(1555-1626)
Chairman of the Old Testament committee at Westminster who was
conversant in fifteen languages. It was said that whenever the godly
Lancelot was near, King James "desisted from mirth and frivolity in
his presence."
Astruc, Jean (1684-1766) Roman Catholic
physician and textual critic who developed the theory that the Pentateuch
was authored by at least two different men, neither of whom was Moses.
Bede, the Venerable (673-735) British scholar
known as "The Father of English Church History," who crowned his
literary career with a deathbed translation of the Gospel of John into
Middle English.
Beza, Theodore (1519-1605) Swiss Reformer,
Greek scholar, and successor to John Calvin. He produced ten editions of
his pro-Textus Receptus Greek New Testament. He was also a major
contributor to the translation committee for the Geneva Bible in
1560.
Bois, John (1560-1643) One of the final editors
for the King James translation who may have been the most accomplished
scholar of them all. As a child, he was reading Hebrew at age five and
writing the same at six. As a student, he corresponded with his teachers
in Greek. As a professor, he taught and studied sixteen hours a day.
During his career, he mastered sixty Greek grammars.
Burgon, Dean John William (1813-1888)
Outstanding conservative scholar of 19th-century Anglicanism, whose
literary works in defense of the A.D. 1611 Authorized Version have never
been refuted. They include: The Revision Revised, The Traditional Text
of the Holy Gospels Vindicated and Established, The Causes of the
Corruption of the Traditional Text of the Holy Gospels, and The
Last Twelve Verses of Mark. Burgons and Scriveners writings
provide a wealth of data in favor of the Greek manuscripts underlying the
King James and opposing the Greek Text the modern ones are based
on. Also see Scrivener and Miller.
Caniplon, Priest Edmund (1540-1581) Former
Protestant who turned Jesuit agent; he was arrested in England for
conspiracy and executed in 1581.
Chrysostom, John (347-407) Bishop of
Constantinople recognized as the first historical personality to refer to
Scripture as "the Bible." Name means "golden-mouthed."
Clement of Alexandria (150-215) Successor to
Pantaenus as headmaster of Alexandrias catechetical school of theology
and philosophy. Among his many doctrinal heresies, Clement believed that
Platos writings were inspired and that the stars should be worshiped.
Origen succeeded him in 202.
Coleridge, Samuel Taylor (1772-1834)
Pro-Vatican poet-philosopher who composed numbers of his works under the
"inspiration" of a lingering opium habit. F.J.A. Hort deeply
valued Coleridge's writings.
Constantine the Great (d. 337) First of
the so-called "Christian" emperors, he commissioned Eusebius of
Caesarea to transcribe fifty new Bibles in the aftermath of the
Diocletian-Galerius persecution. Most scholars believe codices Vaticanus
and Sinaiticus are two of the fifty copies.
Coverdale, Miles (1488-1568) Cambridge scholar
who produced the first complete English Bible printed in 1535, called The
Coverdale Bible. four years later, he completed the Great Bible
(1539). This good man was also a part of the translation committee that
issued the Geneva Bible in 1560.
Diocletian, Emperor Valerius (245-313) Roman
emperor who initiated the tenth and worst of the Imperial persecutions
against organized Christianity (303-313). After only two years of
bloodletting, Diocletian went insane and abdicated his throne. Moving to
Dalmatia, he planted cabbages. The widespread incineration of Holy
Scripture carried on by Diocletian's successor-nephew, Galerius,
prompted Constantine to later procure fifty new Bibles for his realm.
Edward VI, King (1537-1553) Pious son of
England's Henry VIII (by the Protestant Jane Seymour), whose brief reign
of six years was characterized by an unprecedented proliferation of Bibles
throughout the land.
Ellicott, Bishop Charles John (1819-1905)
Chairman of the British New Testament Revision Committee (1871-1881), he
sided with Westcott and Hort in their undermining of the King James Bible.
Elzevir, Bonaventure (c.1546-1617) Dutch
printer, whose Leiden publishing house produced seven editions of the
Greek New Testament between 1624-1787. His 1633 second edition introduced
the term, Textus Receptus, in the preface with the words, "Textum
Ab Omnibus receiptum"meaning "You have therefore the text
now received by all."
Erasmus, Desiderius (1469-1536) Dutch
intellectual known as the "journalist of scholarship" credited
with producing the worlds first printed Greek New Testament. His
decided preference for the readings of the Textus Receptus over
those of Codex Vaticanus (as supplied to him by the Catholic
Seplveda) produced an outstanding Greek Text. Unfortunately, he later
later rejected the Reformers and remained with Catholicism.
Eusebius of Caesarea (260-340) Catholic
churchman and close friend of Emperor Constantine, who told him to procure
fifty new Bibles in the wake of Diocletian's decade-long persecution.
