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Featured Has the KJV been proven to be based on a superior text?

Discussion in 'Bible Versions & Translations' started by Logos1560, Apr 14, 2021.

  1. Logos1560

    Logos1560 Well-Known Member
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    That claim for the KJV would ignore and avoid the facts concerning the Majority Text. Thus, it does not support the claim made for the KJV when a more consistent majority text is considered. The KJV is based on several varying editions of the Textus Receptus.

    A Majority Text could be regarded as a superior text to the textually-varying Textus Receptus editions with their additions from the Latin Vulgate and with their conjectures introduced by Erasmus and Beza.
     
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  2. atpollard

    atpollard Well-Known Member

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    I agree 100%.
    The critical word being "could", since this is what makes the whole concept of "superior" a subjective one. There is nothing objectively superior about the TR, the CT or the MT. They are overwhelmingly identical for over 98% to 99% of the text with most of the differences falling into the presence or absence of a preposition. So each side is capable of making a credible "subjective" argument for the superiority of its source.

    Thus 200 years this argument has raged with no real progress.

    With respect to the KJV translation, the archaic (Elizabethan) grammar and vocabulary occasionally makes it harder to understand after 400 years of language drift, but it was and is a translation that sounds good when read aloud in public. This was one of the goals of the translation team writing for the lecterns of Anglican Churches rather than home bibles as their primary market. Since I know of people that have come to faith and grown in faith through reading the KJV, clearly the translation is every bit as much the inspired WORD OF GOD as the autographs were and is still used by the Holy Spirit to enlighten men to the mysteries of God. In this respect, it is inferior to no other translation that the Holy Spirit uses in a like manner.


    2 Timothy 3:16-17
    • [TR] πᾶσα γραφὴ θεόπνευστος καὶ ὠφέλιμος πρὸς διδασκαλίαν πρὸς ἔλεγχον, πρὸς ἐπανόρθωσιν πρὸς παιδείαν τὴν ἐν δικαιοσύνῃ ἵνα ἄρτιος ᾖ ὁ τοῦ θεοῦ ἄνθρωπος πρὸς πᾶν ἔργον ἀγαθὸν ἐξηρτισμένος
    • [KJV 1611] All scripture [is] given by inspiration of God, and [is] profitable for doctrine, for reproof, for correction, for instruction in righteousness: That the man of God may be perfect, throughly furnished unto all good works.
    • [RSV 1801] All scripture is inspired by God and profitable for teaching, for reproof, for correction, and for training in righteousness, that the man of God may be complete, equipped for every good work.
    • [ASV 1901] Every scripture inspired of God [is] also profitable for teaching, for reproof, for correction, for instruction which is in righteousness: that the man of God may be complete, furnished completely unto every good work.
    • [NASB 1960] All Scripture is inspired by God and profitable for teaching, for reproof, for correction, for training in righteousness; so that the man of God may be adequate, equipped for every good work.
    • [NIV 1973] All Scripture is God-breathed and is useful for teaching, rebuking, correcting and training in righteousness, so that the servant of God may be thoroughly equipped for every good work.
    • [NLT 1996] All Scripture is inspired by God and is useful to teach us what is true and to make us realize what is wrong in our lives. It corrects us when we are wrong and teaches us to do what is right. God uses it to prepare and equip his people to do every good work.
    • [CSB 2017] All Scripture is inspired by God and is profitable for teaching, for rebuking, for correcting, for training in righteousness, so that the man of God may be complete, equipped for every good work.
    • [MGNT] πᾶσα γραφὴ θεόπνευστος καὶ ὠφέλιμος πρὸς διδασκαλίαν πρὸς ἐλεγμόν πρὸς ἐπανόρθωσιν πρὸς παιδείαν τὴν ἐν δικαιοσύνῃ ἵνα ἄρτιος ᾖ ὁ τοῦ θεοῦ ἄνθρωπος πρὸς πᾶν ἔργον ἀγαθὸν ἐξηρτισμένος
     
    #22 atpollard, Apr 16, 2021
    Last edited: Apr 16, 2021
  3. Logos1560

    Logos1560 Well-Known Member
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    You have it backwards. It is KJV-only reasoning which attempts to pass off mere subjective opinions as objective facts. It is right and proper to challenge KJV-only advocates to prove their own assertions to be true. If KJV-only reasoning is merely subjective preference, they have no sound basis for their many attacks on the preferences of other believers.

