10 Who can find a virtuous woman? for her price is far above rubies. 11 The heart of her husband doth safely trust in her, so that he shall have no need of spoil. 12 She will do him good and not evil all the days of her life. 13 She seeketh wool, and flax, and worketh willingly with her hands. 14 She is like the merchants' ships; she bringeth her food from afar. 15 She riseth also while it is yet night, and giveth meat to her household, and a portion to her maidens. 16 She considereth a field, and buyeth it: with the fruit of her hands she planteth a vineyard. 17 She girdeth her loins with strength, and strengtheneth her arms. 18 She perceiveth that her merchandise is good: her candle goeth not out by night. 19 She layeth her hands to the spindle, and her hands hold the distaff. 20 She stretcheth out her hand to the poor; yea, she reacheth forth her hands to the needy. 21 She is not afraid of the snow for her household: for all her household are clothed with scarlet. 22 She maketh herself coverings of tapestry; her clothing is silk and purple. 23 Her husband is known in the gates, when he sitteth among the elders of the land. 24 She maketh fine linen, and selleth it; and delivereth girdles unto the merchant. 25 Strength and honour are her clothing; and she shall rejoice in time to come. 26 She openeth her mouth with wisdom; and in her tongue is the law of kindness. 27 She looketh well to the ways of her household, and eateth not the bread of idleness. 28 Her children arise up, and call her blessed; her husband also, and he praiseth her. 29 Many daughters have done virtuously, but thou excellest them all. 30 Favour is deceitful, and beauty is vain: but a woman that feareth the Lord, she shall be praised. 31 Give her of the fruit of her hands; and let her own works praise her in the gates
Proverbs 23:13 - Withhold not correction from the child: for if thou beatest him with the rod, he shall not die.
Colossians 3:21 - Fathers, provoke not your children to anger, lest they be discouraged.
Proverbs 13:24 - He that spareth his rod hateth his son: but he that loveth him chasteneth him betimes.
Proverbs 22:15 - Foolishness is bound in the heart of a child; but the rod of correction shall drive it far from him.
Deuteronomy 6:7 - And thou shalt teach them diligently unto thy children, and shalt talk of them when thou sittest in thine house, and when thou walkest by the way, and when thou liest down, and when thou risest up.
Proverbs 29:17 - Correct thy son, and he shall give thee rest; yea, he shall give delight unto thy soul.
Psalms 127:3-5 - Lo, children are an heritage of the LORD: and the fruit of the womb is his reward.
2 Timothy 3:16 - All scripture is given by inspiration of God, and is profitable for doctrine, for reproof, for correction, for instruction in righteousness:
Proverbs 19:18 - Chasten thy son while there is hope, and let not thy soul spare for his crying.
Psalms 127:3 - Lo, children are an heritage of the LORD: and the fruit of the womb is his reward.
2 Timothy 3:17 - That the man of God may be perfect, throughly furnished unto all good works.
Proverbs 15:5 - A fool despiseth his father's instruction: but he that regardeth reproof is prudent.
1 Peter 2:20 - For what glory is it, if, when ye be buffeted for your faults, ye shall take it patiently? but if, when ye do well, and suffer for it, ye take it patiently, this is acceptable with God.
Jonah 4:11 - And should not I spare Nineveh, that great city, wherein are more than sixscore thousand persons that cannot discern between their right hand and their left hand; and also much cattle?
Leviticus 19:29 - Do not prostitute thy daughter, to cause her to be a whore; lest the land fall to whoredom, and the land become full of wickedness.
Ephesians 6:4 - And, ye fathers, provoke not your children to wrath: but bring them up in the nurture and admonition of the Lord.
John 3:16-17 - For God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have everlasting life.
Is it in a room full of people??(Any special kinds of people?)
Well I guess I want to suggest that there are a million ways to find JOY..
Now your way.. and My way..
Are bound to be different.. but I will offer some suggestions..
But at least admit to yourself.. That you want it..
Look at your town’s website (as well as those of cities and towns
nearby) or stop by city hall to find a list of events going on in the
community, many of which are free. You’ll often be surprised at how many
interesting (and free) activities are going on right now in your area.
