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MULTIVERSIONS ONLYISM
Jeffrey Khoo
King James Onlyism1—a new book by James D
Price of Temple Baptist Seminary—joins the ranks of fundamentalist books
like From the Mind of God to the Mind of Man (1999), One Bible
Only? (2001), and God’s Word in Our Hands (2003), in attacking
the Biblical doctrine of the verbal and plenary preservation (VPP) of the
Holy Scriptures, and the faithful, logical identification of the divinely
preserved texts to be the Hebrew Masoretic Text and the Greek Textus
Receptus on which the King James Version (KJV) is based.2
Price’s Multiversions Onlyism book was printed with the help of
Rev Yap Beng Shin, a Bible-Presbyterian (BP) minister, who earned his MDiv
from Temple Baptist Seminary under Price’s tutelage. Rev Yap was one of
the 11 signatories
of a statement against the VPP of the Holy Scriptures.3
Besides Rev Yap, the other signatories
were Rev Philip Heng, Rev Ong Hock Khee,
Rev Tan Eng Boo, Rev Charles Seet, Rev Colin Wong, Rev Anthony Tan, Rev
Tan Choon Seng, Rev Eric Kwan, Rev Eddy Lim, and Rev Yap Kim Sin. I would
assume that Price’s book is not only recommended by Rev Yap but also these
other BP ministers who stand with him. For those looking for reasons why
the KJV ought to be replaced with modern versions, Price’s book is better
than most.
Price’s involvement in the VPP/TR/KJV debate in Singapore went
as far back as 2002 when he wrote a critique of my paper, “A Plea for a
Perfect Bible."4 His critique was circulated among BP churches
and members, and grossly misrepresented my position on the VPP of
Scriptures by making it purely a translational (English and KJV) issue
when it was primarily a textual and doctrinal one (100% inspired and 100%
preserved Hebrew, Aramaic and Greek words underlying the faithful and
accurate KJV on the basis of the twin doctrines of the VPI and VPP of the
Holy Scriptures, Ps 12:6-7, Matt 5:18, 24:35 etc). Price’s critique
heightened the confusion among BP members and churches concerning VPP. I
wrote a response to Price’s review of my paper and clarified what I meant
by VPP.5 But Price does not seem to care about accurate and
truthful reporting for he continues to misrepresent and caricature pro-KJV
or KJV-superiority advocates as Ruckmanites and Seventh-Day Adventists (SDA).6
He insinuates that Presbyterian and Harvard scholar Edward F Hills, and
David Otis Fuller, a founding leader of the International Council of
Christian Churches (ICCC), and D A Waite, President of the Dean Burgon
Society believe in the inspiration of the English words of the KJV when
they are actually talking about the inspiration and preservation of the
Hebrew, Aramaic and Greek words on which the KJV is based.7
Such slanders did not begin with Price, but with Doug Kutilek who is
quoted and praised by Price in his book.8 If Hills, Fuller and
Waite are Ruckmanites and SDAs for promoting the KJV as the best and only
faithful English Bible today, then the Trinitarian Bible Society and the
Bible League, which promote and defend the KJV and consider not only the
modern versions but also the NKJV to be unreliable, should be implicated
too. Price unjustly paints with a broad brush, and by so doing creates
confusion and scepticism among the believers.
Anyone reading Price’s anti-KJV book would likely lose
confidence in the KJV and be filled with doubts over the faithfulness and
accuracy of the KJV and its underlying Hebrew and Greek texts. If a
Multiversions Only advocate wishes to discourage a KJV user from using the
KJV, Price’s book might just do the trick. Price spared no effort to show
that the KJV is full of mistakes. A young or undiscerning reader might be
stumbled and deceived, especially if he does not start with Scripture
itself and believe in God’s promise of special providence in preserving
His inspired Hebrew, Aramaic and Greek words on which the KJV is based,
and how the KJV is a faithful and accurate translation of those
providentially preserved Hebrew, Aramaic and Greek words.
