Thank you, both, for helping me to see the importance of rightly appreciating Scrivener in his context as a way to understand W and H better.
@AlienDad9 ай бұрын
Powerful conclusion, and a great contribution to restoring people’s faith in God’s Word rather than faith in lies of men. Praise the Lord!
@markwardonwords9 ай бұрын
Amen!
@kevinjodrey76646 ай бұрын
@markwardonwords Question. What affect does Wescott and Hort have on the Modern Versions?? How much of their text is still used today?? Thank you??
@markwardonwords6 ай бұрын
@@kevinjodrey7664Good question! Watch the first video in this series!
@chuckdeuces9116 ай бұрын
They are lying through omission. Read the books or letters they are quoting from. These guys are doing exactly the same thing they accuse others of doing. They are chopping quotes from Westcott and Hort then massaging their 'thoughts' into what they think Hort and Westcott are saying. They aren't even addressing the real claims at all.
@chuckdeuces9116 ай бұрын
@@kevinjodrey7664 Watch the video then watch the series of Chris Pinto where he talks about this same subject. These guys aren't even scratching the surface of the accusations that are clear as day. I'll say this much. Any modern Bible that is derived from these texts are Vatican approved. The only thing that's missing from their version to this version is the deutero canonical books. They were Catholics in disguise or became closeted Catholics by the end of their lifetime.
@scripturejot21918 ай бұрын
Thank you brothers! What a blessing of clarity charity. Thank you for your hard work for the truth!
@moonglow77109 ай бұрын
I was wrong about Wescott and Hort. For decades I slandered these men because I believed the slander about them in the books I read. I repent and have asked our Father to forgive me after the first video in this series. I am sorry. Thank you for correcting me.
@markwardonwords9 ай бұрын
This is very meaningful to me. Praise God!
@Savedbygrace228 ай бұрын
That is a beautiful proclamation @moonglow7710 God bless you.
@AllDayML6 ай бұрын
Praise the Lord! God bless you.
@carlosfarias60126 ай бұрын
Me 2, I have been a KJVO for over 10 years. I recently purchased a NKJV BIBLE and it’s good. Part of me feels guilty reading it instead of the kjv and I don’t know why. I’m going to continue seeking Jesus and not worry about Bible translations.
@markwardonwords6 ай бұрын
@@carlosfarias6012 Carlos, I appreciate this. And note that the NKJV is based on the same Hebrew and Greek texts as the KJV; Westcott and Hort never touched it!
@rodneyjackson61819 ай бұрын
Bro. Mark, your point about the manuscripts are great being a gift from God. This is precisely why I dont lean to one text type over another. I think the Critical Text, the Received Text and the Majority Text are gifts from God that we have the privilege to glean from. Blessings!
@markwardonwords9 ай бұрын
Amen! All are good.
@honsville8 ай бұрын
I used to be one of them people who handed out those KJV only tracts with quotes that bent the truth, sets up strawmen, and slanders. Ive repented of slandering and wont go back to that. Its information like this thats helped me see the truth. Most people wont put in the time and effort to do the research or even watch a video like this. They prefer a tract or accusation that only takes a minute or two to repeat/read. I feel for them because i used to be there. Praise God for convicting me and renewing my conscience through channels like this, Jonathan Burris, Mike Winger, and all the work that Tim did. Thank you Mark and God bless you brother. Also thank you for your testimony at the end Tim, that was extremely powerful. :)
@markwardonwords8 ай бұрын
Love this! Thank you so much! Praise God for his mercy to us.
@LukassFreidenfelds6 ай бұрын
nice you are an apostate.
@MrPCApps4 ай бұрын
I love truth, thank you. I find your work all kind of way, Mark keep up the work brother you add line upon line life giving truths, much love in Christ.
@svenskbibel9 ай бұрын
Enlightening. Again! And Tim's personal testimony in the last minutes, powerful!
@markwardonwords9 ай бұрын
Agreed.
@MarkJerdeEsq9 ай бұрын
Excellent series, thanks! I was KJV-Only c. 1983-88, so have genuine interest. While watching this video I thought of this verse, applied to many in the TR/KJV-Only crowd, exactly like I used to be. 😉 “For I bear them witness that they have a zeal for God, but not according to knowledge.” Romans 10:2 ESV
@fnjesusfreak9 ай бұрын
I feel like a lot of people attacking Westcott and Hort aren't attacking the actual Westcott and Hort, but a strawman called "Westcottandhort", based on a fusion of the two of them, as well as a different Westcott.
@markwardonwords9 ай бұрын
Agreed. Well stated.
@2HarveyCee9 ай бұрын
The ASV had Unitarians on the translation team, and team head was Modernist / Liberal who wrecked Chambersburg T S. (German Reformed) then Union, Philip Scap Reformed
@fnjesusfreak9 ай бұрын
@@2HarveyCee Go on about the ERV/ASV translators, but keep special-pleading the KJV translators who weren't exactly in line with IFB dogma...some of whom were out-and-out Romanists...
@2HarveyCee9 ай бұрын
I pointed out to the KJV-O Gang that the RC Church Influenced at least TR rel 001.00 by gathering the manuscripts, making them accessible and by providing the Vulgate Bible which Erasmus used to validate/correct the manuscripts.
@fnjesusfreak9 ай бұрын
@@2HarveyCee Erasmus himself was not only a Romanist but a Mariolater, and yet it was through his work we had the NT in Greek readily available. And if not him, wasn't Zúñiga (Stunica) also a Romanist?
@marcylguevarra40712 ай бұрын
Thank you for this video, your hard work. Thank you for the balance and truthfulness, and thank you for making videos with the intentions to help us as your fellow believers in mind always. May our good Lord help and bless you more.
@markwardonwords2 ай бұрын
I appreciate that!
@benjaminrandolph89729 ай бұрын
This series has been truly excellent! I'm thankful for the balance with which you've handled this subject matter. I also commend your fidelity to the truth. I'm praying that the considerable time and labor that you've invested in this video series will produce the fruit of changed hearts and minds of participants in these errors and falsehoods.
@markwardonwords9 ай бұрын
My prayer as well.
@arthurbrugge24577 ай бұрын
This was so amazing. I loved the nuanced unpacking of these mortal men. Some of those misquotes, revealed for what they were, are so evil and poor in charity, that their "publishers"/creators seem like the ones who should be accused of being satanists or occultists; not Westcott & Hort.
@talisikid16185 ай бұрын
Amen brother!
@eclipsesonic8 ай бұрын
I've watched all four videos of this series on Westcott and Hort and I got to say, all of you really did your homework on this issue. This was super interesting and informative. I know a couple of the people in my church (including my Pastor) have brought up Westcott and Hort and so I have the information to share with them, if they want to do extra research. Thank you for your work, Mark. It's much appreciated. God bless you all. 🙏
@markwardonwords8 ай бұрын
Our pleasure!