Many towns have community sports fields where both youth and adult
sports leagues and activities are regularly going on throughout the
weekend. Stop by, watch a game or two, and if something intrigues you,
look into joining either as a participant or as a volunteer.
Call over some friends.. and haul out one of them old board games,
mostly received as gifts, that we often pull out and play; our closest
friend has a few choice ones as well. Classic games like Monopoly and Pictionary can be great fun, but our favorites are Settlers of Catan, Cartagena, Puerto Rico, and especially Ticket to Ride. (Here are some more board games that are great for groups.) Just dig through the recesses of your closet, find an old board game you haven’t played in ages, and bust it open!
A 101 Goals in 1001 Days
list is an effective way to codify all the things you’d like to
do in one place, so that when you have spare time, you can just turn to
the list and do what’s next on it.
On your money-free weekend, spend some time thinking about
what belongs on this list: your biggest short- and near-term goals, both
personally and professionally. When it’s finished, you’ll be ready to
get started turning your goals into reality.
Take your digital camera out with you and take pictures of anything
you find interesting. Take lots of them, then go home later and see if
you’ve taken anything beautiful and compelling. Great images can lay the
groundwork for homemade greeting cards (yep, keep going downwards for
more on this), nice desktop wallpaper, screensavers, personalized gifts,
or other interesting uses.
Sign up for a free Flickr
account, then upload some of your most interesting pictures to share
with others. Spend the time to title them appropriately, add interesting
captions, and allow them to be used under a Creative Commons Attribution license so your images can be enjoyed by as many people as possible.
Get permission from the city to do this before you try it – ask if you
can block off a street for a block party on a certain date. Then throw
yourself into organizing it. Go door to door, telling people about the
block party, and inviting them to bring something. Ask if they have
tables and/or chairs that can be used for it. Then, on the day of the
party, set out the tables and chairs you borrowed and dig in.
Many cities and colleges have free educational attractions, such as
museums or zoos. Make an effort to enjoy these free attractions.
If your community doesn’t have free zoos or museums, call them and
ask about opportunities for “free to the public” exhibits or “free days”
— many museums open their doors for free or charge “pay what you can”
admission one day a week. You can even ask whether they issue free
passes upon request. Local libraries sometimes loan out museum passes
for the day as well. You’ll often find there are many opportunities to
enjoy museums, zoos, and science centers without any cost at all.
Part outdoor adventure, part treasure hunt, Geocaching — hiking in
search of hidden “caches” you can track by their GPS coordinates — is one of our family’s favorite frugal activities. If you have a GPS device or a smartphone, you don’t need to buy anything else to get started.
Just visit Geocaching.com
and type in your home address (or the address where you plan to be
walking or hiking), and you’ll likely find a few geocaches stashed in
the area. Pick one, add the coordinates to your GPS (or just use the app
on your smartphone), and head out the door, letting your device serve
as a treasure map.
Btw.. All these.. And more are free ideas.. Outside of time and very minor expenses.. you are having fun, making memories and all for free or cheap! NOW GO SEEK IT!
Well what about going to visit a Senior Center (They'd like to be read to, have someone fresh to hear those stories everyone else is tired of hearing..)..
How about a Daycare..(The kid's would love to be read to..)
How about that Teenager who has a new baby.. She might want to take a nap.. Go babysit..
How about the single mom at church.. Does she need someone to come help by running the washer or vacuuming..
What about just paying for the guy behind you's order at McDonald or Tim Horton's..
People are being killed all over the place..Some for religion but some for just stupid stuff..
I know this image says religious persecution.. But this kind of thing happens for many reasons.. Shoot now it is happening over bathrooms!
People are offended by EVERYTHING!
I guess I just wonder where we are headed?
No one loves anyone unless they totally agree with them on every topic, issue, etc..
And I don't know anyone who agrees with anyone on everything.. all the time..
You know that old saying..
“You can please some of the people all of the time, you can please
all of the people some of the time, but you can’t please all of the
people all of the time”.”
Leviticus 19:28 Ye shall not make any cuttings in your flesh for the dead, nor print any marks upon you: I am the LORD.
Leviticus 21:5
They shall not make baldness upon their head, neither shall they shave
off the corner of their beard, nor make any cuttings in their flesh.
