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Old 02-28-2007, 01:27 PM   #61
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the UBS text is a 100% Roman Catholic production[/B], which the majority of Protestants, if they knew this, would reject it outright on that basis alone.
Can you please tell us what you mean by "Roman Catholic production"?

More importantly, can you please tell us how you know, as you claim above to do, that "rejecting the UBS text outright" is what the majority of Protestants would do if they came to know that the UBS text is, as you assert, an RC "production"?

Is this claim grounded in fact, or is it just another of your "personal opinions"?

JG
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Old 02-28-2007, 02:00 PM   #62
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Bruce Metzger was a Presbyterian, incidentally. How does that fit into your Catholic conspiracy theory, Nazaroo?
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Old 02-28-2007, 02:02 PM   #63
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tell us how you know, as you claim above to do, that "rejecting the UBS text outright" is what the majority of Protestants would do if they came to know that the UBS text is, as you assert, an RC "production"?
This question partly hinges upon what one defines as 'Protestant'. But lets assume we mean committed hardcore Protestants who are at least educated in the sense of the history of Protestantism and are firmly committed to mainline Protestant doctrine (which is admittedly strongly anti-Catholic by definition and historical fact).

What do hardcore Protestants do, when they discover that the UBS project and modern NT translations are really RC 'stealth' bibles?

They post their views on the internet:

For example, here:

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The Greek text that is used in most Bible seminaries and colleges is produced by the United Bible Societies, an organization composed of more than 100 national Bible societies. We used the third edition when I was in school. Since then a fourth edition has appeared. In Bible school I was not told that the editors of that volume are apostates, but they are. We will consider four of the editors: Carlo Martini, Eugene Nida, Kurt Aland, and Bruce Metzger.

CARLO MARTINI

Jesuit cardinal Carlo Maria Martini (1927- ) is the Roman Catholic Archbishop of Milan. Since 1967, he has been one of the editors of the United Bible Societies Greek New Testament.
His diocese in Europe is the largest in the world, with two thousand priests and five million "laity." He is Professor of New Testament Textual Criticism at the Pontifical Biblical Institute in Rome. He is also President of the Council of European Bishop's Conferences. Time magazine, December 26, 1994, listed him as a possible candidate in line for the papacy. Another Time magazine article reported that Martini brought together a syncretistic convocation of over 100 religious leaders from around the world to promote a new age, one-world religion. In addressing this meeting, Mikhail Gorbachev said, "We need to synthesize a new religion for thinking men that will universalize that religion for the world and lead us into a new age."

EUGENE NIDA

Eugene Nida (1914- ) is the father of the blasphemous dynamic equivalency theory of Bible translation.
Nida was the Executive Secretary of the Translations Department of the United Bible Societies from 1943 to 1980. Though retired, he continues to act as Special Consultant for Translators.

As to his view of biblical inspiration, Nida says, "... God’s revelation involved limitations. ... Biblical revelation is not absolute and all divine revelation is essentially incarnational. ... Even if a truth is given only in words, it has no real validity until it has been translated into life. ... The words are in a sense nothing in and of themselves. ... the word is void unless related to experience" (Nida, Message and Mission, p. 222-228).

The Psalmist did not hold to Nida’s theories about the words of Scripture. He said, "The words of the Lord are pure words..." (Psalm 12:6). Throughout Scripture it is the very words of the Bible which are said to be important, not just the basic meaning. The words ARE something in and of themselves, regardless of whether they are related to anything else. Nida is wrong. The words of the Bible are intrinsically the eternal words of God.

As to the atonement of Jesus Christ, Nida says, "Most scholars, both Protestant and Roman Catholic, interpret the references to the redemption of the believer by Jesus Christ, not as evidence of any commercial transaction by any quid pro quo between Christ and God or between the ‘two natures of God’ (his love and his justice), but as a figure of the ‘cost,’ in terms of suffering" (Eugene Nida and Charles Taber, Theory and Practice, 1969, p. 53). In A Translator’s Handbook on Paul’s Letter to the Romans, Nida (with co-author Barclay Newman) says, "... ‘blood’ is used in this passage [Romans 3:25] in the same way that it is used in a number of other places in the New Testament, that is, to indicate a violent death. ... Although this noun [propitiation] (and its related forms) is sometimes used by pagan writers in the sense of propitiation (that is, an act to appease or placate a god), it is never used this way in the Old Testament."