@williamragle16089 ай бұрын
WOW. This was the needed Westcott and Hort video. I learned so much about them from their own writings. I even feel like I identify with their struggles to wrestle with what at times can feel like a difference between the Bible and generally accepted doctrine. I have tremendous respect for them now where before i felt like i had no idea whp they were havjng only heard from detractors. They truly were careful, God fearing men.
@markwardonwords9 ай бұрын
I don't feel as keen on Hort after this process as I do on Westcott. He makes me nervous. But I also feel I can give flesh to the bones of my nervousness and be specific in my appreciation. I'm not nervous, never have been, about his work on NT textual criticism. I read it carefully, and it was clearly careful-and epochal.
@matthewmurphyrose47939 ай бұрын
@@markwardonwordsapparently the impression you (and Berg) have given doesn't match your own views!
@redsorgum9 ай бұрын
Another excellent conversation on Westcott & Hort.
@dwmmx9 ай бұрын
That seals it. I'm calling the AV the Anglican Version from now on! I've been toying with that idea for quite a while, so it's been coming for a long time.
@markwardonwords9 ай бұрын
Love it!
@mattkaye65593 ай бұрын
What they said about Anglicanism is false. Anglicanism in the early 1600s was far different than modern. Beliefs ranged from Romanists to full evangelicals which would be compared with a more studied non-denominational today who bases his doctrine on scripture almost or fully entirely. Some were far more Baptist as well. It is a common problem for those who are unaware of the history of England and Christianity in England to assume that "Anglican" only was what it has evolved into. However, it is curious they went to quote one person at a very specific time. And did not mention anything about this difference between those in England. Ignorance, or dishonesty.
@MrPCApps4 ай бұрын
I love truth, thank you. I find your work all kind of ways, in good places, Mark keep up the work brother you add line upon line life giving truths, much love in Christ.
@markwardonwords4 ай бұрын
Thank you! Pray for me!
@Savedbygrace228 ай бұрын
This was so edifying Mark. I don’t have a horse in this race of KJV onlyism and W & H but I wanted to learn what the problem is. I see the KJV only followers in the comments periodically on Christian channels I watch and instead of blowing them off as cultists (which I’ve done) I want to understand them. I see the need for charity now and prayer. I cried after Tim’s brief story at the end. Is there guilt to repent from? Yes. Are they victims? Yes. God bless you all🙏✝️
@billcovington58367 ай бұрын
I have only been heavily involved in this subject and these men for a couple of years and have been guilty myself, but Praise the Lord that He has so quickly delivered me from slandering these men. “Grace, Grace, Gods Grace.”
@BibleVersionConspiracy9 ай бұрын
Wow! 😍 Nicely done, Berg! This reminds me of how some consider (I think it is) "inerrancy" to be a modern term that has not proven itself yet. 17 minutes in and can't wait to finish! 😋
@josephgreen34362 ай бұрын
Amen brother. This man is messing this whole thing up! Why does he not like the word infallibility? Because he doesn’t believe in it. Not oh I don’t like the term
@josephgreen34362 ай бұрын
At 19 min is the most dumbest argument I have ever heard
@josephgreen34362 ай бұрын
I have had enough of this nonsense. Romans 16:17 “Now I beseech you, brethren, mark them which cause divisions and offences contrary to the doctrine which ye have learned; and avoid them.”
@scotthewins53412 ай бұрын
Up until today, I have never, not once heard of these two men, Westcott and Hort. And just listening to the slander and lies about them from people who are living in glass houses themselves saddens me and almost enrages me. Be angry and sin not, rules the day. Enjoying listening to you Mark.
@markwardonwords2 ай бұрын
It is terribly sad, indeed. It's a work of the flesh. =(
@mikefoht273826 күн бұрын
We on the other hand as Christians should not downplay the evil of theistic evolution that Wescott and Hort caved in to. It destroys the entire foundation of scripture and leads men into a darkness of unbelief and a hopeless philosophy that mocks scripture and everything it stands for. In my opinion a believing ten year old child's faithful reading of the creation account, and faith in a literal 6 day creation, makes that child more has more has more discerning than all of the theistic evolutionary scholars put together. Theistic evolutionists are in reality unbelievers in their hearts. Do we trust the creation account or don't we. So called wise men that have taken up foolish paradigms that condradict scripture to its core. Thankfully Christ is not fooled by the craftiness of men.
@f.k.e.parsons211326 күн бұрын
This was a great discusion. Thank you!
@markwardonwords26 күн бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it!
@phillipschulz15656 ай бұрын
"God help us all."....is a great ending. glad you didn't start with that line in the beginning of the video. lol. sounds more like a terminator is coming for us.
@ArtVandelay-ImporterExporter9 ай бұрын
Cheers from an hour south in Lynnwood, WA. Love the content.
@markwardonwords9 ай бұрын
Awesome! Thank you! I have friends in Lynnwood, and I was just in Mukilteo the other day!
@ArtVandelay-ImporterExporter9 ай бұрын
@@markwardonwords Great! Mukilteo is just a few minutes from our home in NW Lynnwood. Lovely area. I used to be convinced of the TR/Majority Text arguments. Not so anymore. The ESV is my main but I love all the main ones from NASB to NLT. Thank God all the differences are very minimal.
@ArtVandelay-ImporterExporter9 ай бұрын
@@markwardonwords Our family has a yearly Spring tradition to visit Der Rosengaarten in Mt Vernon to see the tulips. 🌷
@Asher02088 ай бұрын
Thanks for your examination of Wescott and Horta. I have heard many criticisms of them but I have never seen anyone look at what they actually wrote. They sound like other 19th century high Anglican s that I have heard of. Not my cup of tea, but they would probably say the same about me! Thanks for also putting them into their historical context. That was helpful.
@cameronjdecou9 ай бұрын
Thank you, Mark! Loving these videos. Somewhat unrelated, I believe I may have found another “false friend” that I don’t recall seeing you cover yet. The word “leasing” in Psalm 4:2. Also somewhat unrelated, I noticed on your blog that you are attending (or at least have attended) Emmanuel Baptist Church in Mount Vernon, Washington. My family attended there in the mid-90s because my dad was a pastor on staff there! My parents still have close friends who live in that area (and maybe even still attend the church but I’m not sure). The world is small, indeed.
@markwardonwords9 ай бұрын
Cool! We love it at EBC! On "leasing"-I have doubted that anyone is actually misunderstanding that word in the KJV. The modern sense. so obviously doesn't fit. But maybe I'm wrong!
@cameronjdecou9 ай бұрын
@@markwardonwords ah, very true, I forgot that qualifier for a false friend. Thanks for all your work on the channel! It is profoundly helpful to me and many others.
@markwardonwords9 ай бұрын
@@cameronjdecou Thank you for this kind word!