According to Price, the KJV is only one version among many good
and even better versions. To him, the use of the KJV should be a matter of
preference and not principle. Price would deem all who affirm the KJV as
“the best, most faithful, most accurate, most beautiful translation of the
Bible in the English language, and employ it alone as [their] primary
scriptural text in the public reading, preaching, and teaching of the
English Bible” to be divisive or schismatic (some even say heretical!).9
Price ought to be reminded that Truth does divide (eg, John
10:19). For instance, the Biblical doctrine that a man can only be saved
by grace alone, through faith alone, in Christ alone, based on Scripture
alone, is surely schismatic and divisive. There are no two ways about it.
Jesus said, “Think not that I am come to send peace on earth: I came not
to send peace, but a sword” (Matt 10:34). This “sword” is a sword of
division or separation. Does Price believe this? Does Price who hails from
a fundamentalist seminary not teach separation from modernism, ecumenism,
charismatism, and neo-evangelicalism? Why is he singing an inclusive,
pluralistic, and syncretistic tune by commending and recommending the use
of ecumenical, liberal, neo-evangelical, and feminist versions of the
Bible which will only compromise and confuse the clear testimony of the
Word of God and the Lord Jesus Christ? It must be said that the KJV, being
a Reformation Bible, is a separatist Bible. No wonder it is so disliked,
even hated, by non- or anti-separatists!
Now, we do not discount the fact that the modern,
neo-evangelical and ecumenical versions which are based on the corrupt
texts and/or use the dynamic equivalence method may contain enough gospel
to convict and convert the sinner (according to God’s election), but this
does not make them the “Word of God.” They may contain the Word of God
like tracts and commentaries do, but they can hardly be regarded as the
very Word of God for they stem from the corrupt text of theological
liberals, Westcott and Hort, who denied the historicity of the first three
chapters of Genesis, the total inerrancy of the Holy Scriptures, and other
fundamental doctrines of the Christian Faith.
Price wants Christians to be uncertain or agnostic about the
precise location of God’s Word. He says, “The Bible, like all other things
in life, has a measure of uncertainty associated with the identity, the
exposition, the interpretation, and the meaning of its text. Sound reason
has shown that this uncertainty provides no practical basis for doubting
the authenticity or authority of Scripture; instead, reason provides the
stepping stone for faith to move beyond uncertainty to full confidence in
God’s Word.”10 In other words, faith must depend on reason
(“the stepping stone for faith”) to give it confidence in God’s Word. Such
a thinking is unbiblical to say the least. Faith does not rest on human
reason at all, but on the Word of God alone (Sola Scriptura). Price
has placed corrupt and imperfect human reason above the incorruptible and
perfect Word of God. He is calling Christians to have faith in human
reason and human methods (eg, textual criticism) for their faith to be
sure, for he reasons that reason can give certainty to faith if only we
have confidence in it. Price who adopts human reason as a superior, or an
equal/additional authority to Scriptures proves the point that reason will
only lead to uncertainty, even unbelief. It goes without saying that
Price’s epistemology is utterly wrongheaded.
Biblical fideism, on the other hand, gives rise to certainty
not to be repented of. The Apostle Peter tells us that our faith and
knowledge must be based on the words of our Lord Jesus Christ, “Lord, to
whom shall we go? thou hast the words of eternal life. And we believe and
are sure that thou art that Christ, the Son of the living God” (John
6:68-69). The Apostle Paul likewise said, “So then faith cometh by
hearing, and hearing by the word of God” (Rom 10:16).The Bible is not
“like other things in life” as Price would have us believe. The Bible is
unique and incomparable; there is nothing like it on earth and God forbid
that we should belittle it by making it subservient to human reason and
methods, and “other things in life.” The Bible is perspicuous and not as
“uncertain” as Price thinks. It is unbelief that makes the perspicuous
Bible uncertain to man, and may we not be unbelieving (John 8:43-47, Mark
16:14, Luke 24:25, 27).
