Rome,
Ecumenism and the Bible
Here's proof that modern Bible versions
are not designed to make the Bible easier to
understand. Rather, they are designed as a
bridge to bring unity with Rome.
Find out how Satan used people from early
Gnostics through modern text critics
influenced by the Roman Catholic Jesuit
Order, to make all modern Bible translations
agree with the Roman Catholics' Bible.
What is the goal? One world Bible for one
world religion.
In 1881, two scholars named Westcott and
Hort published a revision of the New
Testament that would send shockwaves through
the academic world.
Their new textual theory declared that
the King James Version (which had been
trusted for centuries) was full of errors.
Sacred readings, long cherished by the
faithful, were now declared to be forgeries.
The world was informed that the book, which
had been called the inerrant Word of God,
was in need of correction.
The new theory claimed that recently
recovered manuscripts revealed a truer
version of Scripture. Yet others warned that
these manuscripts were, in fact, the
creation of early Gnostic heretics that had
been rightly abandoned centuries before. Was
the new revision filled with ancient
corruptions?
Follow the story of the Bible's
controversial history into the twentieth
century, as the work of Westcott and Hort
would transform biblical scholarship,
inspire the work of various Bible Societies,
and pave the way for the cause of ecumenical
unity between Evangelical Protestants and
Rome.
Featured experts: Dr. Phil
Stringer, Dr. David Brown, David Daniels,
Dr. D.A. Waite, Dr. Jack Moorman, Dr. Kirk
DiVietro, Dr. H.D. Williams, Dr. Ronald
Cooke & Dr. James R. White.
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