In these verses, the Lord prohibits the Israelites from making cuttings
in their flesh as an act of mourning for the dead. Neither were they to
print marks upon themselves. The Jews understood this last commandment
to refer to tattoos. Tattooing was "a custom of the heathen, who used so
to mark himself for idolatry, as much as to say that the tattooed
person was a slave sold to the idol and marked for its service" (Mishneh
Torah, Mada, Hilchoth Abodath Kochabim XII, 11). Although piercing the
body for the sake of decoration is not being referred to here, piercing
is in the same category as making marks on the body and cutting the
flesh.
So it is evident that GOD isn't a fan of cuttings..
Now I ADMIT..
Most people's motivation is Not about worshiping some god.. But what if that's exactly what we are doing?
What if unaware of it.. We are practicing ancient worship rituals to a deity who honestly lost the honor, respect and following of "followers" Century's ago??
I mean you see all these people with tattoos and peircings.. and odd tribal art and signage all over them..
People who will often tell you they don't know what this means or that means.. But they felt like inscribing it on their bodies.. I don't know.. But I kind of wonder how everyone is doing this to be an individual.. but THEY ARE ALL DOING IT!
When they begin making choices that the child in the future may very well regret..
Let me give you an example!
The
little girl looks about 5 or 6. The mother was very happy about her
daughters piercings and gauges.
I didn't know that people were actually
allowed to do this to their child.
Frankly I think doing this, or something like tattoo's etc is just quite simply not my job as a mother.
As a matter of a fact for most intents and purposes it is my job to keep my child from making rash decisions to get things such as this during some childhood choice that I feel they might regret in the future..
You know like a $2000 wrap around tattoo from finger tip to finger tip going up the neck and around the shoulders and down the back and on each arm.
Something that one day might prevent them from getting a job or keeping up momentum from advancing in a company..
Here's an example.. Most fortune 500 companies wouldn't hire someone with this "Artwork" on their body..
There is just some choices that shouldn't be made for a child.. and shouldn't be done until the individual is atleast 21 years old and of a sound mind and able to understand the ramifications of what they are choosing!
There’s been a huge surge of interest in women discipling women in
recent years. Books, conferences, blogs, and podcasts urge us to pray,
study, organize, read, and counsel one another. For some, this seems
like a new development. After all, wasn’t women’s ministry in the past
just jam-making and missionary teas?
Thankfully, that wasn’t the case. Aside from the many godly women who
discipled younger women, there were those who trained and organized
them, transforming whole areas by God’s grace. Ellen Ranyard was one of
them. Despite being recognized by historians and sociologists, this
extraordinary and visionary woman has largely been forgotten
by Christians. As we reflect on how to minister to women today, we
must remember and learn from the past.
Deeply Devoted Messenger
In many ways Ellen Ranyard is a mystery. No biographies have been
devoted to her, and she didn’t write about herself, despite being a
prolific writer. Born in London in 1810, she was raised in a
non-conformist, middle-class home and was converted at the age of 16
through the witness of a friend who took her to distribute Bibles among
the London poor. Ellen later recalled, “She spoke to them, but the
Spirit of God carried the message home to me.” Both girls
caught typhoid on this excursion, and Ellen’s friend died, which left a
great impression on her: “I remembered thinking that the Bible work was
the one work to which I had been called by God, and to which I must keep
faithful.”
The full fruition of this calling took years, however, as Ellen
followed a conventional trajectory first: marrying, rearing children
(two of whom died in their late teens), and supporting others in the
distribution of Bibles. Gradually, her work developed. First, she
published devotional poems. Then she wrote a children’s book about
Scripture and began editing The Bible Society’s journal. When she was
nearly 50, her family moved back to the East End of London, where she’d
grown up.
As in London today, the rich lived close to areas of devastating and
deeply entrenched poverty. And so it didn’t take long for Ellen to see
the needs and begin meeting them. Nineteenth-century literature teems
with smart ladies, baskets on arm, picking their ways through dark and
dirty streets, often rejected by those they sought to help. This
was reality. Many well-to-do ladies visited and distributed charity;
Christians took Bibles as well. But the very poor scorned the rich. They
took the charity gladly, but didn’t respond to the Christian message.
