Edward Hills KJV Defended
http://holdingfast.net/Canon?blogid=9176&view=post&articleid=Edward-Hills-KJV-Defended&link=1&fldKeywords=&fldAuthor=&fldTopic=0
The late Edward F. Hills (1912-1981) comprehensive work, "The King James Version Defended: A Christian View of the New Testament Manuscripts", presents a compelling argument for the KJV and old tradition. What makes the KJV worth defending is that it is the only translation of the ecclesiastical text (i.e., the textus receptus) other than Young's Literal 2nd edition and Greens. A scholarly yet readable introduction by the late Dr. David P. Letis is worth your time. Hills was a well trained classicist and internationally recognized New Testament text critic who analyzed the problems of modern language translations and Westscott-Hort text criticism methodology. This book is a must-have for any pastor's study.
(PDF - 225 pgs; 4th edition)
This online version is the fourth edition, ISBN: 0-915923-00-9
"First Edition - 1956; Second Edition - 1973; Third Edition - 1979; Fourth Edition - 1984; Reprint - 1988; Reprint - 1993; Reprint - 1996; Reprint - 2000; Fifth Edition - 2006. Copyright 1956, 1973 Edward F. Hills. Copyright 1984 Marjorie J. Hills. Copyright 2006 Anne Hills Brown. In 2005, his daughter (I believe) Anne (Hills) Brown worked on expanded, addtional and revised content for a fifth edition with assistance from Stephen Mourning on scanning & imaging converting the original text book into digital format for printing/editing/revisions." (source: Amazon.com, used paperback copy)
The Aquila Report posts a useful short history of Edward Hill's confessional Presbyterian history, albeit a disinherited one. It is worth reading if you hail from the OPC or CRC.
Table of Contents
Preface
Introduction: Textual criticism and Christian faith
I. God's three-fold revelation of Himself
II. A short history of unbelief
III. A short history of modernism
IV. A Chrstian view of the Biblical text
V. The facts of New Testament textual criticism
VI. Dean Burgon and the traditional New Testament text
VII. The traditional New Testament text
VIII. The textus receptus and the King James version
IX. Christ's holy war with Satan
View In A New Window
http://holdingfast.net/Canon?blogid=9176&url=10&view=post&articleid=Chicago-Statement-Offers-No-Help&link=1&fldKeywords=&fldAuthor=&fldTopic=0
Though the Chicago Statement on Inerrancy has good content, it still fails at a critical point: verbal plenary preservation. Isolating inerrancy to manuscripts no longer in our possessions leaves a gaping hole in the defense. A brother offers a whimsical illustration of this problem.
Blog - 1 page; 2018
http://holdingfast.net/Canon?blogid=9176&url=10&view=post&articleid=Of-Bible-Translations-and-Manuscripts&link=1&fldKeywords=&fldAuthor=&fldTopic=0
There are three key lenses through which any Bible translator must work: selecting the underlying Hebrew and Greek text, selecting a translation approach, and identifying the key purpose for the translation. This study covers: What the Bible Says About Itself; What Reformed Confessions Say About The Bible; Reliability of the Texts; Types of Attacks; How We Got Our Bible; What We Have Today; and Main Issues You Should Focus On.
(Study - 11 pages; 2022 update)
http://holdingfast.net/Canon?blogid=9176&url=10&view=post&articleid=What-Did-God-Promise-to-Preserve&link=1&fldKeywords=&fldAuthor=&fldTopic=0
It's fashionable for theologians to declare Bible passages to be in error, claiming that words and phrases can be harmlessly removed. They also boldly claim God didn't promise to preserve His Word, but just "propositional truth". Others claim this is a conscience issue. Does the Bible directly address any of this? [Hint: yes!]
(Study - 2 pages; 2015)