    If the claimed "evidence" for KJV-only claims is merely subjective, it would affirm that it cannot and has not been proven to be true.

    How it is incorrect to challenge KJV-only advocates to follow a scriptural truth as stated in the KJV [Prove all things--1 Thess. 5:22a]? Are you suggesting that this scriptural command cannot be obeyed?

    The opening post presented the claimed "objective" evidence that D. A. Waite offered and that would tie in with his superior claim: his claim that the Textus Receptus is supposedly based on 5,210 manuscripts. Since his claim that the TR is based on 5,210 manuscripts is not true, his evidence does not support his subjective conclusion or opinion.

    Are you perhaps improperly taking the brief question that is the title of this thread to misrepresent the entire opening post, which presents more detail and specifics about this KJV-only claim? Only a small number of words can be put in a title so the entire points or case in an opening post cannot always be soundly presented in it.

    You have ignored or dodged the quoted statements made by Waite which would in effect contradict his own argument for the TR and the KJV. You skipped over or dodged the other questions asked in the opening post. Points are presented in the opening post that you have not discussed. One important point was whether Waite in effect contradicted his own claim that the TR is based on 5,210 manuscripts in his other statements that were quoted.
     
    #23 Logos1560, Apr 16, 2021
    Last edited: Apr 16, 2021
  4. Logos1560

    Logos1560 Well-Known Member
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    W. Edward Glenny noted: “The TR has several Greek readings which did not exist before 1516 when Erasmus put them in the Bible, and it also differs from the Majority Text over 1800 times" (Bible Version Debate, p. 51). Charles Lantz asserted: “Erasmus created a number of Greek readings that had never been seen in any manuscript before” (Just One Bible, p. 274). In the fourth edition of his book edited by Edward Miller, Scrivener pointed out that some portions of Erasmus's "self-made version" that are found "in no one known Greek manuscript whatever still cleave to our received text" (Plain Introduction, II, p. 184). In his book about the KJV, F. H. A. Scrivener included a partial list of "places in which the translators of 1611 have apparently followed the Latin Vulgate, mostly after the example of Tyndale, sometimes of Versions later than his, especially of the Rhemish of 1582, whereof the Epistle of the Translators to the Reader speaks so contemptuously" (Authorized Edition, p. 262). John Reumann also maintained that Erasmus “at places actually inserted Greek words found in no Greek manuscripts, translating them himself on the basis of the Latin” (Romance, p. 85). Jan Krans acknowledged: “As is well known, some verses and words in the Greek part of Erasmus’ editions were not derived from Greek manuscripts, but were based on the Vulgate text” (Beyond What is Written, p. 53). Jan Krans asserted: “In Erasmus’ Greek text, a number of readings are adopted that cannot be found in any Greek manuscripts, or at least not in those which Erasmus had at his disposal” (p. 62). Jan Krans maintained that “Erasmus’ text appears as an unsteady bridge between the Byzantine and the Vulgate text, but a bridge nevertheless” (p. 108). Donald Brake noted that “several of his [Erasmus’s] renderings do not appear in any known Greek manuscript” (Visual History of the English Bible, p. 93). In their second edition’s preface, Maurice Robinson and William Pierpont wrote: “Some early printed editions (usually Textus Receptus) and English translations include words or phrases that are not part of the Byzantine Textform” (The New Testament, p. xx). Edward Andrews maintained that “there are some twenty readings in his [Erasmus’] Greek text not found in any Greek manuscript” (Complete Guide to Bible Translation, pp. 132, 324).