Or they took the Bibles but struggled to apply its message to their
lives.
With God-given perception, Ellen realized a new approach was needed:
working-class women already living in these areas could be gospel
messengers—“the missing link,” as Ellen put it, between wealthy
believers and the struggling masses.
Building an Army
Marian was orphaned at the age of five, and suffered homelessness and
poverty as she grew up. She had, however, been taught to read, and when
a missionary gave her a Bible she put her trust in Christ.
Marian longed to spread the news that saved her. She became Ellen’s
first recruit in an army that would eventually number in the hundreds.
Marian and others like her gained access to some of the most degraded
homes in the darkest areas where the charitable ladies couldn’t—or
wouldn’t—go. Four families lived in one room; drunkenness and violence
were habitual; employment was irregular. Charles Dickens’s tales are
tamer than the true-life stories of women who made a paltry living
collecting the skins of dead cats or picking through rubbish tips for
pennies.
Ellen’s army would sell Bibles in installments, a penny a week for 24
weeks, and did the same with mattresses. They taught mothers to read,
to make soup and to sew, never giving away anything but charging cost
prices. And all the time, they would boldly speak of the Lord Jesus.
Behind these women, who were paid by the charity Ellen established, were
the lady Superintendants, often pastors’ wives, who would access funds
for the worst cases and give direction, training, and Bible teaching.
Ellen’s Best Tool
Rising at 5:00 a.m. every morning to pray before immersing herself in
the detailed administration of her growing organization, the pen was
Ellen’s best tool. Through writing letters, articles, and books she
relentlessly promoted the work, writing not about herself (she often
used the initials L. N. R. rather than her name) but about the workers
and those they helped. Her descriptive writing is energetic and
engaging, full of pathos and clarity.
Ellen’s stories were useful not only to raise funds and motivate
others to service, but to demonstrate God’s grace. The poor women who
responded to the gospel and patiently endured the trials of their
chaotic lives became examples to middle-class readers. While Ellen’s
sentimental stories are often culture-bound and classist, there’s much
we can apply today: the example of women evangelizing and teaching
others; seeing women not as victims but as responsible agents; the bold
application of Scripture for comfort, warning, and direction in all
circumstances; and encountering lives redeemed by the gospel.
Trailblazing Woman
The charity grew and was duplicated in other British cities, as well
as overseas. A nursing branch with its own training school, which lasted
well into the 20th century, was established. Through it all, Ellen’s
mission remained: to see women equipped to minister to women, working
with local church leaders and other parachurch organizations to advance
God’s kingdom through the faithful presentation of God’s Word. In a time
before the word “complementarian” was coined, Ellen lived it.
Women converted through the organization quickly became involved in
hosting prayer meetings and sharing with others. They joined local
churches and began teaching the gospel to their kids and witnessing to
their husbands. Quoting Ellen Mason in her preface to Civilizing Mountain Men,
Ranyard writes: “If you would have (a country) redeemed to the Lord . .
. send women to women and let her teach the ABCs of Christianity, which
is mother’s work the world over.”
At a time when Protestant churches didn’t employ female workers, and
ministry to women tended to occur in formal Sunday school-type settings,
Ellen’s work was trailblazing. Others like Amy Carmichael
followed her pattern, and lives were changed the world over. I love
that this older woman, who had suffered her own tragedies, was used by
God to create something new and beautiful. Ellen Ranyard didn’t
dominate the work, but equipped others to serve, not seeking her own
glory, but Christ’s.
We must remember and learn from her devotion and ambition, her
commitment to the share the gospel and serve the needy, and her
willingness to work with people unlike her and not be known herself.
3 lb Chuck Roast, Cooked and Shredded
1 onion
1 small can diced green chilis
Enchilada sauce
1 cup heavy whipping cream (to preference)
To prepare the Chuck Roast cook roast overnight in crock pot with some chopped onions and 2 cans of organic Beef Broth, 1 can of water, a Fajita packet and a Au Jus packet on LOW overnight.
In the morning shred roast, spoon cooked onion out of sauce and add to the shredded roast, along with the can of diced green chilis.
Warm sauce and add heavy whipping cream.