@kevinshort22308 ай бұрын
Late to the party, speaking as a Christian philosopher who holds to a traditional view of inerrancy, I would actually agree with part of what Westcott is saying. From the empirical (foundationalist) perspective, innerrancy is something that is contingent on other beliefs, rather than being primary to either Christianity of Bibliology. That is, I believe in innerrancy because I believe in the doctrinal perfection of the Bible. I believe in the doctrinal perfection both on the historical record in the Bible (Jesus words as author), experience, etc. I believe these things because of the truth of Christianity. The issue I have with setting innerrancy as a priori is that it would be questionbegging. This doesn't mean I am any weaker on this point than you are, but it does mean I don't draw on inerrancy when discussing the Bible with a critic of Christianity, I dodraw on it in church. There are simple some layers to my theology that some laymen may squash together.
@patrickjames14924 ай бұрын
W and H claimed that the New Testament had been preserved, but for a number of 'primitive corruptions', where Hort was prepared to venture what the original might have been.
@lanekeister83128 ай бұрын
It demonstrates a truth that controversialists need to take to heart. When we quote someone on our side of the debate, we are apt to quote him or her accurately (although even so, there are times when we quote out of context because we can get one more "gotcha" quotation). However, we are FAR more likely to misquote those on the other side of the debate. If we even faintly acknowledged this tendency in our own hearts, we would have to make it a practice to doubly and trebly check the context to make sure that we are not distorting what our opponents say. We should be MORE on our guard against distortion with our opponents than we are with our allies. Sadly, this is almost never true today. I believe this is one of the main reasons why more heat than light is usually present in controversies. Nuance brings light where caricature brings heat.
@markwardonwords8 ай бұрын
You are very right.
@BrendaBoykin-qz5dj9 ай бұрын
Thank you, Gentlemen 🌹⭐🌹 Beautiful testimony of repentance,Tim.
@markwardonwords9 ай бұрын
Our pleasure!
@rodneyjackson61819 ай бұрын
On the subject of racism. The Jews were expelled from England in 1290 and were not allowd to return until Oliver Cromwell in the 1650's. During this time we had many English translation Bibles in England.
@rrsafety9 ай бұрын
Another great video, thank you! It is always important to treat people fairly and honestly. On another topic, I highly recommend the audiobook on KZbin of C.S. Lewis reflections on the Psalms and how Christians can struggle with them but find deep meaning in them nonetheless.
@alexshadowfax1119Ай бұрын
Thank you for this discussion, it was thoroughly enjoyable. While I will agree that the slander people have done towards these men is absolutely wrong and should be condemned,I will say that the mostly truthful accusations you've laid out against these men definitely would cause me to have some mistrust regarding their opinions. Im not sure why attacking these two men is so important to the KJ only position, their clearly wrong for doing so. Read whatever translation you want.
@moonglow77109 ай бұрын
Thank you.
@ShaunCKennedyAuthor9 ай бұрын
I don't use the terms inerancy and infallibility because those terms often get taken over by both critics and believers to mean things in not comfortable with. I would not have a problem signing a statement of faith with those terms in them, but I recognize them as slogans that really has "I take the Bible text seriously." But I'm not going to get into the "I hold to inerancy/infallibility better than you" competition. Far too often, "infallibility" or "inerancy" ends up applying to a particular understanding of the text rather than the text itself, or it turns into pedantic error hunting by the skeptic against imaginative apologetics by the a priori believers. 2 Timothy 3:16 says "All scripture is given by inspiration of God, and is profitable for doctrine, for reproof, for correction, for instruction in righteousness." Notice some of the things that aren't in that list: history, geology, astronomy, biology, and mathematics just to name a few. So when a skeptic asks me, "How old was Ahaziah when he started to reign," I'm perfectly comfortable saying, "There seems to be a conflict in the records we have regarding that. There are apologetic answers to that, how convincing you find those is a matter of personal conviction. Now, when was the last time you were walking down the street and confronted a problem and you said, 'I will decide how to go forward based on the age of one of the ancient kings'?"
@nobodyspecial18529 ай бұрын
What you said and the fact that scripture includes things that aren't canon, canon is a status that men decide and change back and forth (Martin Luther wanted a lot of the new testament thrown out including Revelation, that's a disturbing look into the reformation's biggest hero). These calls are weighted by denominational dogma and scholastic one-upmanship and it goes into weird tangents that elevate dogma to be celebrated as canon in all but name. Plus the bigger issue for me is "proclaim trinitarianism, then say it exactly my way or you're a heretic". I argue 3 archetypes from a formless infinity that manifests whatever aesthetic and utility it wants to, and other people usually argue 3 persons of a triune god.... meanings are debatable, particularly when it wasn't originally English. The nicene creed isn't in the bible 😵 but the ideology is considered the litmus test to determine Christian identity. I despise hearing it from people that proclaim sola scriptura 🤦♂️
@maxxiong9 ай бұрын
@@nobodyspecial1852 This is where the distinction between infallibility and the lack of error comes in. Sola scriptura says that the Bible is the only infallible authority, meaning that it is incapable of making error. The Nicene creed can be said to be authoritative and have no errors without being infallible because each point in it has been argued for from scripture. The problem with KJVO is that if you say the KJV has no errors but is not infallible, then you have to answer every question about supposed KJV mistakes, and if you say the KJV in infallible then you violate sola scriptura.
@albertcabrerajr9928 ай бұрын
God *used* fallible men to CREATE *THE INFALLIBLE* . When *GOD WORKS* , His WORK *SHALL NEVER BE LOWER* than THE *WORK OF A KING* . Did *HE* not give unto you and me the *King James Bible?*
@ShaunCKennedyAuthor8 ай бұрын
@@albertcabrerajr992 No, God did not give us the King James. King James did. That's why it's called The King James Version.
