KJV-ers and the Quran
The recent story of a KJV-only church burning non-KJV Bibles got me thinking about the three main views of how God inspired holy texts:
1. Islam. God spoke through his prophet Muhammad, in Arabic, and Muhammad transcribed God’s words—in Arabic. Translation of the Quran into other languages is discouraged, because the Quran is only considered truly inspired and reliable in Arabic.
2. KJV-Only. Numerous authors penned the 66 books of the Old and New Testaments in Greek and Hebrew. However, it was not until 1,500 years later that God miraculously enabled King James’ clerics to compile and translate manuscripts into an English Bible that is now the only truly inspired and inerrant version available.
3. Classical Evangelical. The Holy Spirit led authors to pen 66 books in Greek and Hebrew—the original manuscripts of which are inspired, inerrant and authoritative. We no longer have any of these original documents, but the thousands of copies of these manuscripts that we do have allow us to reliably translate God’s Word into any language on earth.
Now, which of these two views are most similar?