Nida is wrong. The sacrifice of Christ was not just a figure; it WAS a placation of God, of His holiness and of the righteous demands in His law. Christ’s sacrifice WAS a commercial transaction between Christ and God, and was NOT merely a figure of the cost in terms of suffering. The sacrifice of Calvary was a true sacrifice, and that sacrifice required the offering of blood—not just a violent death as Nida says. Blood is blood and death is death, and we believe that God is wise enough to know which of these words should be used. Had Christ died, for example, by beating, though it would have been a violent death, it would not have atoned for sin because blood is required. Those, like Nida, who tamper with the blood atonement often claim to believe in justification by grace, but they are rendering the Cross ineffective by reinterpreting its meaning. There is no grace without a true propitiation. This word means "satisfaction" and refers to the fact that the sin debt was satisfied by the blood atonement of Christ. The great difference between the heathen concept of propitiating God and that of the Bible is this—the God of the Bible paid the propitiation Himself through His own Sacrifice, whereas the heathen thinks that he can propitiate God through his own human labors and offerings. The fact remains, though, that God did have to be propitiated through the bloody death of His own Son.

Nida is a clever man. He does not openly assault the blood atonement and the doctrine of inspiration as his translator friend Robert Bratcher does. (Bratcher, translator of the Today’s English Version, has co-authored books with Nida.) Nida uses the same words as the Bible believer, but he reinterprets key words and passages such as those above. This is called Neo-orthodoxy. Beware.

BRUCE METZGER

Another of the editors of the United Bible Societies’ Greek New Testament is Bruce Manning Metzger (1914- ). Metzger is George L. Collord Professor of New Testament Language and Literature, Princeton Theological Seminary, and he serves on the board of the American Bible Society. Metzger is the head of the continuing RSV translation committee of the apostate National Council of Churches in the U.S.A. The Revised Standard Version was soundly condemned for its modernism when it first appeared in 1952. Today its chief editor sometimes is invited to speak at Evangelical forums. The RSV hasn’t changed, but Evangelicalism certainly has!

Metzger was the chairman for the Reader’s Digest Condensed Bible and wrote the introductions to each book in this butchered version of the Scriptures. The Preface claims that "Dr. Metzger was actively involved at every stage of the work, from the initial studies on each of the sixty-six books through all the subsequent editorial reviews. The finished condensation has received his full approval." The Condensed Bible removed 40% of the Bible text, including the warning of Revelation 22:18-19! In the introductions to the books of the Reader’s Digest Bible, Metzger questions the authorship, traditional date, and supernatural inspiration of books penned by Moses, Daniel, and Peter, and in many other ways reveals his liberal, unbelieving heart.
http://www.wayoflife.org/fbns/ubstrans.htm

This is a good example of how committed Protestants react when they discover that the UBS text was overseen by a Roman Catholic cardinal, and a group of 'stealth' liberal academics.

Most fundamentalists and KJVOnly people would certainly concur with the basic sentiments expressed on this site.
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Old 02-28-2007, 02:11 PM   #64
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Bruce Metzger was a Presbyterian, incidentally. How does that fit into your Catholic conspiracy theory, Nazaroo?

And Nixon said, "I am not a crook!"

And Bush said, "Saddam has weapons of mass destruction."

But there are plenty of Roman Catholic conspiracy theories to go around, and millions who believe in them. After all, the RC church is one of the wealthiest and most powerful institutions in the world.

Remarkably, I am not the author of any RC conspiracy theories whatever. These were begun long before my time.

I personally don't consider what RC power magnates do a 'conspiracy'. A conspiracy implies covert ops. The RCs are pretty open about their subversion of Protestantism.
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Old 02-28-2007, 02:19 PM   #65
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Even if this were so, why would this make the UBS text wrong?
Speaking scientifically, this would not a priori make the text wrong. What makes it wrong is its content. It is full of amateurish blunders.

And it has a confused mandate and goal.
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Old 02-28-2007, 02:24 PM   #66
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Originally Posted by Nazaroo #64 View Post
I personally don't consider what RC power magnates do a 'conspiracy'. A conspiracy implies covert ops. The RCs are pretty open about their subversion of Protestantism.
I am very interested in your ideas and I would like to subscribe to your newsletter.
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Old 02-28-2007, 02:26 PM   #67
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Originally Posted by Nazaroo View Post
This question partly hinges upon what one defines as 'Protestant'. But lets assume we mean committed hardcore Protestants who are at least educated in the sense of the history of Protestantism and are firmly committed to mainline Protestant doctrine (which is admittedly strongly anti-Catholic by definition and historical fact).

What do hardcore Protestants do, when they discover that the UBS project and modern NT translations are really RC 'stealth' bibles?

They post their views on the internet:

For example, here:



http://www.wayoflife.org/fbns/ubstrans.htm

This is a good example of how committed Protestants react when they discover that the UBS text was overseen by a Roman Catholic cardinal, and a group of 'stealth' liberal academics.

Most fundamentalists and KJVOnly people would certainly concur with the basic sentiments expressed on this site.
This entire post is so self-discrediting that it almost isn't even worth responding to. You start with a "no true Scotsman" fallacy as to what defines a "majority of Protestants" (essentially attempting to define Protestantism as being synonymous with inerrantist, fundamentalist, KJV only dogmatism), you then paste a series of ludicrously polemic and substance-free quotes from an overtly anti-Catholic website and then say hat "most committed Protestants" would agree with it.

In fact, most would not agree with it, despite your fallacious attempt to shrink the definition of "Protestant."
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Old 02-28-2007, 02:29 PM   #68
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Originally Posted by Nazaroo View Post
And Nixon said, "I am not a crook!"

And Bush said, "Saddam has weapons of mass destruction."

But there are plenty of Roman Catholic conspiracy theories to go around, and millions who believe in them. After all, the RC church is one of the wealthiest and most powerful institutions in the world.

Remarkably, I am not the author of any RC conspiracy theories whatever. These were begun long before my time.

I personally don't consider what RC power magnates do a 'conspiracy'. A conspiracy implies covert ops. The RCs are pretty open about their subversion of Protestantism.
Each post you make is more ridiculous than the last. You are suggesting that Bruce Metzger was secretly a Catholic only pretending to be a Presbyterian minister?

Are you a Jack Chick fan, by any chance?
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Old 02-28-2007, 02:40 PM   #69
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Each post you make is more ridiculous than the last. You are suggesting that Bruce Metzger was secretly a Catholic only pretending to be a Presbyterian minister?
Again you insist upon attributing nonsensical 'conspiracy' theories to me. I don't know why. I am not a fundamentalist or KJVonlyist or even a Protestant.

Metzger was openly a liberal academic. His interests of course align strongly with those of RCs, who also oppose Protestant fundamentalism. Why deny it?

Quote:

Are you a Jack Chick fan, by any chance?

Is this productive? or even on-topic?

A 'Jack Chick fan'? Yes. I think his comics are hilarious. I wish I could draw. I am also a 'Simpsons' fan.

But I don't consider Bart the Son of God.

One reason I like the Simpsons is that its funny. In fact, most imported Canadian talent is funny, unlike Americans who aren't funny at all, except when they're trying to be serious.
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Old 02-28-2007, 03:00 PM   #70
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This question partly hinges upon what one defines as 'Protestant'. But lets assume we mean committed hardcore Protestants who are at least educated in the sense of the history of Protestantism and are firmly committed to mainline Protestant doctrine (which is admittedly strongly anti-Catholic by definition and historical fact).
Mainline protestant doctrine such as formulated by Luther, Calvin, Wesley, Zwingli and other major reformers or by Armenians and dispensationalists and creationists?

Quote:
What do hardcore Protestants do, when they discover that the UBS project and modern NT translations are really RC 'stealth' bibles?

They post their views on the internet:
It's interesting to note just who this posting "hardcore protestant" (David Cloud) is and how his views are regarded by those who have the very commitment you speak of.

For Cloud and his ilk, see:

http://www.propadeutic.com/faith/authors/fundamental

For a "hardcore Protestant" review of Cloud, see:

http://www.atruechurch.info/cloud.html


Quote:
This is a good example of how committed Protestants react when they discover that the UBS text was overseen by a Roman Catholic cardinal, and a group of 'stealth' liberal academics.
If this is a good example of how "committed Protestants react to this news, then it's more accurate to label them "Protestants who should be committed". But be that as it may, you've begged the question and cooked the books and poisoned the well in defining only people like Cloud and his ilk as "Protestant", let alone as "committed Protestants", and in labeling Metzger and others as "stealth liberal academics". And that you have to resort to these sort of tactics to make your case, shows how weak it is.

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Most fundamentalists and KJVOnly people would certainly concur with the basic sentiments expressed on this site.
Certainly the KJV only people would. They have to (and note the lies about Metzger they resort to when they do).

But you still haven't demonstrated that most "fundamentalists" would so concur. And even if they did, it does not prove, as you seem to think it does, that what they would concur with is true. (argumentum ad populum).

But curiously, that wasn't your original claim, now, was it?

You claimed that "the majority of Protestants" would reject the USB text if they knew that it was a 100% RC production.

I see now that you are not only changing your tune on the 100% RC point (and NB, you still haven't demonstrated that the USB is an "RC production" of any kind. Did it have the sponsorship of the Curia? Financial support from the Vatican?), but that you've had to limit your definition of "Protestant" to (primarily) Arminianism, extreme fundamentalisim (a recent development within Protestantism) , and creationism in order to "prove" your point about what "Protestants" would do to. Nice equivocation.

Then there's the little irony that the text you do seem to acknowledge (correct me if I am wrong) as the true Greek NT -- the Textus Receptus -- was ultimately the product of a Roman Catholic.

JG
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