Paidion wrote:Humanistic probabilities? Probabilities are neither humanistic nor divine.
We are dealing with God's promise to transmit Scripture, and the doctrine of preservation and the doctrines of building the Church, the growing kingdom and the spiritual gathering, so there is hardly anything un-divine or purely chance to do with the Word of God coming through time.
Paidion wrote:And there probably are some certainties in life.
You speak like a Roman Catholic, or a Deist or an unbeliever seeking eternal life.
Paidion wrote:But let's not have a blind faith in something which is far from certain, just because we want to believe it.
This is the very same argument which can be used for saying that you are unsure of whether you are saved, etc.
But let us deal with this issue. True faith is not blind but seeing with spiritual eyes. Your argument for dice-tossing is for what is seen and known in the natural.
2Co 4:18 While we look not at the things which are seen, but at the things which are not seen: for the things which are seen are temporal; but the things which are not seen are eternal.
Faith is rational. Unbelief actually is the opposite, even though it is based on human reasoning.
2Th 3:2 And that we may be delivered from unreasonable and wicked men: for all men have not faith.
There is a wisdom of the world which is earthly, sensual and devilish, and a wisdom of God which makes peace. Worldly wisdom such as to not have any spiritual explanation about the Bible coming through time is an idea which comes to nothing.
1Co 2:6 Howbeit we speak wisdom among them that are perfect: yet not the wisdom of this world, nor of the princes of this world, that come to nought:
Paidion wrote:Since I have given no indication at any time that I believe in a created God, why do you believe that? Or are you assuming that John 1:18 would say that if the word was "God" instead of "Son"? there's nothing about creation in that verse.
Your upholding of "only-begotten God" indicates that you hypothetically or rhetorically believe in a created God.
Paidion wrote:In 150 A.D. and before there was no such thing as a "canon of the New Testament".
That is the same as saying that the separate books of Matthew, Mark, Luke and John did not exist. Just because "the Canon" may not have been finalised does not mean that the Scripture did not exist. And if the inspired books did exist (i.e. they did exist), then obviously in those perilous times, there were also people in places who were corrupting copies. We know this because Paul already said, "For we are not as many, which corrupt the word of God: but as of sincerity, but as of God, in the sight of God speak we in Christ." (2 Cor. 2:17).
Paidion wrote:All apostolic writings were read in the churches including Clement's letter to the Corinthians, written shortly after Paul and Peter's death.
We can assume that Scriptures were being read around the place. The existence of copies of Scripture is logical based not merely on finding quotations in the Church Fathers or finding scraps of copies, but that it is self-evident from the Scripture we have right now that it says that Scripture existed and was going abroad in the 1st century.
I don't know why you want to open the door for Clement's letter, unless you are using it to provide evidence of its allusions to knowledge of New Testament writings in early times.
Paidion wrote:The Christian scribes made every attempt to copy faithfully and carefully the memoirs of Christ ("gospels") and the letters of the apostles as well as other writings now found in our New Testaments.
That's like saying Christians are people who have made every attempt to believe and be saved, as if it is just trying and human works. Copying the Bible and its transmission is not merely a human endeavour. If it was, your modern version view would be right, because that would just be the latest development in the arena of human endeavour.
Jesus said, "He that rejecteth me, and receiveth not my words, hath one that judgeth him: the word that I have spoken, the same shall judge him in the last day." (John 12:48).
He expected that His words would endure through time. He expected that the same thing He said, and the same copy of the Scripture (e.g. John's Gospel) would be there at the end of history. Otherwise Christians would not have had a fair warning or a proper framework though time.
This indicates that God's superintendence, special care and providence has been involved in the preservation and transmission of Scripture. This means that even though there was scattering and evidence of corruptions (such as your 150 AD papyrus shows), it did not thwart or overwhelm the Scripture through time.
This is not to suggest that God caused perfect copies of the originals to be made generation by generation, or that perfect translations have been supplied to every language. What I am saying is that we should actually believe the teaching of the Scripture that God has been faithful, and that His Word has not been in a state of flux, and that He had to raise up modern scholarship to help get it into a better state, even though modern scholarship has as a cardinal rule that no copy, version or translation ever can be or will be perfect. It is that final humanistic assumption which is indicative of the entire modernistic system and so fatal to itself in standing in OPPOSITION to the teachings of the Word of God.
Paidion wrote:First of all it's not "unintelligible".
I am speaking rhetorically, of course, because no Christian is actually bringing a few scraps (scanned in on a computer or ereader) with him to read from next Sunday morning, and, more importantly, Church attendees are not comprehending Greek. If you read out some Greek in a congregation, they would not understand, and it would edify no one. In a Pentecostal Church they would pray for an interpretation!
Paidion wrote:It's one of many pages comprising the entire gospel of John.
Looks like lots of John is still missing from P66.
Paidion wrote:In my opinion it is a faithful copy of earlier copies of the original manuscript penned by John. The copyist sometimes omitted a letter or two, but he then went back over it and corrected these minor errors.
So, you are happy to uphold your opinion that for the period of time until 150 AD, the Scripture was not corrupted, even though you are relying upon an incomplete MS of one book of the Bible; but when it came to the Reformation, the KJB which has the entire of the Book of John, got various things wrong?!?
Paidion wrote:Most of those burned at stake during the middle ages were the so-called "Anabaptists" (Re-baptizers).
Nice Romanist apology there, but what about Tyndale and the English Reformation martyrs, see
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Pr ... eformation
Paidion wrote:Why would they put anyone to death for believing in the same Bible which they accepted?
That's a good question. Why was Wycliffe exhumed? Why was Tyndale burned? And John Rogers? Clearly, it was because the Romanists were against the English Bible.
Paidion wrote:Many of the Anabaptists used Luther's translation of the Bible from Hebrew and Greek into German.
And the Vatican hosted a display about the King James Version recently, which doesn't have any relevance either.
Paidion wrote:It is possible that Catholics persecuted those who used anyone who used any Bible other than their Jerome's Latin Vulgate. In the middle ages, they considered the Vulgate in much the same way as you consider the King James translation—as the "only true Bible."
This accusation against the KJB is incorrect on many grounds.
First, you know full well that the Romanists persecuted many people.
Second, just because the Papists declared how wonderful their Vulgate was all falls to pieces when it is known that there were different editions (actually, technically, versions) of the Vulgate, such as the Sixtine and the Clementine. There are more now.
Third, the Roman Catholic doctrine for the inspired Vulgate is nothing like the Protestant argument for the upholding of the KJB. This is because the KJB was not made by inspiration, and because no "papal-like" declaration has been made over the KJB.
Fourth, the Roman Catholics have had to back-pedal their position on the Vulgate, and have since employed modern textual criticism, and also promoted making new translations in their Vatican 2 document on the subject.
Fifth, the KJB is not upheld as an icon, by superstitious deference or worshipped by me, so your implication is incorrect.
Sixth, and most importantly, the KJB is not the only true Bible, in that the true Scripture existed since the time of the prophets and apostles, and came through time (i.e. long before the KJB came to be in 1611). Furthermore, various people have used Scripture which is not the KJB after 1611. Foreign people have been saved without knowing English, and salvation is being taught (regardless of modern undermining) today by people in English who do not use the KJB. My view is that the KJB is the exact presentation and content of the Scripture and the ultimate benchmark for proper doctrine in time, but the pretended quote that the KJB is the "only true Bible" is dishonest.
Seventh, the KJB is in English in a language many understand. The Vulgate is in Latin which is a dead language.