M
Milliardo
Guest
Chris LaRock:
If you’ll search this board, you’ll see a topic concerning the KJV and why it’s not consistent on many places. I think it was, ironically enough, a Jew who pointed out where the KJV is just flat out in error in certain verses.Newer translations are not a word for word rendering, but rather a more modern rendition.
Again, forcing an interpretation that’s simply not there. The verse, even if rendered on the KJV, speaks of God in the heavenly firmament, not on the earth. No interpretation of that verse would mean the earth to be round; aren’t you curious that this view was only populrized now, and not before? Aren’t you wondering why this idea was not pushed further into the New Testament? Do you mean to say that this was only known in Isaiah, and then subsequently lost in the centuries that followed? If we take your view to its conclusion, even Jesus did not know about this, when it was clearly stated in Isaiah and He did not teach this, or at the very least mentioned it in passing to His Disciples. That this matter took many more centuries to be “rediscovered” is simply incredible, and simply the product of the modern mind trying to force interpretations that are not there.The vers I showed you in Isaiah speaks of the earth as a circle. Man thought the earth was flat at that time, so it’s significant in proving that man didn’t write this on his own - but by the inspiration of God. How else would he be writing of thing so far ahead of his time?