Paidion wrote:So? The fact is that "The Pure Cambridge Edition" is not identical to the 1611 King James Bible as you have claimed. The fact is that there are many more differences IN MEANING between the two versions, but I can see that bringing them forth will make no difference to you.
It is not honest to claim that the KJB in 1611 is a different version to now. Not one "reading" is changed. If the word "not" was omitted by printers in one or other printing, that does not invalidate anything, as in, it did not actually change the Word of God, nor did it actually change the KJB either in the commission of the typographical error, or in the rectification of them.
Paidion wrote:You appear to have no interest in the ancient Greek manuscripts of the New Testament.
Correct. (But then, we live in the present, so I don't think people bring to church with them on Sunday morning fragments of papyri in an unknown tongue, multitudes bring their KJB!)
Paidion wrote:You seem to believe that these do not reflect the original autographs, but that your "Pure Cambridge Edition" does, even though the New Testament of the latter was translated from much later Greek manuscripts which clearly have been altered.
All Greek manuscripts in existence today differ to some degree to each other, many are of parts of the NT, not the whole. And so while they are sufficiently as collective whole reflecting the original inspiration, they, nor the printed collations made from them (e.g. a critical text) is reflecting the contents of the autographs exactly.
Whereas, in the Reformation, the work was done in the English translations, which do NOT match to any single Greek manuscript, which took in a holistic view, including a purview of Latin, commentaries, etc. etc., and made the English Bible version in 1611 that is being identified as standard.
So, I am saying that the King James Bible has the readings of what was written in the Autographs, and is giving the exact sense of them in English.
Paidion wrote:until it eventually died out.
I agree that superstition is wrong, or blind faith. But the KJBO position is none of those two. It is based on the tangible reality of looking at the KJB in front of you, and it is based on the seeing faith of what the Scripture is actually saying.
To insist that the PCE KJB is a different version to the 1611 KJB, or that omitting the Apocrypha affects truth are actually examples of superstition and blind faith.