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To: I-ambush
I am aware that many Protestant scholars study scripture in the language of origin, and that there are many and varied opinions on scripture in the multitude of Protestant sects. However, I have been told by some Protestants, including one of my teachers in high school, that only the KJV was inspired.

Add all of that to your wrong list as well.

Did anyone ever give you examples of the *many and varied* interpretations of Scripture that Protestants are supposed to have?

And some fringe groups consider the KJV inspired but they probably also believe the earth is flat.

The original Greek is inspired as well as the Hebrew, and there are plenty of online resources available to go to to look up anything you wish to investigate and find out the Greek and Hebrew word meanings.

137 posted on 01/24/2015 8:32:26 PM PST by metmom (...fixing our eyes on Jesus, the Author and Perfecter of our faith...)
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To: metmom
The original Greek is inspired as well as the Hebrew, and there are plenty of online resources available to go to to look up anything you wish to investigate and find out the Greek and Hebrew word meanings.

Let's see...online resources have been available for.....say 25 or so years...where did we go before that??? I know, The Catholic church!!!!....and they still have all the answers!!

144 posted on 01/24/2015 8:59:02 PM PST by terycarl (common sense prevails over all)
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To: metmom
"The original Greek is inspired as well as the Hebrew, and there are plenty of online resources available to go to to look up anything you wish to investigate and find out the Greek and Hebrew word meanings."
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metmom, the first thing anybody learns about translation from one language to another (like Hebrew to English, or Koine Greek to English) is that there is never a perfect, word-for-word translation that can ever be made between two different languages like that.    That is true for numerous reasons, including the fact that different languages express things in completely different ways, orders, structures, etc.

In addition, certain words in one language, have absolutely no corresponding words in the other language, or they might have a more distinctive set of words for something expressed in only one nebulous word in the first language, so translators often have to make their best effort to estimate (guess) exactly what was being said in the first language, and possibly use a bunch of words in the second language to try to approximate to the best of their ability what they believe was probably meant by the first language.

There is also the problem of words changing very much over time.    Even in English (from old English to new English), it is often very difficult to know exactly what the old English was saying, and the biblical texts were written a long time before that old English was written (and we do not have any experts from those biblical days to explain exactly what those Hebrew and Greek writings really mean today).

In addition to all that, translators always bring their own biases to their translation efforts, so if they are vague in their own mind about something, or not quite really sure, they likely err to the side favoring their own beliefs and prejudices when making uncertain choices.

You can look up the biblical Hebrew and Greek and individual words online, or in your own Hebrew or Greek Old and New Testaments and Dictionaries, but those online dictionaries were certainly not written by the Holy Spirit, and those various dictionaries often differ with each other as to the precise, exact meanings of different words, phrases, and sentences (and the printed dictionaries do likewise).

It is not a prudent or honest thing for anyone to stick their nose way up in the air, and try to brag that they looked up some Greek words in an online or printed Greek dictionary or interlinear translation (or other language study tool like that), and claim that they now know everything there is to know about a particular text, as that is quite simply never the truth, and anyone who believes it is, is just deluding himself or herself.

Whenever people trust themselves to be special recipients of the Holy Spirit's personal guidance, making their self- interpretation of the Holy Scriptures better than everyone else's "Holy-Spirit-guided" self-interpretation of those same Holy Scriptures, you end up with the folly we have today, with so many contradictory interpretations of every text in the Bible.

After praying for the Holy Spirit's interpretive guidance, William Miller, one of the founders of the Seventh-Day Adventist denomination, interpreted some scriptures in the books of Daniel and Revelation in the Bible, then declared that Jesus Christ was going to return to Earth in the "Clouds of Glory" in 1844.

He was wrong too.

As St. Peter said:

First of all you must understand this, that no prophecy of scripture is a matter of one’s own interpretation.    2 Peter 1:20

149 posted on 01/24/2015 9:44:46 PM PST by Heart-Rest ("Our hearts are restless, Lord, until they rest in Thee." - St. Augustine)
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To: metmom; I-ambush

Did anyone ever give you examples of the *many and varied* interpretations of Scripture that Protestants are supposed to have?


The following website includes a list of 50 different English versions of the Bible.

https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Matthew+3%3A13-17&version=NIV

I do not know if all are interpretations from the faiths that came out of the Reformation, or if some are versions from denominations that were formed after the Reformation, but I would say they are many and varied.


181 posted on 01/25/2015 3:42:01 AM PST by rwa265
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