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"KJV ... Inerrant? Excellent?" (off-shoot from Biology conversation)
JM: NIce try. This says something about interpreting the bible doesn't it? I thought the translations were 'God inspired' and error free. Didn't God know what cud was?
Typical dishonest straw man. Who believes that translations are inspired (apart from KJVO loonies)? All major creationist organizations make it clear that inspiration and inerrancy apply to the original autographs, which is in line with standard documents such as the Chicago Statement on Biblical Inerrancy.
But then we should not be surprised at such dishonesty from one who professes to be a Christian but won't come clean on what he really believes, and who yokes with overt (i.e. more honest) infidels to mock the Scriptures which Jesus said "cannot be broken" (John 10:35).
To return to the thread, this means that JP Holding's analysis of the original Hebrew is the right approach. This easily trumps the anti-Christians and their professing Christian allies who whinge about what English translations say.
Last edited by Socrates; June 17th 2003 at 09:11 PM.
Typical dishonest straw man. Who believes that translations are inspired (apart from KJVO loonies)? All major creationist organizations make it clear that inspiration and inerrancy apply to the original autographs, which is in line with standard documents such as the Chicago Statement on Biblical Inerrancy.
KJVO loonies? What about the millions of Chrsitians that have been told the KJV is the true inerrant word of God? They were all lied to?
"I have no need for that hypothesis," Pierre-Simon Laplace
Socrates: Typical dishonest straw man. Who believes that translations are inspired (apart from KJVO loonies)? All major creationist organizations make it clear that inspiration and inerrancy apply to the original autographs, which is in line with standard documents such as the Chicago Statement on Biblical Inerrancy.
KJVO loonies? What about the millions of Chrsitians that have been told the KJV is the true inerrant word of God? They were all lied to?
They were certainly told untruths. A lie implies that the untruth was intentional and I don't wish to make such a claim.
So lets deal with the inerrancy as defined in the Chicago Statement on Biblical Inerrancy. The defenders of inerrancy on TWeb such as JP Holding, Jaltus and myself hold to this, and none of us are KJVOs or even Textus Receptus only.
Also, the statements of faith of ICR and AiG are consistent with the Chicago Statement too. And since Meert by his own claims is very familiar with creationist writings, he must have known that he was setting up a straw man about alleged belief in inerrancy of translations. Therefore I have no hesitation about calling him a liar.
Last edited by Socrates; June 17th 2003 at 09:29 PM.
Typical dishonest straw man. Who believes that translations are inspired (apart from KJVO loonies)? All major creationist organizations make it clear that inspiration and inerrancy apply to the original autographs, which is in line with standard documents such as the Chicago Statement on Biblical Inerrancy.
Unfortunately, we don't have the originals - only copies of unknown verisimilitude. But your own source says the translations are excellent:
So unless JPH can come up with any evidence that the translation is wrong in this specific instance, and gerah was in fact also used to mean dungballs, we're back exactly where we started.
Socrates: Typical dishonest straw man. Who believes that translations are inspired (apart from KJVO loonies)? All major creationist organizations make it clear that inspiration and inerrancy apply to the original autographs, which is in line with standard documents such as the Chicago Statement on Biblical Inerrancy.
Unfortunately, we don't have the originals - only copies of unknown verisimilitude.
Actually the copies are extremely accurate. Westcott estimated that the difference between his critical Greek text of the NT was <2% and affected no essential point. Furthermore, not a single doctrine of Christianity rests on a disputed verse. We have FAR more manuscript support, both in number and in closeness to the originals, for the NT than any other classical document, the authenticity of which is not in the slightest doubt.
As the Statement says:
But your own source says the translations are excellent:
As Sher said, this does not equate to inerrancy of translations, as the Chicago Statement makes clear. So any claim of "error" in the Bible must address the originals, not a translation. Before that which Thearle quoted, the Statement sez:
And to return to the thread at hand, the Statement has two articles directly relevant:
Yeah, I know. But I wouldn't expect an excellent translation to include this sort of mistake.
You might, as JPH has pointed out, if the translators were not too familiar with biology. But the main point is, there is no error in the original Hebrew!
Yeah, I know. But I wouldn't expect an excellent translation to include this sort of mistake.
You might, as JPH has pointed out, if the translators were not too familiar with biology. But the main point is, there is no error in the original Hebrew! [/QUOTE]
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