Thanks AMR, that was interesting, and informative.
In studying the history of the KJV, I have come across numerous opinions from people who claim the KJV was an anti-Puritan Bible and King James only had it made because he hated the Geneva Bible.
Moreover, there are claims that King James commissioned the bible due to the Millenary Petition given to him by the Puritans. Part of the petition was that the king commission a new English Bible.
However, that doesn't make sense because:
The Puritans came into power in the mid 1600's. The last Geneva Bible was printed in 1616 (5 years after the KJV), but the Puritans were more receptive to the KJV when they had the power.
If there is any truth to these claims, why did the Reformers incorporate the language of the KJV into the WCF instead of the Geneva Bible?
This piece offers a nice summary:
https://blog.logos.com/2013/06/scri...-tradition-the-story-of-the-king-james-bible/
In relation to the Geneva Bible, we should bear in mind that it was the Puritan party at the Hampton Court Conference which called for a new translation to take in the best aspects of the Geneva and Bishops Bibles; and the result was a significant improvement. The idea that the Puritans rejected the King James Version in favour of the Geneva Bible is not attested by the facts. Certainly the Geneva Bible contained those valuable book and chapter digests and textual annotations which made it appealing; but the fact remains that Puritan works predominantly quote from the Authorised Version at least from the 1640s, when the Puritan revolution was in the ascendancy.
As an aside...
A friend of mine asked Dr. Maurice Robinson a few weeks ago...
What would you say the percentage difference is between the Critical Text and the Majority Text/Byzantine Priority (AMR's preferred manuscript tradition)?
His answer...
Easy answer: if all differences are included, including spelling issues, the difference is about 6%, with about 94% of the text the same in both. If only translatable differences are considered, the difference would be only about 3%.
While a lot can happen in 3%, if you are losing sleep over textual variants I hope this gives you some perspective.
Why do we believe the Scriptures are inspired?
Because Scripture itself states it plainly and quotes itself as inspired. Since later Scriptures make this attestation of earlier Scriptures,
it must include within it the belief in the preservation of Scripture.
What is inspired is also preserved, according to the self-attestation of Scripture. When Moses is quoted 1400 years later, or David is quoted 1000 years later, it is always on the presupposition that what was written has been preserved in its original purity.
Now the question is,
Which text-critical theory gives the greatest weight and place to the attested preservation of Scripture? Is it the belief which holds the original is lost forever and must be reconstructed as men are able, or is it the belief which affirms the original has been faithfully transmitted through means of the church and is in possession of the church as an authority for final appeal?
I do not think it is difficult to decide once the doctrine of preservation is accepted as an essential part of the self-attestation of holy Scripture. It is undoubtedly true that there are difficulties connected with the work of textual criticism regardless of which view one takes. But these difficulties should not decide one's position. The testimony of the Holy Spirit speaking in the Scriptures should decide that point.
Which tradition a person favors has everything to do with how you weight the various criteria in textual criticism. And any debate, like the one planned next week rests upon the following technical details...
If one ties God's providence
to the church in preserving manuscripts, and does not believe that God's providence works outside those boundaries, then the TR/MT will likely be your choice (my view).
If you believe God's providence can work in preserving manuscripts outside the church as well as inside, then the CT (Alexandrian Critical Text) will probably be your choice.
As to individual variants, if you believe that the majority rules, then you will probably hold to the MT.
If you believe that geographical distribution and the age of the manuscript is more important, then the CT will probably be your choice.
As for me, the TR is real; the CT is an idea. The TR is fixed; the CT is fluid. The TR is preserved; the CT is reconstructed, or in the case of eclectic criticism, deconstructed. The TR is "received;" the CT is "examined." A student of history will have to agree that the only area that even could have preserved Scripture throughout the years was the Byzantine area because the Western Church adopted Latin as their official language (thus no longer copying Greek texts), and the Alexandrian area had fallen to Islam early on (thus no longer copying any Bible texts). With the TR I may humbly sit at the feet of the Word and learn; with the CT I am required to stand over the Word and exercise judgement upon it.
Finally, beloved,
onlyism is not a bad word
when properly used. Is the Bible "the Word of God?" If so, it is an exclusive concept. This means everyone who embraces
the word of God is functioning with some kind of
onlyism. It may be, for charitable reasons, that this exclusivity is not brought to the fore in discussion with others. It may be that it is presented in a subtle way due to the bad associations with which it has been connected. Nonetheless, it is there; and a candid treatment of the issues will not take place without an open acknowledgement that
the Word of God itself is an exclusive concept.
AMR