Would God use rascals like these in the translation or for that matter any of his work?

The new versions come from W&H's contrived text.

First Nazi's, then Perverts and now Heretics as the Fathers of the Modern translations.

http://wayoflife.org/otimothy/tl09000c.htm

Westcott and Hort held a vague or erroneous position on inspiration, revelation, or inerrancy.
Westcott embraced the heresy of the universal Fatherhood of God.
Westcott denies that God had to be propitiated.
Westcott taught that men could be divine in some way.
Westcott espoused evolution in various ways.
Westcott had a heretical theory of man's sinfulness and depravity, believing in man's perfectibility in various ways.
Westcott and Hort failed to affirm the personality of the Devil, calling him only a power.
Westcott and Hort denied that Heaven is a place, speaking of it as a state.
Westcott believed that the redemptive efficacy of Christ's work was to be "found in his whole life" rather than in his death.
Westcott questioned the eternal preexistence of the Lord Jesus Christ.
Westcott and Hort denied the deity of Jesus Christ.
Westcott explained away some of the miracles of Christ.
Westcott and Hort denied or gave a false meaning to the literal, bodily resurrection of Christ.
Westcott and Hort had a false and heretical view of the vicarious, substitutionary sacrifice of the Lord Jesus Christ.

http://www.picknowl.com.au/homepages/rlister/wh/wh.htm

Westcott: "My faith is still wavering. I cannot determine how much we must believe; how much, in fact, is necessarily required of a member of the Church." (Life, Vol.I, p.46).
Westcott: "After leaving the monastery we shaped our course to a little oratory...It is very small, with one kneeling-place; and behind a screen was a 'Pieta' the size of life (i.e. a Virgin and dead Christ)...I could not help thinking on the grandeur of the Romish Church, on her zeal even in error, on her earnestness and self-devotion, which we might, with nobler views and a purer end, strive to imitate. Had I been alone I could have knelt there for hours." (Life, Vol.I, p.81).
Westcott: "All stigmatise him (a Dr. Hampden) as a 'heretic,'...I thought myself that he was grievously in error, but yesterday I read over the selections from his writings which his adversaries make, and in them I found systematically expressed the very strains of thought which I have been endeavouring to trace out for the last two or three years. If he be condemned, what will become of me?" (Life, Vol.I,p.94).
 
Hort: "But the book which has most engaged me is Darwin. Whatever may be thought of it, it is a book that one is proud to be contemporary with. I must work out and examine the argument in more detail, but at present my feeling is strong that the theory is unanswerable." (Life, Vol.I, p.416).
 Hort: "I entirely agree - correcting one word - with what you there say on the Atonement, having for many years believed that "the absolute union of the Christian (or rather, of man) with Christ Himself" is the spiritual truth of which the popular doctrine of substitution is an immoral and material counterfeit...Certainly nothing can be more unscriptural than the modern limiting of Christ's bearing our sins and sufferings to His death; but indeed that is only one aspect of an almost universal heresy." (Life, Vol.I, p.430).
Hort: "I have been persuaded for many years that Mary-worship and 'Jesus'-worship have very much in common in their causes and their results." (Life, Vol.II, p.50).


Do you Yahoo!?
Yahoo! Search presents - Jib Jab's 'Second Term'

Reply via email to