Assemble Enchiladas to preference:Lay out a tortilla, put the meat in the middle, sprinkle some cheese and approx 1 tablespoon of the sauce. Then roll them up. You could also layer the olives, beans, and rice here too. Place in disposable pans. Sprinkle with Mozzarella and/or Mexican Cheese!
Selfish = Focusing on one’s own needs, wants, desires and pleasures. Not focusing on the needs, wants, desires and pleasures of others. And sometimes this also takes on the form of not even noticing that another has a need that you could meet;Even when that need is obvious to others around you..
Selflessness = Having little to no concern for one’s own needs, wants, desires and pleasures, but showing lots of concern for the needs of others. Sometimes this also becomes like an addiction. Now in the positive way like the bible describes it it can be where your addicted to ministering in others lives.. In the negative way it becomes where you enable others to hurt you, themselves etc.
Here's an example of what I am talking about..
Romans Chapter 15
1 We then that are strong ought to bear the infirmities of the weak, and not to please ourselves.
2 Let every one of us please his neighbour for his good to edification.
3 For even Christ pleased not himself; but, as it is written, The reproaches of them that reproached thee fell on me.
4 For
whatsoever things were written aforetime were written for our learning,
that we through patience and comfort of the scriptures might have hope.
5 Now the God of patience and consolation grant you to be likeminded one toward another according to Christ Jesus:
6 That ye may with one mind and one mouth glorify God, even the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ.
7 Wherefore receive ye one another, as Christ also received us to the glory of God.
And things you do can and do hurt others..
Your choices have consequences!
Why do I say this?
Because someone very near and dear to me is making a lot of very bad choices.
I love this girl.. But she isn't the girl I knew..
She has totally bought into the mentality that if someone isn't beneficial in your life.. that they are expendable.
And she has hacked off relationships that have hurt people..
And at this moment. I don't even know if she will realize inside this decade the HURT she's caused many people..
INCLUDING HERSELF! And to her children also..
My mom was like that.. In some ways..
And sadly I started becoming like that..
And I know it's not easy becoming "selfless"
Selfishness is a mental problem.
And that mental problem is where YOU are the primary focus.
I will speak from my own experience from here on out in this post. When you are someone who has been abused by others.. ESPECIALLY as a young child. You learn to take care of yourself... And yes.. that means you build a wall of selfishness around your heart.. why?
I can hear you out there thinking.. I'd think you'd be more concerned about helping others after a bad experience. But that's not true..
The person who grew up mentally and emotionally abused becomes convinced that no one else cared/cares about them and their needs. Hence they will do what they need above and beyond anything and anyone Else's needs. And it's almost so ingrained that they really can't see it.. It takes a lot of self observation to see how you repeatedly make choices doing things that are incongruous with your normal morality and decisions.. And it is.. It was a choice from a place of brokenness in your life and it is making choices to seek it's own!
What I am suggesting is that you look at where your current life trajectory is heading.. and consider if you really want to go there??
See how your treating others.. See how your family responds to you..
The
only Christians I have run into over the years who REALLY believe in an
infallible Bible are the King James Bible believers. We may not always
agree on what the Biblical texts MEAN, but we all DO agree on what the
Bible text SAYS. Those
in the Bible Babble Buffet Camp don't always agree on what their
varying texts mean either, and they certainly do not agree on what their
contradictory and ever changing texts SAY.
USA Today came out with a very interesting article in 2011 that found
that people who actually READ the Bible, are far more likely to be King
James Bible readers. It's called Bible Readers Prefer King James
Version. You can see the article here. http://usatoday30.usatoday.com/news/religion/2011-04-21-king-james-bible.htm Here
is one quote from this USA Today article - "Although there are two
dozen English-language Bibles in many contemporary translations, the King James Version reigns even more supreme among those who actually read their Bibles:
82% of those who read the Good Book at least once a month rely on the
translation that first brought the Scripture to the English-speaking
masses worldwide."