    It has not been demonstrated that Erasmus, Stephanus, or Beza collated completely and accurately anything approaching a true majority of Greek NT manuscripts. It also has not been proven that they applied any sound textual measures consistently and justly. The available evidence indicates that the textual editing or textual criticism decisions of Erasmus, Stephanus, and Beza were based on an imperfect, incomplete collation of likely less than fifty Greek NT manuscripts [not of 5,210 manuscripts].
     
  5. Yeshua1

    Yeshua1 Well-Known Member
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    Think both the CT and MT would be superior to the TR, but that all 3 of them would be an accurate representataion of the Originals!
     
  6. Yeshua1

    Yeshua1 Well-Known Member
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    KJVO do not have evidence to support their case from either the Bible nor from textual criticism!
     
  7. 37818

    37818 Well-Known Member

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    Nonsense.
     
  8. Yeshua1

    Yeshua1 Well-Known Member
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    Which point? As the TR is seen as being the weakest of all Greek texts!
     
  9. Conan

    Conan Well-Known Member

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    Not by people in the know. Does it have mistakes? Yes. Is it a critical text? Yes. Did Erasmus occasionally bring in reading from the latin vulgate? Yes. But most of his manuscripts fortunately were of the Byzantine text type. So the majority of the TR is in agreement with the Majority, or Byzantine Text.
    While the Critical Texts correct Erasmus's mistakes, they introduce other mistakes. More than they fixed. I can understand in the 1800's men finding older valuable manuscripts overestimating there value. But by now we should know they they are faulty as well and should not be valued as much.

    All 3 Texts agree
    TR MT NA.
    TR MT verses NA.
    MT NA verses TR.
    TR NA verses MT.
     
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  10. Logos1560

    Logos1560 Well-Known Member
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    Terence D. McLean wrote a brief 90-page book entitled The History of Your Bible proving the King James to be the perfectly preserved words of God. I just read it, and this book fails to prove what its title claims.

    Terence D. McLean asserted: "By the way, prejudiced belief in favor of the King James Bible is just as unacceptable as being prejudiced against it. It is facts we need, not fables or favoritism" (p. 6).

    Terence McLean did not present sufficient facts to prove what he may assume and what he claims.
    Some of what he claims to be facts are not facts.
     
  11. Logos1560

    Logos1560 Well-Known Member
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    Any positive assertion that any Bible translation made after the end of the giving of the New Testament by inspiration of God is inspired would have the burden of proof to prove it. Is it sound to assert a need to prove a negative? It would be a positive assertion that should be proved.

    Thomas Bilson, co-editor of the 1611 KJV, wrote: “We never learned to prove the negative” (Perpetual Government, p. 251).

    Reformer Francis Turretin observed: “The affirmative is bound to prove, not the negative” (Institutes of Elenctic Theology, I, p. 38).

    John A. Broadus wrote: “He who alleges must prove; no man is under obligation to prove a negative” (Treatise on the Preparation and Delivery of Sermons, p. 165). ).
     
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  12. Dave G

    Dave G Well-Known Member

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    Perhaps, but I have a question for you:

    Do your or my assertions carry any more or less weight than anyone else's opinions, short of the Lord's?
    No.

    They are our own personal opinions backed up, ultimately, by no more authority than others who read and post here on this forum.
    It has to me.;)
    It is denied, and quite vigorously, by those who hate the position that we can actually take comfort in a Greek set of texts that are believed by many to be God's preserved ( New Testament ) words for his children...
    A set of texts that agrees with the majority text ( 5,210 differing pieces of Greek manuscripts ) markedly better than the "Critical Text" does.

    That difference has been said to be anywhere from 10 to as much as 15 percentage points better.
     