@albertcabrerajr9928 ай бұрын
@@ShaunCKennedyAuthor *wrong*
@BibleVersionConspiracy9 ай бұрын
Thank you for the new video! 😍 I'm greatly looking forward to watching this. Just one thing before I forget, however. You mentioned W.W. Westcott as a clear example of Gail's "repeating statements she had to know were false" in the description of the first video on slander. White, Wallace, and now the TCC claim Gail Riplinger conflated Bishop Brook Foss Westcott and Rosicrucian William Wynn Westcott to arrive at her conclusion that B.F. Westcott was a "spiritualist". From my own research (which I am still developing, so correct me if I'm wrong) and Gail's own statements (NABV 2021, p. 474), there is no such conflation in her book. The label "spiritualist" seems to be derived from a not easy to be understood quote from B.F. Westcott's son which Gail references without clarifying context (NABV 2021, p. 447) not from his conflation with W.W. Westcott. I hope that you and your team will look into this confusion we have inherited from White's early response to NABV. The very implication that she simply assumed the two Westcotts were one and the same is considered slanderous against NABV by Gail (Blind Guides, p. 35). Irony strikes again. If you and your team find time to look into this, I trust that your responsible team will make some statements to clear up this confusion. I'm putting together the information on this and my own thoughts on my website bibleversionconspiracy.com/westcottandhort/ under the section titled "W. W. Westcott & Charges of Spiritism". I hope it will be of help. (Since this page is a work in progress, please pardon the typos. 😅) If I get a chance, I may add a similar comment to the first video about slandering since the W.W. Westcott statement came for its description. I'm sure I'll be making more comments as I go through this new video whenever something pops into my head. 😁 I'm always looking forward to more content from you and the TCC! Thanks again, God bless, and have a great day! ❤
@markwardonwords9 ай бұрын
We are still open to correction. I did look over your piece. It is rather long, I confess… It is possible, it seems to me, to read Riplinger as you do: maybe she was self-consciously referring to B.F. rather than W.W. with her "'the Father' of the current channeling phenomenon" comment. In this case, she was still terribly and obviously wrong-slanderous. But perhaps not guilty of conflating the two. But then she can't help but entertain the notion by referencing the "possibly allonym" "W.W. Westcott." I'm having trouble getting around that as evidence for our position on this. Can you straightforwardly acknowledge, my friend, that Gail Riplinger slandered B.F. Westcott? We can quibble at the edges of what that means, but centrally: she reported his words, as did Waite, in such a way as to bear a false witness about him.
@BibleVersionConspiracy9 ай бұрын
@@markwardonwords Thank you for your reply and for looking over our page! Can I straightforwardly acknowledge that Gail Riplinger slandered B.F. Westcott? Yes. I definitely acknowledge she greatly misrepresented W/H on many occasions. Your videos are helpful for us as sort through these cases. There are still, however, some odd things they wrote (or seemed to write) that she quoted, and that I hope to look into further. I cannot get behind her claim that B.F. was "a London spiritualist" or that he fathered modern channeling. (She attempts to support this idea with three ellipsis-riddled quotations from authors Guald, Salter, and Webb not with any quotation regarding W.W. Westcott that I could find.) But, even if she did conflate the two it would make no sense. It's not even true that W.W. Westcott was the father of the current channeling phenomenon. I'm just tired of the misrepresentation on both sides. That's why I'm here. Thanks again for taking the time to respond and for your efforts to clear up matters in this controversy. God bless!
@markwardonwords9 ай бұрын
@@BibleVersionConspiracy This is much appreciated, my friend. An answer to prayer. I can't say I expected this when I first encountered you. But you have shown a willingness to dialogue in good faith, and it has been noticed. I will ping Peter, too, who made the original statement. ;)
@markwardonwords9 ай бұрын
(Just confirming that I did ping Peter.)
@BibleVersionConspiracy9 ай бұрын
@markwardonwords Awesome! Thanks for the kind words. 😁 All this and I haven't even started watching the video yet! 🤣
@emlylemly97489 ай бұрын
This makes a lot of sense. And, wow, the double standard is glaringly obvious. I always knew those who translated the KJV were not completely in line with the theology I grew up with, but I've never felt any doubt about my Bible. I didn't grow up KJV only (more like KJV adjacent), but I rubbed up against a lot of those who did, and I always found their arguments to be a little cherry-picked.
@dennisklopper18189 ай бұрын
When this series is over, please do a video on Universalism aka Martin Zender KZbin, but especially, the Concordant Living Translation Bible that Universalists use. Blessings
@patrickjames14924 ай бұрын
Do we know that Scrivener was not placed to block George Vance Smith the Unitarian?
@LFV_1Ай бұрын
This was illuminating, but I think there was a lot of semantical and mental gymnastics at play to conclude that while he indeed referred to the TR as villainous & vile, he didn’t despite it. Huh?
@markwardonwordsАй бұрын
I'm willing to give some on that one. He did despise is. But what did he produce as an alternative? How different is his text, really, from the TR?
@LFV_1Ай бұрын
@@markwardonwords agreed, which is ironic to say the least! To add to the irony, if we put the best shine on it, it’s very possible he just genuinely felt it was corrupted making his sentiment identical to how KJVO crowd feels about the critical text & modern versions. Full disclosure, like you, I grew up in a KJVO church/Christian school in NYC. In fact Dickman spoke a few times at bible conferences. Those influenced always led me to the personal conviction the Byzantine text family to be the purer line…e.g., , the early church emanated from Antioch, not Egypt (where Gnosticism infected Christian theology) & in scripture Egypt is a type of the world. In fact, Rev 11:8 explicitly equates Egypt spiritually with sodom. And since 1881 we have learned that the Byzantine text type dates back much earlier than previously thought-back to the first century or so following the apostolic era. Those facts coupled with the great many more copies of the Byzantine text MSS is persuasive to me. But I digress…I have come to agree-in no little part to your parallel KJV online Bible-that the differences are minuscule. I am deriving satisfaction from digesting multiple varied readings across versions bc I no longer think the differences b/t underlying texts are consequential. And your series on Westcott & Hort has been illuminating. I have to agree they’ve been grossly misrepresented. I’m very much enjoying your channel. Deep dives, a breadth of info, well-articulated facts & arguments & a uncontentious tone. Really good work!
@tony.biondi9 ай бұрын
Excellent! Thank you.
@markwardonwords9 ай бұрын
You are welcome!
@michealferrell16779 ай бұрын
Watching now !
@kevinshort22308 ай бұрын
Good work.
@michaelroots69319 ай бұрын
Another great video. Many attacks on newer versions translators when you turn them against KJV translators would damage their credibility also. Where can I find the beliefs of the KJV translators without reading or buying fifty books.
@mike2454019 ай бұрын
Dr. Ward i was wondering if you could do a video. On what Paul saids about what happens to you when you die. Or if you already have a video on it. Me and another paster from a different denomination have a disagreement on this. It would be great to have a Scholars view on this. Thanks 😊🙏
@markwardonwords9 ай бұрын
This is probably beyond the purpose of my channel. I'd suggest you look in systematic theologies and commentaries, my friend!
@mike2454019 ай бұрын
@@markwardonwords ok 👌 no worries just thought I would ask. Thank you😊
@nicobrits51114 ай бұрын
By all means read them. What bugs me about C S Lewis is that pastors sometimes quotes Lewis more than the Bible almost like the Adventists quote White. As a older guy Lewis was kind of quiet before the Narnia movies. The same with Tolkien and the Hobbit. We lived happily without the knowledge of C S Lewis and JRR Tolkien. Some groups are like that with Bunyan. I tried Bunyan found it super tedious to read and decided to read my Bible instead if I want to see the pilgrim’s progress through life.