Many believe codices Vaticanus and Sinaiticus are two of these
fifty copies.
Fawkes, Guy (1570-1606) Catholic soldier of
fortune caught superintending thirty-six barrels of gunpowder in the
basement of Parliament only hours before the convening of that assembly.
Executed in 1606, the would-be assassin of James I continues to be burned
in effigy each Guy Fawkes Day in Britain.
Garnet, Priest Henry (1555-1606) Superior
general of the Jesuit House in England who was hanged, drawn, and
quartered for his role in the foiled Gunpowder Plot of 1605.
Hort, Fenton John Anthony (1828-1892)
Pro-Catholic, pro-atheist, and demon-guided Cambridge professor who joined
Brooke Westcott in producing a Greek New Testament built upon the Codex
Vaticanus. During the ensuing Revision Committee of 1871-1881, Dr.
Hort took the lead in cramming this corrupt text down the throats of his
fellow committee members. The end result was the Revised Version New
Testament of 1881.
Ignatius de Loyola (1491-1556) Fanatical
founder of The Society of Jesus (more commonly known as the
Jesuits) in 1534. The avowed purpose of his mission was to recapture
Europe for the pope.
Irenaeus (130-200) Bishop of Lyons and
one of several Ante-Nicene "fathers" whose extant writings
contain quotations from Mark 16:9-20. He cites Mark 16:19 in his polemical
treatise entitled Irenaeus Against Heresies, penned in
approximately A.D. 177. (over a century and a half before Vaticanus
and Sinaiticus).
James I, King (1566-1625) Formerly James VI of
Scotland (through the Catholic, Mary, Queen of Scots), his English reign
was distinguished by the authorized translation of the Bible which bears
his name.
Jerome (342-42O) Catholic scholar who produced
the Latin Vulgate, by "revising" the Itala version (Old Latin)
according to the readings of Codex Vaticanus.
Keble, John (1792-1866) Professor of Poetry at
Oxford and co-laborer with E.B. Pusey in the pro-Vatican Oxford Movement.
This pro-Catholic exercised a strong influence on Dr. Westcott.
Lucian of Antioch (250-312) The
purported catalyst behind Dr. Hort's unfounded conjecture regarding an
empire-wide sanction of the Textus Receptus readings at two church
councils between A.D. 250-350 at Antioch. Hort contended that all the
Majority Text readings were merely many copies later made of Lucians
copy. But there was no evidence of this.
Luther, Martin (1483-1546) Father of the
European Reformation who employed Erasmus second edition Greek text for
his epochal German translation of the Bible (1522-1534). He also provided
the protection and encouragement for the exiled William Tyndale to print
and smuggle into England his first 3,000 English New Testaments in 1525.
Mabillon, Priest Jean (1632-1707) Benedictine
priest whose work, Latin Paleography in Official Documents, helped
lay the earliest foundations of modern textual criticism.
Marcion, the Heretic (d. 160) Ancient
enemy of the church known for his repeated verbal attacks on the New
Testament Scriptures.
Mary, Queen (1516-1558) Also known as Bloody
Mary. Fanatical Catholic daughter of Henry VIII (by Catherine of Aragon),
whose five-year reign of terror caused the deaths of over three hundred
English Christians, including John Rogers, John Hooper, Hugh Latimer,
Nicholas Ridley, and Thomas Cranmer.
Matthew, Thomas see Rogers, John.
Miller, Edward (19th century) Faithful
friend and editorial assistant to Dean John William Burgon. His own
literary works include A Guide to the Textual Criticism of the New
Testament. Also see Burgon.
Nestle, Eberhard (1851-1913) German scholar
whose initial Greek New Testament of 1898 has undergone twenty-six
editions to date. Used in the majority of modern Bible colleges and
seminaries, the Nestles text is basically identical to the text of
Westcott and Hort.
Newman, Cardinal John Henry (1801-1890)
Early leader within the Oxford Movement whose Tract 90 (written in
1841) evoked a major controversy for attempting to interpret the Church of
England's 39 Articles as consistent with Catholicism. This apostate
Anglican revealed his true pro-Vatican sympathies by converting to Rome in
1845. Seven years later, Dr. Westcott wrote: "and him I all but
worship." Newman was rewarded with a Cardinals hat in 1879.
Origen, Adamantius (185-254) Onetime headmaster
of Alexandria's catechetical school of theology and philosophy. Hailed
as the church's first textual critic, this apostate denied many
Christian beliefs and believed the stars were living creatures in
possession of souls for which Christ died. After his Alexandrian
excommunication for castrating himself, Origen took his mutilated
manuscripts and migrated to Caesarea, where he set up another school. At
the time of his death in A.D. 254, he bequeathed his library to his
favorite pupil, Pamphilus. Upon his own death in 309, