Introduction
"Something must be wrong in my
understanding." That was the realization with which I kept being confronted a number
of years ago the more I dealt with the issue of what the Bible has to say about itself.
What I thought, and had been taught, just wasnt perfectly or consistently lining up
with what I found the Bible to be saying about itself. And that not only bothered me, it
frightened me.
I held the prevailing viewpoint of fundamentalism regarding such issues as inspiration,
preservation, original manuscripts, and the like. However, the more I considered exactly
what it was I was saying I believed, and the more I scrutinized it in the light of
precisely what Gods word said about these matters, I discovered and became convinced
that what I was saying wasnt exactly what the Bible was saying about these issues.
Something, therefore, was wrong in my understanding, and the more I examined it the
clearer it became that one of the primary problems was that my understanding was
deficient. For example, I discovered that I had a poor grasp upon such issues as
inspiration and preservation. What I thought about these matters was woefully weak
compared to what the Bible was actually saying. Yet though I recognized that my primary
problem was deficiency, I also came to realize that my thinking was faulty and corrupted
in other areas. It was tainted with various ideas and accepted notions about the Bible,
which I had to conclude were purely human viewpoint, for I could find no support for them
in the Bible itself. This was found to be particularly true regarding what I had been
taught and believed about original manuscripts and the transmission of Gods word in
history. Something indeed was wrong in my understanding, and if I was going to be honest
with the Bible it demanded that I re-examine the whole issue. It became obvious to me that
I needed to be able to say more about the Bible than what I had been saying about it. For
I knew from my initial investigations that it was saying more about itself than I had been
allowing it to say.
My viewpoint, therefore, about the Bible has changed. The change, however, is not one of
abandoning fundamentalist statements about such issues as the inspiration of the
Scriptures, inerrancy, infallibility, and the like. Instead, it is one of bringing my
understanding of those issues into full line with what I am convinced the Bibles own
testimony about itself demands. This adjustment in my thinking has resulted in a stronger
statement about those issues. It has also resulted in a stronger conviction about using
them and applying them when speaking about Gods word. Hence what I have always
believed about these Biblical matters, I believe now with more understanding and more
conviction than I possessed before.
However, this change in my thinking has made it so that I have departed from commonly
accepted fundamentalist thinking about the Bible in one notable area. Instead of generally
restricting terms like "inerrant" and "infallible" to the
"original manuscripts," or the "autographs" of the apostles and
prophets, (as I used to do), I am fully convinced that God has preserved His word and that
I can say without qualification that I possess the "inerrant" and
"infallible" word of God today. Moreover, I am persuaded that I can say these
things about His word translated into my native language English. Howbeit, I am
equally fully persuaded that I can not say these things about all English translations
calling themselves the Bible. But about one in particular. The King James Version.
As I examined this issue I learned that a significant revolution has taken place over the
past couple hundred years in the generally accepted, historic thinking about what God has
done with His word, especially since the canon of Scripture was completed. Divine
preservation of the Scriptures, and what that entails, used to be more than a topic of
debate. It was generally acknowledged as something the Bible taught about itself, and the
science of textual criticism for the most part used to operate with the doctrine of Divine
preservation as its foundation. However, over the past couple hundred years this has
changed. In fact, one of the foundational tenets of the thinking that resulted in the New
Greek Text introduced in 1881, (which not only established the issue of a competing text
of the Bible, but planted the seed for the ongoing production of "newer"
translations), was the complete denial of the idea that God has specially preserved His
word. The modern phase to the science of textual criticism, therefore, operates on a
fundamentally different foundation than its predecessors. And, consequently, all of our
modern English versions with their textual differences rest upon a completely different
foundation than that of the King James Version. In connection with this, they have come
into existence for a completely different reason than did the King James Version.
At first, however, I was not aware of this. Not having investigated for myself the
foundation upon which these different English versions rest, I naively accepted the
teachings and conclusions set forth by the modern science of textual criticism. Yet having
taken the time to investigate these things, I am now fully persuaded that they rest upon a
foundation that is not only inconsistent with the Bibles own testimony about itself,
but is actually contrary to it.
My thinking, therefore, has involved me in a sort of counter-revolution. For in departing
from the conclusions of the modern science of textual criticism, I have returned to the
conclusions of its predecessors. This I have done being fully convinced from the Bible
that God has preserved His word, that the science of textual criticism when operating upon
that foundation can successfully identify Gods word when confronted with textual
variations, that the science of textual criticism has already succeeded in doing that
during the Protestant reformation, and that the culmination of that work in English is the
King James Version of the Bible.
Being persuaded of these things, and possessing personal conviction about them, I
therefore take a stand for the King James Version. Yet my stand is not just one of
preferring it over the multitude of other English versions. Rather, it is one of being
convinced it has both the right to be called the inerrant, infallible, preserved word of
God in the English language, and to be dealt with as such.
Personal convictions are fundamental to the issue of taking a stand for or against most
anything. Such convictions can be based upon a wide variety of things, including even
subjective things like experiences, traditions, and also irrational things and
superstition. However when it comes to the Bible, ones personal conviction certainly
should be based not only upon Gods testimony, but solely upon exactly what God says
about His word and the matters that pertain to it. In addition, because God is the one who
is saying the things upon which ones personal conviction rests, that conviction can
be held with much assurance, even when it is not popular. In fact, the conviction can be
held even when evidence for what has been said by God is not necessarily seen.
The Bibles own testimony and doctrine about itself, along with its promises
regarding preservation, are issues to be believed for the simple reason that they come out
of the mouth of God. Faith is believing what God says. As such, it is the issue of
believing what God says regardless of what anybody else says or thinks.
My personal conviction about the Bible, and in particular about the King James Version of
the Bible in the English language, is based upon having to face up to exactly what the
Bible says about itself, its preservation, and other related matters. The issues with
which the Bible confronted me made my former understanding, profession, and stand
untenable. Simply taking God at His word has made it so that I am persuaded that the stand
I now take is the only stand I can take that is fully consistent with the Bibles
testimony.
Statement of Purpose
The purpose of these Articles is simple. It is to make a brief
presentation of the personal conviction of Pastor Keith R. Blades, and of Enjoy the Bible
Ministries, regarding the King James Version of the Bible and other English versions. As
such, they put in written form a synopsis of the major issues that comprise our
understanding and appreciation respecting this matter.
Limitations
The subjects set forth and dealt with in these Articles by no
means address every issue connected with the Bibles doctrine about itself, or every
issue germane to the science of textual criticism, modern or otherwise. And no apology is
made for this being the case, for, as said, the purpose of these Articles is strictly to
relate information that has led to the formation of some personal convictions. They are
merely an attempt to present in a concise manner information about the major issues
connected with the stand taken by myself and Enjoy the Bible Ministries regarding the King
James Version of the Bible and other English translations. As such, these Articles are not
designed to be confrontational, but informational.
In addition, these Articles that comprise the initial section to this site are not
designed to be a defense of my stand regarding the King James Version. They do not address
objections or objectors as such. They do not contain an analysis of opposing views, nor an
exhaustive defense of all objections to the conclusions at which I have arrived. That,
once again, is not the purpose of these Articles. Instead, these Articles simply declare
the stand I take, and the major reasons why I take it.
|