@timothyjoseph62468 ай бұрын
Great video👍 I do love the equal judgment view. Yet, when men like Lewis and Wright denied core theological beliefs, some of which would deny even parts of the Nicene Creed, how beneficial can it be to read them, at least theologically. Of course, as literature, I appreciate the Chronicles, but I would not go to them for doctrine. Where is your Theological triage place belief in Adam as real or eternal punishment? Thanks again, God bless all of you!
@markwardonwords8 ай бұрын
There is a lot of meat with both Lewis and Wright, there really is. Many judicious evangelicals have read both with profit. I've read a ton of Lewis-with great profit to my faith and understanding, and I just haven't ever felt tempted by the views I take to be erroneous.
@calebschaaf15559 ай бұрын
Another good one. Here's a comment for the algorithm. :)
@markwardonwords9 ай бұрын
Many thanks!
@captainercoupe20163 ай бұрын
Infallibility is only the original languages.
@markwardonwords3 ай бұрын
Ultimately, yes. Proximately, accurate translations of those original languages must also be considered infallible.
@captainercoupe20163 ай бұрын
@@markwardonwords Thank you brother Mark for personally responding. I see your reasoning for that. Thank you. In truth, I have always felt that Scribes could never mess things up bad enough to make a difference unless they did so intentionally. Praise God for the work of Textual Criticism that helps us have confidence in the preservation of God's Word. God bless you in your continued work. It has impacted my life. :)
@Outrider749 ай бұрын
A few things for thought: 1.) Textual Confidence Collective: Resistance is Futile; You WILL be Educated. (Okay, had to go "sci-fi geek for a minute there") 2.) Regarding sacramental efficacy: yeah, the rejection of Wescott and Hort based on this one is EXTREMELY telling about the ignorance of history by the KJVO people who state this point. In fact, if you look at church history, you would be very surprised at the number of prominent Christians who believed in a degree of sacramental efficacy: Luther, Calvin, Jonathan Edwards, John Wesley, Matthew Henry, and also possibly George Whitefield and John Knox. Truth be told, the prominence of sacramental efficacy in the theology of those non-Catholics was instrumental in my conversion to Lutheranism. 3.) This video is giving me bad flashbacks of a Chick Tract comic called "Sabotage" which essentially made Wescott and Hort the fountainhead of every bad and liberal idea in modern Christendom. Your treatment of this subject has been very good in proving otherwise. Well done.
@markwardonwords9 ай бұрын
Right. I'm praying that someone out there in KJV defense will not just listen but will publicly repent. Point 2 in your note, especially, is so clear.
@EricCouture3159 ай бұрын
"I have been lied to my whole life" I resonate with that quote. I was never taught who the KJV Translators were and their church/soteriology connection with the Anglican Church and their connection to Westcott, Hort.
@markwardonwords9 ай бұрын
I feel for you, Eric, I really do. You know I do!
@EricCouture3159 ай бұрын
@markwardonwords I praise the Lord nearly everyday for your work and your patience with me.
@nobodyspecial18529 ай бұрын
I hear a lot about a closet lesbian being on the NIV84 translation team, how her coming out later means her corruption ruined that whole translation 🤦♂️ .... JMac protects pedophiles at GCC church and nobody cares to bash LSB or NASB (no he didn't produce NASB 95 but many use it because they think it'll help them walk on water while holding his hand), nevermind King James of KJV fame being a hardcore machiavellian partisan and warmonger AND hedonist with both sexes - that bad witness is forgiven without question. Garbage people can still produce good products, absolutely be skeptical but don't dismiss on reputation alone.
@albertcabrerajr9928 ай бұрын
@@EricCouture315 do you know that *that symbol* you have on your photo is a symbol derived from witchcraft?
@annakimborahpa9 ай бұрын
True (and Mostly True) Accusations against Westcott & Hort Charitable podcast; some comments: 1. Tim Berg at 1:12:17-46 "... and the Lord smote my heart and He said "You've been wrong about this man and you've telling lies, spreading lies about this man. And I remember I was in the big room at Credo and I went over to ... they had this little room that was kind of blocked off with no windows that they called the map room ... which I would use sometimes as just a little prayer closet. I went in there because I've got to meet with Jesus. And I got down on my knees and I wept. I wept in sorrow and repentance and said "Lord forgive me..." Response: Luke 15:7 (KJV), "I say unto you, that likewise joy shall be in heaven over one sinner that repenteth, more than over ninety and nine just persons, which need no repentance." Tim, was the effect of this soul shattering experience like that of being in a forest of lumberjacks and hearing one of them yell, "TIMBER!" as the tree fell? 2. Mark Ward at 30:55 - 31:39: "...what's the alternative to naturalistic textural criticism that's charged against us and Westcott & Hort? And that would be supernaturalistic textual criticism, right? ... which means you're claiming God's authority, divine authority for your text. And what we're saying is that's like saying we've now determined that Mary was immaculately conceived, you know, conceived without original sin ... now we've determined that Mary was bodily assumed into heaven. Like that would be fine if God said that I would believe both of those things, I would be happy to. I'd be happy to believe that God has given us exactly one text, all the jots and tittles, none missing or added and all in the correct order and it's this one ..." Response: One text for each, eh? A. Immaculate Conception: The angelic greeting to Mary in Luke 1:28 which is transliterated from Greek into English as 'kecharitomene.' B. Bodily Assumption: Revelation 11:19 (NKJV), "Then the temple of God was opened in heaven, and the ark of His covenant was seen in His temple. And there were lightnings, noises, thunderings, an earthquake, and great hail." 3. Recall that the term ὁμοούσιος (homoousios, "consubstantial") describing Jesus Christ as possessing the same essence as His Father was adopted at the Council of Nicea in 325 AD, three centuries after Christ's ascension into heaven. Quoting from the Ligonier Ministries youtube video 'Lawson, MacArthur, Mohler, and Sproul: Questions and Answers' of March 21, 2017, R.C. Sproul is hooked up to an oxygen tank not long before his death and near the end of the video he says the following at 40:45 - 41:16: "I believe the first question, if I'm not mistaken, was something about what is Reformed theology? What does it mean to be Reformed? And anybody who is Reformed is first of all catholic, namely that we embrace the classic ecumenical truths of the ecumenical councils, the Council of Nicea, the Council of Chalcedon, and so on, that we all share the same basic structure of Christianity." 4. Mark Ward at 57:59 - 59:13: "... but I have gotten so much help from Lewis over time in living a holy life, in having joy in Christ, in seeing through the challenges my culture poses against my Christian faith ..." Response: A. Three years before his death, C.S. Lewis revised Mere Christianity in 1960 by adding his belief in a purification after death. As if God was the author of his words, C.S. Lewis wrote: “Make no mistake,” He says, “if you let me, I will make you perfect. The moment you put yourself in My hands, that is what you are in for. Nothing less, or other, than that. You have free will, and if you choose, you can push Me away. But if you do not push Me away, understand that I am going to see this job through. Whatever suffering it may cost you in your earthly life, WHATEVER INCONCEIVABLE PURIFICATION IT MAY COST YOU AFTER DEATH, whatever it costs Me, I will never rest, nor let you rest, until you are literally perfect - until My Father can say without reservation that He is well pleased with you, as He said He was well pleased with me. This I can do and will do. But I will not do anything less.” [Mere Christianity, New York: Macmillan, 1960, p. 172] B. In his book Letters to Malcolm: Chiefly On Prayer that was published posthumously in 1964, C.S. Lewis goes into greater detail about his (A) belief in purgatory, as well as (B) praying for the dead that came in response to the loss of loved ones. [Letters to Malcolm: Chiefly on Prayer, New York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1964, 107-109] 5. Returning to the topic at hand, there's the following quote from the preface to Gail Riplinger's book New Age Bible Versions: “Daily, during the six years needed for this investigation, the Lord miraculously brought the needed materials and resources - much like the ravens fed Elijah. Each discovery was not the result of effort on my part, but of the direct hand of God - so much so that I hesitated to even put my name on the book. Consequently, I used G. A. Riplinger, which signifies to me, God and Riplinger - God as author and Riplinger as secretary.” [Quoting from A Summary Critique: New Age Bible Versions, Author: H. Wayne House, Article ID: DB015, Updated: Oct 20, 2023, Published: Apr 6, 2009; Equip website /articles/a-summary-critique-new-age-bible-versions/] There's the dictation theory of inspiration.
@markwardonwords9 ай бұрын
Boy… The mental gymnastics needed to get from Luke 1:28 to the immaculate conception, and from Rev 11:19 to the bodily assumption-I'm just not capable of them. =| Perhaps I am blinded by my own exegetical tradition, but years of working to be a more accurate herald make me fear to make leaps like those. Great catch on no. 5. And so true on no. 1.
@annakimborahpa9 ай бұрын
1. Thanks and understandable. You, Tim and your fellow travelers are in proper recovery. After enduring years of indoctrination that only the KJV is infallible, anyone would be wary and reluctant to consider any other claims of infallibility elsewhere, perhaps like Westcott's avoidance of the term. 2. It took nineteen centuries for the Catholic Church to pronounce the dogma of the Immaculate Conception. The 14th century Franciscan John Duns Scotus came up with the rationale that, by a singular act of grace (no one else in the Bible is 'kecharitomene'), God saved Mary in advance in anticipation of her Son's saving work. God is outside of time, so He saw that if Mary said 'yes', her Son would save the human race. Therefore, He provided her with the fullness of grace to assist in her free consent to the angel to become the mother of Jesus. However, she would pay a heavy price as indicated by Simeon's prophecy in Luke 2:35 when Jesus was presented in the Jerusalem temple. Five centuries after Scotus' death, Pope Pius IX used Scotus' own words in the 1854 dogmatic pronouncement Ineffibilis Deus. 3. It took twenty centuries for the Catholic Church to pronounce the dogma of the Assumption. Bodily assumption is considered for at least two figures in the Old Testament: Enoch in Genesis 5:24 and Elijah in 2 Kings 2:11. Mary's assumption can be considered conjoined with Jesus' resurrection in Psalm 132:8 (KJV): "Arise, O LORD, into thy rest; thou, and the ark of thy strength." Since Jesus identifies the new covenant with His physical person in Luke 22:30, KJV (Likewise also the cup after supper, saying, "This cup is the new testament in my blood, which is shed for you"), then she who carried and bore Him would be "the ark of His covenant" in Revelation 11:19 (NKJV). 4. Recall that the Bible itself in two places indicates that Jesus did and spoke many things that are not contained within: A. John 20:30-31 (KJV): And many other signs truly did Jesus in the presence of his disciples, which are not written in this book: But these are written, that ye might believe that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God; and that believing ye might have life through his name. B. Luke 24:25-27 (KJV): Then he said unto them, "O fools, and slow of heart to believe all that the prophets have spoken: Ought not Christ to have suffered these things, and to enter into his glory?" And beginning at Moses and all the prophets, he expounded unto them in all the scriptures the things concerning himself. It was God's providence that He would not provide a transcription of this 1-2 hour walking lecture that Jesus gave to two of his disciples on the road from Jerusalem to Emmaus, an exegesis of the entire Old Testament showing where He was present therein. Did He leave it up to His Church to slowly unravel and decipher this elaborate mystery?
@mumenrider24819 ай бұрын
Thanks! I've heard such awful things about them. It is good know what they really believed.
@markwardonwords9 ай бұрын
You're welcome!
@chris2fur4018 ай бұрын
On the flip side, I’ve often heard king James was a bisexual. If that’s true then the KJO movement’s arguments are hypocritical
@HeavyHeartsShowАй бұрын
Westcott and Hort were young with these opinions yes, but didn't they start their Greek text when they were around the same age? 20s-30s
@springsofsalvationministries8 ай бұрын
a lot of these ''kjvo'' authors who are openly lying about these christian gentleman need to be saved themselves
@barryjtaftАй бұрын
One of the main criticisms of Westcott and Hort's work was the secret nature of their work. Dean Burgon argued that they clandestinely put together a new Greek text and distributed it among members of the revision committee without disclosing it to anyone else. This secrecy raised suspicions about their motives and the validity of their work. Overall, the opposition to Westcott and Hort centered around their theories and changes to the Bible, the lack of historical evidence to support their claims, and the secret nature of their work.
@JamesSnappJr9 ай бұрын
Mark Ward: do you (A) accept English Bible versions in which a conjectural emendation in the base-text is conveyed by the English text - specifically, in Acts 20:28, and/or First Peter 3:10, or (B) reject English Bible versions in which the acceptance of the English text is tantamount to a rejection of the idea that the text of the New Testament has been preserved for us ("us" being Mark Ward and Timothy Berg and me)?
@barryjtaftАй бұрын
Westcott and Hort suborned perjury and colluded with the other committee members to replace the text with their own text that they had been working for 17 plus year in contravention of the clear instructions from the Southern Convocation of the Church of England. July 7th - Hort: “Dr. Westcott and myself have for above seventeen years been preparing a Greek text of the New Testament. It has been in the press for some years, and we hope to have it out early next year.” (Life, Vol.II, p.137).
@barryjtaftАй бұрын
Westcott and Hort, in their own words, openly confessed their adoration of Mary. Westcott wrote to Archbishop Benson, November 17, 1865: “I wish I could see to what forgotten truth Mariolatry bears witness” (Westcott, Life of Westcott, II:50). Hort wrote to Westcott: “I am very far from pretending to understand completely the oft-renewed vitality of Mariolatry” (Hort, Life of Hort, II:49) Hort wrote to Westcott, October 17, 1865: “I have been persuaded for many years that Mary-worship and ‘Jesus’-worship have very much in common in their causes and their results” (Hort, Life of Hort, II:50).
@barryjtaftАй бұрын
1847 Jan., 2nd Sunday after Epiphany - Westcott: “After leaving the monastery we shaped our course to a little oratory…It is very small, with one kneeling-place; and behind a screen was a ‘Pieta’ the size of life (i.e. a Virgin and dead Christ)…I could not help thinking on the grandeur of the Romish Church, on her zeal even in error, on her earnestness and self-devotion, which we might, with nobler views and a purer end, strive to imitate. Had I been alone I could have knelt there for hours.” (Life, Vol.I, p.81). 1848 July 6th - Hort: “One of the things, I think, which shows the falsity of the Evangelical notion of this subject (baptism), is that it is so trim and precise…no deep spiritual truths of the Reason are thus logically harmonious and systematic…the pure Romish view seems to me nearer, and more likely to lead to, the truth than the Evangelical…the fanaticism of the bibliolaters, among whom reading so many ‘chapters’ seems exactly to correspond to the Romish superstition of telling so many dozen beads on a rosary…still we dare not forsake the Sacraments, or God will forsake us…I am inclined to think that no such state as ‘Eden’ (I mean the popular notion) ever existed, and that Adam’s fall in no degree differed from the fall of each of his descendants” (Life, Vol.I, pp.76-78). Aug. 11th - Westcott: “I never read an account of a miracle (in Scripture?) but I seem instinctively to feel its improbability, and discover some want of evidence in the account of it.” (Life, Vol.I, p.52). 1851 Dec. 29,30th - Age 23 Hort: “I had no idea till the last few weeks of the importance of texts, having read so little Greek Testament, and dragged on with the villainous Textus Receptus.. Think of that vile Textus Receptus leaning entirely on late MSS.; it is a blessing there are such early ones” (Life, Vol.I, p.211). 1860 May 1st - Hort to Lightfoot: “If you make a decided conviction of the absolute infallibility of the N.T. practically a sine qua non for co-operation, I fear I could not join you, even if you were willing to forget your fears about the origin of the Gospels.” (Life, Vol. I, p.420). 1860 May 4th - Hort to Lightfoot: “I am also glad that you take the same provisional ground as to infallibility that I do.” (Life, Vol.I, p.424). 1860 May 5th - Westcott to Hort: “at present I find the presumption in favor of the absolute truth - I reject the word infallibility - of Holy Scripture overwhelming.” (Life, Vol.I, p.207). 1860 Apr. 3rd - Hort: “But the book which has most engaged me is Darwin. Whatever may be thought of it, it is a book that one is proud to be contemporary with. I must work out and examine the argument in more detail, but at present my feeling is strong that the theory is unanswerable.” (Life, Vol.I, p.416). Oct. 15th - Hort: “I entirely agree - correcting one word - with what you there say on the Atonement, having for many years believed that “the absolute union of the Christian (or rather, of man) with Christ Himself” is the spiritual truth of which the popular doctrine of substitution is an immoral and material counterfeit…Certainly nothing can be more unscriptural than the modern limiting of Christ’s bearing our sins and sufferings to His death; but indeed that is only one aspect of an almost universal heresy.” (Life, Vol.I, p.430). 1865 Oct. 17th - Hort: “I have been persuaded for many years that Mary-worship and ‘Jesus’-worship have very much in common in their causes and their results.” (Life, Vol.II, p.50). 1867 Oct. 17th - Hort: “I wish we were more agreed on the doctrinal part; but you know I am a staunch sacerdotalist, and there is not much profit in arguing about first principles.” (Life, Vol.II, p.86). 1890 Mar. 4th - Westcott: “No one now, I suppose, holds that the first three chapters of Genesis, for example, give a literal history - I could never understand how any one reading them with open eyes could think they did - yet they disclose to us a Gospel. So it is probably elsewhere.” 1861 Apr. 12th - Hort to Westcott: “Also - but this may be cowardice - I have a sort of craving that our text should be cast upon the world before we deal with matters likely to brand us with suspicion. I mean, a text, issued by men already known for what will undoubtedly be treated as dangerous heresy, will have great difficulties in finding its way to regions which it might otherwise hope to reach, and whence it would not be easily banished by subsequent alarms.” (Life, Vol.I, p.445).
@JamesSnappJr9 ай бұрын
19:52 - There it is folks: in Hort's own words. He considered the TR "vile" and "villainous." And lo and behold, his sunsequent research happens coincidentally to produce the rejection of the Byzantine text in favor of the Alexandrian text (dubbed the "Neutral" text by Hort and Westcott). Brother Mark, is this (A) a coincidence, or (B) intentional ?
@alanstewart20429 ай бұрын
Yeah, talk about gaslighting the audience.
@JamesSnappJr9 ай бұрын
45:00 - Ahem. Scrivener could TOLERATE having a Unitarian on the committee. Westcott and Hort ENGINEERED having a Unitarian on the committee. There is a difference gentlemen.
@barryjtaftАй бұрын
Dean John Bergen in "The Revision Revised" utterly destroyed the textual theory of Westcott and Hort and his critique has never been refuted. He published before the RV of 1885 was released and neither of these men ever answered his criticism.
@barryjtaftАй бұрын
The only voice defending the Textus Receptus was Dr Scrivener, probably the foremost scholar of the day in the manuscripts of the Greek New Testament and the history of the Text. But he was systematically outvoted by the Cambridge trio and outdone by Hort’s powerful debating skill. When the revision was completed, they had altered the Greek Text in 5337 places, thus violating the original rule that had been set for the committee of not altering the Greek Text unless absolutely necessary to do so.
@markwardonwordsАй бұрын
Scrivener did not endorse the Textus Receptus-at least it's not nearly that simple. If you're willing to hear from his own lips what he thought about various important TR readings, here's a talk in which I discuss that very thing: kzbin.info/www/bejne/p6nOhJycdqqYgpI.
@barryjtaftАй бұрын
@@markwardonwords the comment doesn't say he endorsed it. it says he defended it against the other committee members.
@19king149 ай бұрын
Excellent info! I wonder if W&H believed in God directly creating a perfect Adam and Eve - our ultimate parents? One secular comment, if I may.. while watching the whole video I 'clicked' through 15 ads! Was I the only one? Please, check the commercial placements. Thanks :)
@19king149 ай бұрын
Mark may not be aware of how many ads KZbin places automatically.
@markwardonwords9 ай бұрын
Hmm. I was indeed not aware of the sheer number of ads. That really does surprise me. I pay for KZbin Premium, in large part because one time KZbin showed an ad for an HIV medication to my children, an ad featuring amorous gay men. I have already been considering turning off ads for all videos. This is more grist for the mill. Open to your thoughts, both of you.
