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Should the reading of "shalt be" be in the bible at Revelation 16:5? Did Theodore Beza simply make this reading up as James White claims? Is this reading a textual emendation, or is there evidence for the reading? Did the KJV translators and the Elzevirs slavishly follow what Beza liked here, rejecting the true reading? This book examines the claims that the Revelation 16:5 reading is an error in the King James Version and should be changed to read "holy." The author is persuaded that after you have read this book, you will not only be convinced of the reading of "shalt be" (Greek esomenos),…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Should the reading of "shalt be" be in the bible at Revelation 16:5? Did Theodore Beza simply make this reading up as James White claims? Is this reading a textual emendation, or is there evidence for the reading? Did the KJV translators and the Elzevirs slavishly follow what Beza liked here, rejecting the true reading? This book examines the claims that the Revelation 16:5 reading is an error in the King James Version and should be changed to read "holy." The author is persuaded that after you have read this book, you will not only be convinced of the reading of "shalt be" (Greek esomenos), but you will see that all of the internal and external evidence point to this reading.
Autorenporträt
Nick Sayers was born in Melbourne Australia, April 13, 1975. He was saved at the age of nineteen. He has since been an avid street preacher having travelled to Papua New Guinea twelve times mostly doing street ministry also many other nations including, Fiji, Indonesia, Philippines, Cambodia, and more recently Pakistan. In 2006 Nick wrote an article in support of the KJV reading of Easter which became popular and was cited by Answers in Genesis and Johnathan Sarfati of Creation Ministries International. The conclusions of the article were supported by D. A. Waite and Jack Moorman. World leading expert on the English language David Crystal also read the article and said that it was good and accurate. Since 2008, he has run the textus-receptus.com website which as of 2019 has had over 44 million page views. The website has thousands of pages of information supporting the Hebrew Masoretic Text and Greek Textus Receptus that underlie the King James Version, and also counteract the false claims against the KJV from modern sceptics, bible agnostics, and cultists. In 2016 he spent one year in Pakistan working on an Urdu bible translation based upon the Textus Receptus completing the New Testament. The work of the Old Testament is continuing. He has been married since 2015 to a Pakistani Christian whose family are involved in bible translation work based upon the traditional text.