    #32 Dave G, Apr 17, 2021
    Last edited: Apr 17, 2021
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  13. Dave G

    Dave G Well-Known Member

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    I hold the opposite opinion, having read probably many of the very same books that you have,
    including D.A. Waite's book, "Defending the King James Bible".
    Any evidence that could be presented is widely available for your review.
    But something tells me that you've already reviewed it, and this thread is not intended for people to present evidence, but for you to refute anything that might be presented.
    To me, supporters of the "Critical Text" and most modern English translations have not offered sufficient, sound evidence or proof for their unproven assertion that the KJV is not based on a superior original language text.

    In addition, they do not back up their unproven assumptions that "older-is-better" with sufficient sound evidence, and they assume that just because a Greek manuscript is older than, say, 40 other ones, that its reading should have more weight than the majority.

    They also conclude that a Greek manuscript's age should automatically make its readings of more accuracy than a Latin or Syriac translation of equal ( or even greater ) age...
    or writings from early professing Christians that clearly show certain passages being referred to, when few existing Greek manuscripts do.
    I also have read D.A. Waite's book, and to me he did prove, to my satisfaction, that some of his claims are true...
    In other words, I happen to agree with many of his conclusions, even if many do not.
     
    #33 Dave G, Apr 17, 2021
    Last edited: Apr 17, 2021
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  14. Dave G

    Dave G Well-Known Member

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    I've seen that kind of behavior from those that oppose "KJVO" ( or even "TRO" ), as well.

    For example, James White's book, "The King James Only Controversy", in which he never does answer the really hard questions about the Critical Text and today's translators' use of "Sinaiticus"...which to me should have been burned instead of being used as anything even remotely approaching trustworthiness due to its many obvious corrections and variant readings ( upwards of 2,000 or more ) when compared to just "Vaticanus"... is one example.
    To me there's no point in answering further, as you would probably dismiss those very same answers.
    Yes, it is...
    Just as much as it is to assert the need to prove a positive.

    That said, we will have to agree to disagree.
    I wish you well, as always, Logos.
     
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  15. Logos1560

    Logos1560 Well-Known Member
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    Who has carefully examined and completely collated all those 5,210 Greek manuscripts so that what you claim can accurately be asserted or suggested? What is the direct source for your unsupported claims?

    In a 2019 book, S. Matthew Solomon asserted: “To date, a large number of manuscripts of the New Testament have not been examined in detail” (Hixon, Myths and Mistakes in NT Criticism, p. 173). KJV-only author J. A. Moorman acknowledged that “only a relative few of the 5555 MSS now catalogued have been collated” (When the KJV Departs, p. 17). KJV-only author David Cloud maintained that “the extant Greek manuscripts have never been collated and examined in such a way that a majority text could be determined with any degree of certainty” (Bible Version Question/Answer, p. 207; Faith, p. 692). Does a consistent, just application of David Cloud’s statement suggest that it cannot with any degree of certainty be claimed that all those 5,210 manuscripts agree with the Textus Receptus editions?

    David Cloud claimed that the collations of Hermann von Soden are “the most extensive collation that has ever been made” (Bible Version Question/Answer, p. 207; Faith, p. 692). Clinton Branine also acknowledged that “Von Sodden has done more work for a critical apparatus than anyone else has in this point of time” (Waite, Fundamental Distortions, p. 27). J. A. Moorman suggested that von Soden “provides far more MS information than any other” source and claimed that “von Soden examined more items than anyone before or since” (When the KJV Departs, p. 21).

    If according to some KJV-only authors this more extensive collation of around 400 Greek NT manuscripts is supposedly insufficient evidence to establish the text for a Majority Text, it would indicate or even demonstrate soundly that the actual use of a much smaller number of Greek NT manuscripts (also incompletely and imperfectly collated) would have been insufficient evidence to establish the text of the printed textually-varying editions of the Textus Receptus. That smaller number is evidently fewer than one hundred and perhaps fewer than fifty. There were many textual variations including some significant ones in that smaller number of manuscripts on which the TR editions were actually based.

