Misquoting theological texts has been going on at least since the days
of the Apostles, if we can make that inference from that New Testament
verse to the effect that some were "wresting Scriptures to their own
destruction." 

As others have said, if intentional, it is dishonest at best. If not
intentional, well, the author is laboring under a misapprehension. 

What are you using it for, Lisa? Perhaps the simplest thing is to state
clearly what the original preacher intended to say and how he made the
case. If the author is relevant, and it's necessary, you can explain how
he misconstrued it. And, if you have further evidence, perhaps you can
offer explanation or theory as to why he misconstrued it -- if that's
relevant to your purpose.

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Behalf Of Lisa Gielczyk (TCP)
Sent: Tuesday, December 04, 2007 3:53 PM
To: Dick Margulis
Cc: email
Subject: Re: [TCP] quotes misquoted in articles

Thanks! I appreciate all the responses. In this case, the speaker has
been dead for many years, and the sermon is in the public domain. But
the author of the article is trying to convince the reader of a point,
and appears to be manipulating the deceased speaker's words to make his
point at all costs.



On Dec 4, 2007 3:00 PM, Dick Margulis <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> Lisa Gielczyk (TCP) wrote:
> > It's a theology article. Someone is quoting a sermon out of context,

> > making it look like the speaker was making one theological point 
> > when, in context, he was making a different theological point.
> >
> >
>
> That's a violation of copyright law. The speaker has an inherent 
> copyright in his original words. Misappropriating them this was is a 
> violation. If the preacher (even now) were to register the copyright 
> with the Library of Congress, he or she could find a lawyer who would 
> be happy to sue the pants off the person doing the misquoting.
>
>
>
>
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