Protestant101, I will take your first comment last. So let me start with the second issue.
You said it yourself, that the “Catholic” interpretation" of the Bible (re Isaiah 1:18) is the “most” “accurate” rendering, and you didn’t mention exactly which version that was so I don’t know how to reply yet. I guess I need you to clue me in more before I can answer your question… I have never seen the translation which you mentioned above; and I would need a lot more details on your statement before it would make sense to me.<<<
The newest bible I have is almost 30 years old. The bible I personally refer to was made in 1950. Its OT is from the Douay-Challoner text, and the NT and Psalms are from the Confraternity text. The verse of Isaiah I gave you from my 1950 bible matches the Douay-Rheims of 1610, while the quote you gave me matches the KJV of 1611…
Douay-Rheims
1:18And then come, and accuse me, saith the Lord: if your sins be as scarlet, they shall be made as white as snow: and if they be red as crimson, they shall be white as wool.
KJ original
Come now, and let us reason together, saith the LORD: though your sins be as scarlet, they shall be as white as snow; though they be red like crimson, they shall be as wool.
Personally, I think there are too many denominations going around writing their own Bibles.<<<
I agree, and this is part of the problem. Different denominations will taint the bible to reflect their personal beliefs. Now if the bible of a particular denomination has been corrupted, how can sola scriptura or “bible sufficiency” be defended?
Everyone says theirs is the best, but I have not found the KJV to fall short in anything that is essential for salvation. I find it easiest to understand. I have 13 different Bible versions, and I use them all from time to time to do comparisons and in depth study. (including Catholic Bibles)…<<<
The question then becomes, which bible is authorized? From where did King James, an avowed homosexual, receive his authority to commision or validate a bible? The passage from Iasiah that we have discussed shows how a debatable interpretation had caused you to regard it as a support of bible sufficiency when in reality it has nothing to do with it. I could give you other examples if you wish to pursue them.
Still, there must be some doubt in you regarding bible sufficiency when you have stated that you have 13 different bible versions to study from. How do you know which is truthful regarding a certain subject, and which is a dubious translation? Do you believe that God intended for us to endlessly bible study trying to find a truth that many denominations will always argue for or against?
But you are putting the documentary horse before the theological cart. If you believe that the bible is the sole and final authority -sufficient for salvation etc., then you, of course, mean the Catholic bible, don’t you? Or which bible do you give this authority and sufficiency to BEFORE the KJV was complied? Or before the reformation? The only acceptable bible for over 1,100 years before the reformation was the Catholic bible - which was also the first bible.
Now, if the Catholic church was moved by the spirit to compile the first bible, does one not have to accept the notion that it must have been a valid, authorized, and sufficient text? If not, then you are saying that God gave us a bible that was corrupt from the start, or that was at least subject to future corruptions. If this is the case, then no denomination can claim an authorized and sufficient bible. Now if the Catholic bible, which was the only bible for over 1,000 years before the reformation, is valid, then certainly you can see that any bible that is reworded, unaccepted by the church, and bearing a truncated OT cannot be considered either authorized or sufficient.
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