    I have nowhere advocated or recommended the Critical Text. My point concerned whether the twenty to thirty textually-varying "Textus Receptus" editions can be soundly asserted to be a superior text. I raised the point of a comparison of a text based on fewer than fifty or one hundred manuscripts to a majority text based on a larger number of manuscripts such as 400.
     
    #35 Logos1560, Apr 17, 2021
    Last edited: Apr 17, 2021
  16. Logos1560

    Logos1560 Well-Known Member
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    This thread is intended for people to present evidence for the claim that the KJV is based on a superior text if they assert that the claim is true or proven.

    Another poster (Stratton7) had made this claim in a recent thread (that was on page 7) without offering any proof for it [besides a link to Waite's writing].

    Knowing that that thread would likely be closed while I was at work second shift (since threads are closed after they reach page 7), I started this new thread concerning that poster's claim to see if he would offer evidence for it and back it up.
     
    #36 Logos1560, Apr 17, 2021
    Last edited: Apr 17, 2021
  17. Logos1560

    Logos1560 Well-Known Member
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    Do you ignore the other assertions by Waite that would in effect contradict his own claims concerning a type of text claimed to be supposedly based on 5,210 manuscripts that have not been collated?

    D. A. Waite asserted: “There is no proof whatsoever that Greek manuscripts are genealogically related and in ‘families.’ I agree with Dean John William Burgon who stated that all the Greek manuscripts are like ’orphaned children.’ You don’t know which manuscript goes with which family so how can you classify them as belonging to one another” (Critical Answer to Michael, p. 118). D. A. Waite claimed that “there is no such thing as ’Text type’” (Ibid.). Waite suggested that his readers should buy Burgon’s book and “see the proof that all of the surviving manuscripts are like orphan children with no provable connection with one another and certainly not grouped as ‘Text-types’” (p. 98). Waite asserted: “Each manuscript is a lone and independent document” (p. 50).

    Waite acknowledged that “nobody on this earth has examined all the manuscripts that we have”
    (p. 121). Waite asserted: “There are no such things as ‘families’ of Greek manuscripts” (Fundamental Deception, p. 56). Waite declared: “I do not believe there are any ‘text-types’ of Greek manuscripts, only individual manuscripts” (Bob Jones University’s Errors, p. 11). Waite claimed: “Each manuscript is like an orphaned child with no ability to say where it came from” (p. 41). Waite asserted: “Manuscripts of the Greek language are simply manuscripts. None are related to each other” (Central Seminary Refuted, p. 53). Waite declared: “”Every manuscript is independent of all others,” and Every manuscript stands alone” (Critical Answer to James Price’s, pp. 64, 72).
     
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  18. Logos1560

    Logos1560 Well-Known Member
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    Has anyone ever checked and confirmed the accuracy of these collations of the few Greek manuscripts that underlie TR editions?

