calvinism. There are KJV-only advocates who are Calvinist like Will Kinney, Dr. Ken Matto. They each have websites that are really exceptional, though.

If you ever need an apologetic on defending a certain verse of the King James Bible, Will Kinney's site is probably the best.


If you are looking for differences, Matto (who is passed away) has a good comparison page:

(Note: With Matto's page here, you have to scroll down a little bit to see the listing of the Old Testament and New Testament differences between the KJV and the Modern Bibles).
 
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Bible Highlighter

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I've heard this many times. It simply isn't true - as anyone who is truly familiar with the NIV will know.


If the word 'fornication' has been removed it's because it's hardly used these days. The NIV is a translation into modern English, after all! Language evolves continuously, unfortunately we Christians have a tendency to be ultra-conservative.
I would love to show you these differences. I plan on updating my slide from the debate involving the textual differences in the original languages that reflect changes even in the English. Once, I am finished, I will post the link to download free the Powerpoint slides, and upload a video of an improved reading of my updated slide from my debate. This way, you can properly see the changes for yourself.

May God bless you greatly in the Lord today.
 

Bible Highlighter

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These changes are making the Word no easier to understand, plus they change the whole meaning.

I agree. One of my goals in life is to let more believers know of the major differences. Changes that do affect doctrine.

And, the last verse take, Matthew 5:44 totally missing in the NIV, ESV, NASB, LSB, NLT etc...!!

Yes, this is a wrong change. The Critical Text side will say that these truths are found elsewhere in the Bible. While this is true, it is a watering down of these very important truths we must know. There are other instances I strive to point out that are bombshells or major changes in doctrine, or missing commands in Modern Bibles like in 2 Timothy 2:15 (a translation difference), and 1 Timothy 6:5 (an underlying textual difference). Things like these should greatly disturb any truth seeker.

Very easy to understand and is of much importance!

You share a very important message and I pray that others will be mature enough to at least look into what you have to say HL!

Have a great day and looking forward to your new slides!
Thank you again for the kind words.
I have family coming to visit, and we are planning to visit the Bible Museum, and Spy Museum in Washington, DC this week with them (if all goes well). So, I will not able to work my follow up projects until next week. So, hopefully maybe by March 5-7th I can start to make my updated works available (Lord willing).

May God bless you.



....
 
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Rockerduck

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I've heard this many times. It simply isn't true - as anyone who is truly familiar with the NIV will know.


If the word 'fornication' has been removed it's because it's hardly used these days. The NIV is a translation into modern English, after all! Language evolves continuously, unfortunately we Christians have a tendency to be ultra-conservative.
Not where I teach. I use fornication in missionary work all the time as its forceful. Street evangelists use it all the time too. I asked God what bible I should use. The Holy Spirit said to me get "the red bible", and I saw it in a vision. I looked high and low for what looked like that bible. Then I found it, it is the KJV. Mind you, what Jesus says to do, I'll do. As I said in Post #15. The KJV is a supernatural book the seems to "give" you a scripture when you need it, and not even looking for it. Its one way God speaks to us.
 
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KUWN

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Yes. I agree. Scourby is really awesome.
I have to talk more to a friend to get the other ones I heard that are good, too.
===================================================================================

He should have never put it in there!


The King James Version (KJV) was originally published, in 1611, by the royal

printer, Robert Barker. In the margins of that very first edition, there

were some 8,422 notes. Several of these notes indicate that a particular

verse itself may not be exactly correct.



For example, here is Luke 17:36 as it appears in the New King James Version

“Two men will be in the field: the one will be taken and the other left.”

Here is the note that appeared in the margin of that original 1611 edition:

“This 36. verse is wanting in most of the Greek copies.”



If you have a NIV, don’t bother looking this verse up. It is not in that

Translation. What the note said in essence was, “we have reason to believe that this verse should not be in here at all.”



Well, therein lies Textual Criticism, which is the study of what the

Original Autographs (these are the actual writings of the Apostles

themselves) exactly contained. In other words, before we can know what the

Bible says, we need to know what the Bible is. And this is no small task.

Once a group of Textual Critics finish their work, they turn their work over

to the printers to publish. That way, we can read the Bible.



In this article, I would like to draw our attention to some amusing mistakes

that found their way into the KJV. Fortunately, they have all been fixed

with subsequent Editions. Bear in mind, the King James Version went through

many revisions, including one the very next year in 1612. And again in 1613.

And many more after that.



Oddly enough, the KJV was translated from only about six Greek manuscripts

dating no earlier than the 10th century. Although there are more than 5,400

Greek manuscripts today, back in the 1600’s that was not the case.