It is a proven fact that the majority of present day professing
Christians no longer believe that "The Bible" is the infallible words of
God. Among the clergy and seminary students the percentage is in the
90's. See what the polls and professors are saying here - "The Bible
is NOT the infallible words of God." - http://brandplucked.webs.com/thebiblenotinspired.htm
IF
a Christian REALLY believes the Bible is the infallible words of God,
then the "old fashioned language" is not an issue at all. Sure, the King
James Bible has some words that are older or have different meanings
than we may be familiar with. But
people are learning new vocabulary or new meanings to English words all
the time in any field of study, be it sports, biology, the sciences,
mathematics, medicine or just about anything imaginable. If you are
interested in something, you learn the meaning of the words that are
found in this field of interest. Even when you start using the computer
we have to learn some new words or different meanings to words we
already knew - Words like "mouse", IPad, "Kindle", Office, Word,
"paste".
Do we need to "update" the language of the Bible? Usually
it is the bible agnostic crowd that keeps telling us that “The N.T.
was written in Koine Greek” and this somehow proves that bible versions
need to be “updated and revised” and put into modern English and other
languages. But
let’s look at it a different way. Does God see the beginning from the
end? What is the pattern we see Him use in history? Usually the bible
agnostics and unbelievers in the infallibility of ANY Bible tell us we
need to study and learn “the Hebrew and Greek” or “the original
languages” in order to find out what God REALLY said. Right?
Well,
this same God who sees the end from the beginning also knew that the
biblical languages of the never seen by any man alive today and the
forever lost originals would be written in a form of Hebrew and Greek
that are no longer spoken or used today. They are both in a slightly
“archaic” form, yet the native speaking Jews and Greeks today can read
them and understand them. Would
any Bible believing, devout Jew change a single syllable of his
“archaic” Hebrew Bible? Or a believing Orthodox Greek change his “old
fashioned” Textus Receptus New Testament? Of course not; they have too
much respect and reverence for the biblical texts.
I believe it
is the same thing with the English language. God knew that languages
would change over time and that His pure words, as found only in the
King James Bible, would sound slightly “strange, different and old
fashioned”, but this is a good thing. When
people read out of the King James Bible we are immediately struck by
the fact that it reads like NO OTHER BOOK on this earth. It is an OLD
Book that has been around for a good long time, and it speaks God’s
eternal truths to us like no other book or Bible on this earth. The
very way it is written sticks in the mind and makes you think about what
it is saying the way the watered down and dumbed down modern versions
do not. Most
modern versions have more the taste of cardboard than of the sweet
honey of God’s pure words as found in the King James Bible. And it is
the ONLY one seriously believed by thousands even today to be the
complete, inspired and 100% true words of the living God. I’m
always amazed when I hear a college educated person say, "I can’t
understand the King James Bible with all its "thee"s, "ye"s, and other
archaic words."To see why the use of all those "thee"s and "ye"s are far more accurate and should be retained see - http://brandplucked.webs.com/theeandye.htm
In
his book, Answering the Myths on the Bible Version Debate on page 91,
Mr. David Cloud quotes linguistic scholar A.T. Robertson (by no means a
KJB onlyist) who makes this observation about the King James Bible: "No
one today speaks the English of the Authorized Version, or ever did for
that matter, for though, like Shakespeare, it is pure Anglo-Saxon, yet
unlike Shakespeare, IT REPRODUCES TO A REMARKABLE EXTENT THE SPIRIT AND
LANGUAGE OF THE BIBLE." (A Grammar of the Greek New Testament, p. 56). Amazing quote from the Professor of English Literature at Yale University. From
the Introduction to Human Nature in the Bible, August 22, 1922!. "But
the Crowning achievement of those spacious times was the Authorized
Translation of the Bible, which appeared in 1611... The art of English
composition reached its climax in the pages of the Bible... We Anglo-Saxons have a better Bible than the French or the Germans or the Italians or the Spanish; our English translation is even better than the original Hebrew and Greek. There is only way to explain this; I have no theory ...to account for the so-called "inspiration of the Bible," but I am confident that the Authorised Version was inspired. Now as the English-speaking people have the best Bible in the world,
and as it is the most beautiful monument ever erected with the English
alphabet, we ought to make the most of it, for it is an incomparably
