Great Quote from Timothy George

by Oct 26, 2021KJV, Linguistics, Mission4 comments

Timothy George in his Galatians commentary in the NAC:

The fact that this word [Abba] is given here [in Gal 4:6], and also in Rom 8:15, in both Aramaic and Greek indicates the bilingual character of early Christian worship. Throughout the history of the church various Christian groups have attempted to canonize one particular language as the authorized sacred tongue of religious discourse. Some Orthodox Christians have done that with Greek, traditional Roman Catholics with Latin, and certain Protestants with the English of the King James Version. However, the fact that in Jesus Christ there is no longer Jew or Gentile does not mean that we must stop speaking Hebrew/Aramaic or Greek. The Spirit who cries out “Abba, Father” from our hearts enabled the gospel to be heard in many of the world’s languages on the Day of Pentecost. The same Holy Spirit still blesses the translation of the Scriptures into the many diverse languages and dialects of the world today.

Read More 

Two Insights into Dealing with KJV-Onlyism from Samuel James

I’m done addressing KJV-Onlyism at the popular level on December 31, 2024 (with a few little exceptions I mention in my wrap-up video), so I’m clearing out my files—and posting a few scripts that never made it to the channel.     Two insights from a Substack...

A Letter from a Soon-to-Be Former KJV-Only Christian

I’m done addressing KJV-Onlyism at the popular level on December 31, 2024 (with a few little exceptions I mention in my wrap-up video), so I’m clearing out my files—and posting a few scripts that never made it to the channel. I get letters like the one below on a...

Authorized Documentary Freely Available on YouTube!

The Authorized infotainment documentary (emphasis on the -tainment, though I hope the info is good!) is now up on YouTube for free to everyone! This is kinda big! For some time it has been behind a paywall on FaithlifeTV. This project was one of the great privileges...

Review: Why I Preach from the Received Text

Review: Why I Preach from the Received Text

Why I Preach from the Received Text is an anthology of personal testimonies more than it is a collection of careful arguments. It is not intended to be academic, and I see nothing necessarily wrong with that. But it does make countless properly academic claims, and...

Leave a comment.

4 Comments
  1. Omar Schrock

    Ah, this is good! Thanks!

  2. Dr. Priscilla Turner

    Here’s an interesting point that first struck me decades ago. Hebraists have sought in vain for any clear sign of systematic rhyme or metre in Hebrew poetry. Even wordplay such as we find in Is..5 is extremely rare. Poetry differs from prose basically by virtue of the parallelism. This is fully translatable into any known language without any manipulation of the sense.

  3. Ryan Martin

    Also Maranatha in 1 Cor 16:22

  4. dcsj

    Outstanding commentary! (Even though I argue with him. A Lot.)

    Maranatha!
    Don Johnson
    Jer 33.3