The relatively few Greek manuscripts that are behind this KJV date between

the 10th and 14th centuries. Since the publishing of the first KJV, more

than 2,000 Greek manuscripts have been found. And some of these date back as

early as the 2nd century. (Remember, the earliest Greek manuscript

supporting the KJV is 800 years later.) With the new discovery of older

manuscripts, modern versions have come on the scene. The NIV is based on

different Greek manuscripts than is the KJV. That is why they differ at

places, as noted above.



Here is one example as to why they differ. When a man by the name of Erasmus

was putting together the Greek New Testament in the early 1500’s, he could

find no existing Greek manuscript that contained the words in 1 John 5:7,

which reads in the KJV, “For there are three that bear record in heaven; the

Father, the Word, and the Holy Spirit: and these three are one.” It’s in the

KJV even to this day, but Erasmus refused to put it in his Greek Edition,

unless…



That was his mistake! Erasmus went on public record saying that if anyone

could produce even one Greek manuscript with the disputed passage in it, he

would put it in his next Greek Edition. (These disputed words were first

noticed in a not-so-old Latin version.) Erasmus’ first two Greek New

Testaments did not contain this passage.



Well, along comes an enemy of Erasmus, by the name of Edward Lee, and he

mysteriously produces a Greek manuscript (a very highly suspect one, I might

add) that contained these words. So, Erasmus, true to his word, yet being

convinced it would not do too much damage to sacred Scripture, unwillingly,

put it in his third Edition. Erasmus did note that he doubted its

authenticity. Right here is where my opening line fits in. He was true to

his word, but not the Word of God.



Well, no early Greek manuscript has this passage in it. Not one early

manuscript! No Greek manuscript dated in the first 5 centuries has this

passage in it. So, if we look at most modern versions, we simply will not

find that passage in it. There are a lot of these types of disputes in the

various manuscripts, practically all of them very insignificant. So, one set of Greek manuscripts read one way and another set of manuscripts say something slightly different, and that’s why we have different versions today.



These differences in Greek manuscripts are actually to be expected. Let’s

suppose, for example, you asked 100 people to copy the book, Moby Dick. Do

you think any two would be exactly alike? Of course not! And if we took the

original book away, and then tried to recreate it, using only the 100

copies, how close to the original Moby Dick do you think we could get? Real

close! If on page 28, I wrote Moby Dock, and my brother, Tiger, wrote Muby

Dick, and 98 other people wrote Moby Dick, would you consider my wording

(Dock) or my brother’s wording (Muby) correct? There is your answer to the

Greek manuscripts. The variants are about as tough to work through as this

preceding example. (In fact, I know my brother well enough to also say the

he will misspell “receive” every time. He puts the i before the e. And

remember, every time that “receive” is misspelled, that’s another variant, even though it’s the same variant each time. If, for example each time misspelled is observed, that’s 48 times, that’s 48 variants. As you can see, they add up pretty quickly.)



Let me show you why some people are initially shocked when they begin their

study of Textual Criticism. The Greek New Testament has roughly 138,162

words. Taking all the 5,800 Greek manuscripts together, there are somewhere

between 400,000 and 500,000 variations. That’s about 3+ variants PER WORD!



Maybe this will help. Let me give you a couple of those variants in one

small phrase in the Bible:



In John 4:1 some manuscripts read, “Then when Jesus knew.” Some other

manuscripts read, “Then when the Lord knew.” One manuscript has, “Then when

Jecus knew.” So, some say “Jesus” and some say “the Lord” and one misspelled

“Jesus.” (There are actually a few more that misspell “Jesus”)



So, how many variants do you see? Are you concerned with any of them? Here’s

the good news: That is just about the extent of the vast majority of

variants in the New Testament. As you can see, not knowing the history of the Bible makes us vulnerable to every wind of doctrine, or false claims against the Word. But when we add up all the ‘discrepancies’ and ‘variants’ there is absolutely nothing to be concerned with. Absolutely nothing! The preservation of the Word of God over the years, one could argue, has a supernatural element to it.



I mentioned earlier that since the first publication of the KJV of 1611, of

which there have literally been thousands of corrections to it, many Greek

Manuscripts have been discovered. How one or two of those manuscripts were

discovered are interesting stories.