rich inheritance, free to all who can read. This means that we ought invariably in the church and on public occasions to use the Authorised Version; all others are inferior. And...it should be used exclusively in private reading. Why make constant companions of the second best, when the best is available?"- William Lyon Phelps, Lampson Professor of English Literature at Yale 1922 PREVIOUS GENERATIONS EDUCATED THE PEOPLE UP TO THE BIBLE, AND THAT IS WHAT WE SHOULD DO TODAY. "Instead
of lowering the Bible to a lowest common denominator, why should we not
educate people to rise to the level required to experience the Bible in
its full richness and exaltation? Instead of expecting the least from
Bible readers, we should expect the most from them. The greatness of the
Bible requires the best, not the least. ... The most difficult of
modern English translations -- the King James -- is used most by
segments of our society that are relatively uneducated as defined by
formal education. ... research has shown repeatedly that people are
capable of rising to surprising and even amazing abilities to read and
master a subject that is important to them. ... Previous generations did
not find the King James Bible, with its theological heaviness, beyond
their comprehension. Nor do readers and congregations who continue to
use the King James translation find it incomprehensible. Neither of my
parents finished grade school, and they learned to understand the King
James Bible from their reading of it and the preaching they heard based
on it. We do not need to assume a theologically inept readership for the
Bible. Furthermore, if modern readers are less adept at theology than
they can and should be, it is the task of the church to educate them,
not to give them Bible translations that will permanently deprive them
of the theological content that is really present in the Bible" (Leland
Ryken, The Word of God in English, pp. 107, 109). THOUGH
THE TERMS "THOU" AND "THINE" HAVE BEEN OUT OF COMMON USAGE OF THE
ENGLISH LANGUAGE FOR MORE THAN 400 YEARS, IT WAS ONLY A FEW DECADES AGO
THAT PEOPLE STARTED COMPLAINING ABOUT IT. One
of the main reasons the modern version promoters tell us we need to get
rid of the King James Bible and buy one of the multiple choice modern
versions is because they say that the old King James Bible is too hard
to understand and it uses "archaic" words. They tell us that people
don't talk like that today (with all those "thee"s and "ye"s) and that
we need something easy to understand. First
of all, let me point out what none of these people are telling you. You
need to know where they are coming from and where they want to take
you. It is a proven fact that not one of them actually believes that ANY
Bible in ANY language IS or ever was the complete, inspired and
infallible words of God. Just
ask them. I have been discussing and debating the King James Bible
issue for years now, and I have never run into a single modern version
user who honestly believes that his particular version IS the infallible
words of God and that when other versions differ from his in either
text or meaning, then the others are wrong and his is right. NOT ONE.
When
you ask them to SHOW you a copy of this "infallible Bible" they seem to
want you to think they actually believe in, most of these people then
begin to backtrack and come out with something like "Well, only the
original Hebrew and Greek are inspired." What
they utterly fail to notice is the obvious FACT that there IS NO "the
original Hebrew and Greek" in existence. They have never seen a single
word of these "original autographs" and have no way of knowing if their
particular flavor of the month bible version (which are always changing
with each new edition to come down the pike) matches their unseen,
unknown and unreadable "the originals" or not. They are bluffing and
they are professing a faith in something that they KNOW does not even
exist!
Furthermore, I always find it amusing and highly ironic
that these same people (Bible agnostics - they don't know for sure what
God may or may not have said) and unbelievers in the infallibility of
ANY Bible end up referring us to "the" Hebrew and "the" Greek. It
should be pointed out that there is no such thing as "the" Hebrew and
much less anything called "the" Greek. There are literally THOUSANDS of
variant readings in both the Hebrew and Greek manuscripts and numerous
very different printed Greek editions are out there in Bible Babblelonia
Land today. I
also find it highly ironic that these same people who complain about
the "hard to understand and archaic language" of the King James Bible,
now want us to learn two very difficult archaic languages that are no
longer spoken today and that are FAR more difficult than anything you
will find in the English text of the King James Bible. Biblical
Hebrew and Greek are very different from modern Hebrew and Greek and no
native speaker talks that way. Don't these people ever stop to think
through their position and what they are actually saying? Where
do these modern Version promoters want to take us? The simple truth is
they want us to become bible agnostics and unbelievers in the
infallibility of the Bible - ANY bible in ANY language - just like they
are.