    Scrivener suggested that “the degree of accuracy attained in this collation may be estimated from the single instance of the Complutensian, a book printed in very clear type” (Plain Introduction, II, p. 190). Scrivener then indicated that “forty-eight, or one in twelve [of Stephen’s citations of the Complutensian] are false” (p. 190, footnote 1). Samuel Tregelles maintained that “it may be said, that as the Complutensian text is often incorrectly cited in Stephen’s margin, we may conclude that the same thing is true of the MSS which were collated; for it would be remarkable if manuscripts were examined with greater accuracy than a printed book” (Account, p. 31). Smith’s Dictionary maintained that “while only 598 variants of the Complutensian are given, Mill calculates that 700 are omitted” (III, p. 2131). Marvin Vincent asserted: “Of the Complutensian readings many more were omitted than inserted, and the Complutensian text is often cited incorrectly” (History of the Textual Criticism, p. 57). In a note, John Eadie commented: “The margin of the New Testament of Robert Stephens, 1550, is not of great value. He did not print all the various readings which his son Henry had gathered, nor did he fully collate all the sixteen MSS” (English Bible, II, p. 214). Samuel Newth maintained that the manuscripts used by Stephanus were “imperfectly collated” (Lectures, p. 86). Frederic Gardiner claimed that the collation in this edition “is neither complete nor accurate” (Principles, p. 5). Marvin Vincent suggested that “the collation, both of the Complutensian and of the manuscripts was partial and slovenly” (History of the Textual Criticism, p. 57). Marvin Vincent wrote: “The body of manuscript evidence amassed by the Stephens were imperfectly collated in the edition of 1550. Though the authorities stand in the margin, the text is perpetually at variance with the majority of them, and in 119 places, with all of them. No fixed principles regulated the occasional applications of the manuscript readings to the construction of the text” (pp. 63-64). Richard Porson (1759-1808) asserted that “Stephen’s margin is full of mistakes in the readings and numbers of the MSS” (Gentlemen’s Magazine, May, 1789, p. 386; Letters, p. 55). Richard Porson maintained that Stephens “has favored us with only a part of the various readings, (probably less than half) and has frequently set down a reading as from one manuscript which belonged to another” (Letters, pp. 88-89). Charles Hudson reported that the “various readings collated by his son” . . . “are known to be given very inaccurately” (Greek and English Concordance, p. xiv).

    Is the textual apparatus in the 1550 Stephanus TR edition honeycombed with errors?

    Do KJV-only advocates deal adequately with these pertinent facts that the collating of the few Greek NT manuscripts that are the basis for the TR editions was incomplete, imperfect, or slipshod, which could suggest the possibility that some of the TR textual criticism decisions may not have been soundly made?

    How can an edited text based on such imperfect, faulty collating be soundly considered a superior text?
     
  19. Dave G

    Dave G Well-Known Member

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    No one has.
    The best anyone has been able to do is to collate roughly 100 of them;
    Hodges and Farstad's Majority Text is what this is often referred to.

    All other collated Greek texts that are used for translation purposes use far less than this 100, with the so-called "Critical Text" using the least number of them, as far as I am aware.
    However, there are some people who have had access to many more of them ( but not enough to keep them for collation purposes ), and without carefully collating them, those estimates that I indicated were made based on what little time they had to study them.

    That is what my reference was made to.
    Perhaps, perhaps not.
    But the same could be said from the other direction...

    Does a consistent, just application of James White's statement that the newer translations can be trusted, suggest that they actually can...
    Given the marked differences between the TR and the CT?

    Why do many translators prefer it over the TR?
    I agree that this subject needs more study, and that many of the assertions on both sides are largely either speculative or based on what some may feel is right.
    But thus far, my position has not changed.
    When the differing owners of the various Greek manuscripts are willing to allow people to study them and carefully collate them all,
    perhaps we will know for certain what the actual facts are.

    Until then we get opinions that we end up disagreeing over, with no real statistics other than ones based on a very narrow set of collated texts, don't we?
    But as it stands, I trust the Byzantine text types over the Western and Alexandrian.

    Why?
    Call it a hunch.;)
     
    #39 Dave G, Apr 17, 2021
    Last edited: Apr 17, 2021
  20. Dave G

    Dave G Well-Known Member

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    Has anyone ever checked and confirmed the accuracy of these collations of the few Greek manuscripts that underlie the CT editions?
    Is Westcott and Hort's work honeycombed with errors?
    Nestle-Aland's?
    Bruce Metzger's and ( Roman Catholic Cardinal ) Carlo Maria Martini's work?
    Good point.
    But how can the opposite be said?

    Logos, as I see it, you're asking questions that always seem to shed doubts on the TR, but to me you never ask these very same questions about the CT.
    Why not?
     
    #40 Dave G, Apr 17, 2021
    Last edited: Apr 17, 2021
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