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I am proposing an idea to start a project to put together an edition of the King James Bible that has the deuterocanonical books interspersed throughout the Old Testament rather than separated into a section between the Old and New Testaments and called “the Apocrypha.”
It will also contain study notes explaining the text from a perspective that both Catholics and Orthodox Christians can agree with.
Thus, it will be an ecumenical project.
I’m just not sure if it should be called “Cathodox” or “Ortholic” =)
Why the KJV?
Because many Protestants are not willing to listen to us (Orthodox and Catholic Christians) until we are able to prove our doctrines using the KJV.
Also, the KJV has been called “the most influential version of the most influential book in the world, in what is now its most influential language” by Geddes MacGregor (1968) an Episcopalian priest and professor of philosophy.
Moreover, the KJV includes the Doxology at the end of the Our Father in Matthew 6.
As far as I am aware, not a single one of the currently Catholic-approved Bibles does this.
Thus, it would be helpful, especially for Byzantine Catholics, to have an English Bible where the New Testament is based on Byzantine manuscripts.
Another historical irony happens to be that the KJV New Testament was translated from the Greek Textus Receptus, which was compiled by Desiderius Erasmus Roterodamus, a Roman Catholic monk.
It will also contain study notes explaining the text from a perspective that both Catholics and Orthodox Christians can agree with.
Thus, it will be an ecumenical project.
I’m just not sure if it should be called “Cathodox” or “Ortholic” =)
Why the KJV?
Because many Protestants are not willing to listen to us (Orthodox and Catholic Christians) until we are able to prove our doctrines using the KJV.
Also, the KJV has been called “the most influential version of the most influential book in the world, in what is now its most influential language” by Geddes MacGregor (1968) an Episcopalian priest and professor of philosophy.
Moreover, the KJV includes the Doxology at the end of the Our Father in Matthew 6.
As far as I am aware, not a single one of the currently Catholic-approved Bibles does this.
Thus, it would be helpful, especially for Byzantine Catholics, to have an English Bible where the New Testament is based on Byzantine manuscripts.
Another historical irony happens to be that the KJV New Testament was translated from the Greek Textus Receptus, which was compiled by Desiderius Erasmus Roterodamus, a Roman Catholic monk.