More than 200 years after the first KJV, in the Spring of 1844, a man by the

name Count Konstantin von Tischendorf, a man (genius) fluent in classical

languages and dialects, took a trip to Mount Sinai to visit a monastery. He

took this trip in hopes of discovering ancient biblical documents. The

monastery he visited was called St. Catherine’s, then occupied by Russian

monks. Initially, he was a bit disappointed when he was unable to find what

he was looking for. However, as he looked in a small room near the Library,

he noticed something very unusual in the trash can, of all places! His heart

began to race as he approached this waste basket. The contents, sheets of

‘paper’ written on animal skin, seemed all too familiar to him. He was well

aware that ancient documents were written on the very kind of “trash” he was

looking at. Well learned in Koine Greek, he picked up a sheet and began

reading it. It was the Old Testament! As he kept digging deeper, the New

Testament was also there. There were 129 pages of the oldest known

recordings of the Bible, written almost 1,500 years earlier. Who knows how

many pages had already been burned to warm those Russian monks.



Con't
 

Grailhunter

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I would not attend a church or fellowship in a group of 3 or more that uses a Modern Bible.

Historical statement.....
The Jews probably said that about the Christians.....
The Catholics said that the Tyndale and Geneva Bible was evil.
The Puratians said that the King James Version of the Bible was of the devil.
Scholars that actually know the scriptures commend the King James Version of the Bible for having the most errors.
The King James Version of the Bible is so different that you could start a religion separate from the scriptures.
Many blame the King James Version of the Bible for the reason that there are 30,000 Protestant denominations because so many could not understand it.
 

Rockerduck

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Historical statement.....
The Jews probably said that about the Christians.....
The Catholics said that the Tyndale and Geneva Bible was evil.
The Puratians said that the King James Version of the Bible was of the devil.
Scholars that actually know the scriptures commend the King James Version of the Bible for having the most errors.
The King James Version of the Bible is so different that you could start a religion separate from the scriptures.
Many blame the King James Version of the Bible for the reason that there are 30,000 Protestant denominations because so many could not understand it.
Yet the KJV has been around for 3 great revivals and is the bible of choice for millions. Translations are for profit books and of course, for profit books are going to say the KJV has errors, but there is not any. All the great Preachers used the KJV. All the translations have errors. 300 yrs of the KJV with no updates since 1769. So, I see the typical bashing of the KJV all the time. I have many translations in my library and read them. The KJV is the gold standard to measure translations by.
 
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Grailhunter

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Yet the KJV has been around for 3 great revivals and is the bible of choice for millions. Translations are for profit books and of course, for profit books are going to say the KJV has errors, but there is not any. All the great Preachers used the KJV. All the translations have errors. 300 yrs of the KJV with no updates since 1769. So, I see the typical bashing of the KJV all the time. I have many translations in my library and read them. The KJV is the gold standard to measure translations by.

LOL Ask those people what the King James Version means and most will not know. Most will not be able to understand it even if they read it. Getting people to read the Bible is like getting them to go to church.

The King James Version is great for reading in public because of it poetic style where understanding and truth are not important. Or if you are a collector like me, who collects old King James Version of the Bible.
 

Rockerduck

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LOL Ask those people what the King James Version means and most will not know. Most will not be able to understand it even if they read it. Getting people to read the Bible is like getting them to go to church.

The King James Version is great for reading in public because of it poetic style where understanding and truth are not important. Or if you are a collector like me, who collects old King James Version of the Bible.
Yes, my friend, I too am a collector. I once told a man that reading the KJV was like reading medical journal, you have to study it. My Sunday bible study, people have every bible known to man. But in my men's bible study its KJV only. I have to use the New King James on Sunday. Even reading the KJV at meeting, I translate it as I speak.
 

Grailhunter

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Yes, my friend, I too am a collector. I once told a man that reading the KJV was like reading medical journal, you have to study it. My Sunday bible study, people have every bible known to man. But in my men's bible study its KJV only. I have to use the New King James on Sunday. Even reading the KJV at meeting, I translate it as I speak.
I am a Theologian and I call myself a speaker. Some people call me an evangelist. I am more of a substitute. I speak and fill in as a Sunday School teach or youth pastor or assist with plays…Christmas, Good Friday, Easter.

One thing I learnt is that I should speak at the level or way that people understand. The KJV does not do that. Since we are talking about God and salvation it is important to do that.
 
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Rockerduck

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I am a Theologian and I call myself a speaker. Some people call me an evangelist. I am more of a substitute. I speak and fill in as a Sunday School teach or youth pastor or assist with plays…Christmas, Good Friday, Easter.

One thing I learnt is that I should speak at the level or way that people understand. The KJV does not do that. Since we are talking about God and salvation it is important to do that.
Yes, I get that, I like the KJV, but the Holy Spirit speaks to me in plain English, so why shouldn't we teach and read the bible in plain English.