Your video was exactly. Just one point: After the Protestant Reformation, the Roman Catholic Church translated the Bible into various languages for its members to read. That translation wasn't the best, thought further revisions improved the translation. After Vatican I, different translations for Roman Catholics began to appear. In the modern Roman Catholic Church, laymen can read any translation they wish. I am certainly not a Roman Catholic, nor an advocate for that church. However, I was raised Roman Catholic and in school in the late 1960s and 1970s, we used either the RSV or the Good News for Modern Man in the classroom. There was no commentary in those bibles. Many times, non-Catholics will read about the way the Roman Catholic Church was at the beginning of the Reformation and assume things are the same way. Actually, there have been three church councils since the time of Martin Luther. The main official dogma is the same. However, the worship and the scripture are in the language of each country right now, except the state church in Communist China, which has not had official contact with the Vatican since 1949. As of a decade ago, the Mass is still the old Latin Mass.
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Excellent, not exactly. My kindle fire miscorrects what I type sometimes.