Price’s book rings an uncertain and ungodly sound. It is a
mixed bag of truth and error, facts and falsehoods. For example, he states
truthfully when he says that Hills, Fuller, Waite and Cloud insist on the
Textus Receptus (TR) underlying the KJV as the “providentially preserved
authoritative text of Scripture,” or what he calls “the autographic text.”11
But the next moment he states a falsehood by saying that those men believe
“it is the English words that determine the words of the Hebrew and Greek
texts, not the Hebrew and Greek words that determine the English.”12
By so twisting the doctrine of VPP, he makes the above men look like they
believe in an “inspired KJV,” that the English is superior to the Hebrew
and the Greek, a position none of them advocate. Having painted TR-only
preservationists unfairly with such ugly colours, he then puts his
finishing touches to his distorted picture by making them look like
Ruckman.13 Such a below-the-belt tactic Price had well learned
from Kutilek.14
Price charges the KJV for giving an “uncertain sound” quoting 1
Corinthians 14:8-9, but does not realise that he is guilty of it himself
when he insists that there can be no certainty whatsoever as regards the
identification of the Perfect Word of God today. Where are God’s
infallible and inerrant words today? Well, they are somewhere out there,
but nobody can tell for sure precisely where.15 Without knowing
where God’s infallible and inerrant words are, how can we live by His
every word (Matt 4:4)?
Price is annoyed that preachers should have “to waste time
explaining archaic words, phrases, and idioms.”16 Singapore’s
first chief minister, David Marshall, who had for his English textbook the
KJV, would have scorned at Price’s puerile criticisms of the KJV. There
are only about 200 archaic words in the KJV. These old words comprise only
0.1% of the KJV. The Oxford, Webster, Chambers dictionaries contain
entries for most of these archaic words. The Defined King James Bible
has the meanings of all the archaic words footnoted. They are not that
difficult to look up and learn. Moreover, to be educated with the King’s
English is hardly a waste of time.
Price spurns a One Bible or KJV Only position and advocates a
Modern Versions or Multiple Versions Only position. To Price, every
version has its positive and negative points, and so “it is wrong to
suppose that only one translation is adequate for all purposes.”17
I suppose he would spurn an NIV Only, or NASB Only, or NKJV Only position
as well, but he does not say so explicitly, but one thing is obvious, he
attacks the KJV more than any other version. According to Price’s doctrine
of imperfect preservation, every Bible (including the Hebrew and Greek
Scriptures) contains mistakes. If there is such a thing as a Perfect
Bible, it is only the autographs which no longer exist, or it is in the
sea of multiple manuscripts and versions, every one of them different and
not the same.18 As far as Price is concerned, no one should
presume to know with absolute certainty where the 100% infallible and
inerrant Scripture today is. It may be somewhere out there, but precisely
where, no believer can tell; the only one who can even come close to
telling would be the textual critic, and even then, he cannot be dogmatic
or absolutely sure. There is just no perfect standard to judge anything
today. This logic of Price is the same kind of logic that turned
once-upon-a-time fundamentalist—Bart Ehrman—into an agnostic.19 Where
is the Bible? The Bible is nowhere, and so is God!
This Anti-KJV book of Price would be excellent for those
seeking to (1) oppose the Reformed Faith, the Reformation Text, and the
VPP of Scripture; (2) discourage the use of the faithful and accurate,
time-tested and time-honoured KJV; and (3) push for modern versions to
replace the KJV in the church. Any anti-VPP church which embraces the
anti-KJV views of Price, and sees the use of the KJV as only a matter of
preference and not principle, will ultimately give up the KJV to embrace
the modern versions which are based on corrupted texts. May true and
faithful Protestant, Reformation, and Fundamental believers and churches
beware!
Notes
1 James D Price, King James Onlyism: A New Sect (No
place: No publisher, 2006), i-xii, 1-658.
6 Price, King James Onlyism, 4, 209, 420.
14 “Doug Kutilek, “The Background
and Origin of the Version Debate,” in One Bible Only? ed Roy E
Beacham and Kevin T Bauder (Grand Rapids: Kregel, 2001), 27-56.
15 Price, King James Onlyism, 395-416.
19 Bart D Ehrman, Misquoting Jesus: The Story
Behind Who Changed the Bible and Why (New York: HarperCollins,
2005), 11-12.
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This article is also published
at the website of
The Dean Burgon Society.
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