@19king149 ай бұрын
@@markwardonwords Having a few ads is fine. It is easy to regulate though... STEP 1: Click on the video you wish to edit. STEP 2: CLICK "Edit Video". STEP 3: Click "Monetization." STEP 4: Click "Review placement." THEN you may either slide or delete (or add?) the white markers on the video timeline. Then "SAVE". I hope this helps. Yes, KZbin takes liberties to automatically add "Ads" much too often.
@markwardonwords9 ай бұрын
@@19king14 This is excellent advice. I just never bothered with this; I'm so busy. But if it's making for a bad experience for viewers-and so many ads!-then I need to give it attention. Thank you for this!
@markwardonwords9 ай бұрын
@@didymussumydid9726 I'm carefully considering this. I will say that what sells and what fits the algorithm NEVER plays any role in my consideration. What people are interested in does-I noted, for example, that my book reviews series got no views, so I stopped. I noted, for example, that people liked my "The Best Bible Translation" series, so I did a few more videos and hope to do even more. That's the balance I'm trying to strike! I do need income from this work, or I can't keep doing it, or not as frequently. It has replaced time I used to spend on a side business doing church web design and hosting. That is income we relied on as a family. It's true that I'm not eager to give up ad revenue. But it's also true that it's only about 20% of the income I get from the channel. Again, I'm considering giving it up to reach more people.
@JamesSnappJr9 ай бұрын
43:00 - it's best to just say "Hort was undeniably a racist" and shut up there.
@JamesSnappJr9 ай бұрын
51:30 - Um, yeah. it sure sounds like Hort was wrestling with the idea that it is heresy to say the everybody goes to heaven eventually . . . while holding the office of bishop. A double-minded man is unstable in all his ways. - said somebody somewhere.
@JamesSnappJr9 ай бұрын
22:46 - This is the sort of praise one gives to one's predecessors right before saying "But we can do better."
@bradphi23595 ай бұрын
I have replaced 2 bibles in my lifetime on my third because I use them the older manuscripts
@igregmart8 ай бұрын
As you are the "Textual Confidence Collective." I would like to know which text you collectivists have confidence in? I have confidence in the King James version and its underlying Greek and Hebrew texts used by the KJV translators (who undertook excellent textual criticism with the long line of documents used by Christianity).
@markwardonwords8 ай бұрын
We have confidence in that translation and in those texts, too!
@kevinjodrey76646 ай бұрын
@markwardonwords OK. Thank you!!
@barryjtaftАй бұрын
I wouldn't let either of these men bless my meal much less tell what is or is not scripture.
@JamesSnappJr9 ай бұрын
Marj Ward: first question: if James R. White says something false about the Bible that he ought to know better than to say, and keeps on saying it, is James R. White morally culpable of an offense tantamount to lying? Kindly answer (A) YES or (B) NO.
@markwardonwords9 ай бұрын
If those are the facts, then yes. The “knows better” is tough to demonstrate, however.
@alanstewart20429 ай бұрын
#sellingJesus. "And through covetousness shall they with feigned words make merchandise of you:" 2 Peter 2:3 KJV "Ministers" who run ads are hirelings.
@cherilynhamilton7464 ай бұрын
Which manuscripts are they analyzing? Alexandrian 40 manuscripts, or Antioch, 5600 manuscripts
@markwardonwords4 ай бұрын
Please interact with the arguments made in the video.
@Thewatchman3038 ай бұрын
Mark would you consider partaking in a debate on the divinity of ‘Christ’?
@markwardonwords8 ай бұрын
No.
@Thewatchman3038 ай бұрын
@@markwardonwords any particular reason? Or do you take the view that there is no point debating such issues because you are so certain the doctrine of the trinity is true?
@markwardonwords8 ай бұрын
I have decided to tackle basically one big public controversy at this time.
@Thewatchman3038 ай бұрын
@@markwardonwords thank you very much for your kind reply. I genuinely appreciate you taking the time to respond to my question.
@davidfehr2358 ай бұрын
1hr8min, Mark Ward says you can’t slander dead people. Meanwhile he refuses to apologize for his slander of Bryan Ross, who is not dead, so he should actually be able to reconcile. Where’s the charity in that, Mark?
@markwardonwords8 ай бұрын
No reply.
@davidfehr2358 ай бұрын
@@markwardonwords duly noted, I think it speaks volumes.
@JamesSnappJr9 ай бұрын
Regarding preservation: Hort posited 60 places in the text of the New Testament where there was a "primitive error" and conjectural emendation was needed to recover the original reading. And Hort proposed that ACts 20:28 was among these points. Is this (A) true or (B) false. Timothy Berg, I would like to hear from you: a simple A or B please.
@davidfehr2358 ай бұрын
Listened to the whole video finally, I really dont like how they justified some of these accusations against Westcott & Hort, by essentially saying that others were doing the same things.
@JamesSnappJr9 ай бұрын
12:40 - A text with errors in in is NOT an inerrant text.A text with errors in in is NOT an inerrant text. Hort was content to put a historical error [in Matthew 13:35 and again in Matthew 27:49] in the printed text or in double brackets. Is this (A) true or (B) false?
@PhotographyByDerek9 ай бұрын
You are conflating a "perfect" text with an inerrant text. It can have flaws, yet be perfectly inerrant in its teaching.
@LukassFreidenfelds6 ай бұрын
defending wicked men. you will have your reward for that.
@markwardonwords6 ай бұрын
Please interact with the arguments made in the video.
@JamesSnappJr9 ай бұрын
Um, Westcott's explicit rejection of the idea of the infallibility of Scripture does not add up to a "partially true" accusation that Westcott explicitly rejected the infallibility of Holy Scripture, brother Mark. It is a DEMONSTRATION that Westcott was GUILTY of doing so. Do not try to spin that sir. Westcott considered the doctrine of infallibility optional, just as he and Hort considered belief in the Trinity optional (to the degree that a Unitarian could be on the translation committee. Do you agree, brother Mark (A) YES or (B) NO
@davidfehr2358 ай бұрын
Question for Timothy Berg, in the discussion regarding Hort's use of villainous and vile, you state multiple times that it "certainly not a hatred for the bible" and that it was "just a critic being born", is it fair to say that this is simply your opinion? Also, is this how all critic are born?
@mattkaye65593 ай бұрын
this video is misleading, and does not focus on specific parts which are very convenient for the viewpoint of Mark.
@markwardonwords3 ай бұрын
Then give those specific parts, my friend.
@davidfehr2358 ай бұрын
Good day all! Hot take here, Timothy Berg is Mark Ward's "yes man". Halfway through the watch and multiple times Mark returns to Timothy Berg for commentary, and TB begins with "yeah, I think that's exactly right."
@danielvso9 ай бұрын
Inerrancy is an error. Inerrancy is for theology what Evolution is for science, a hindrance.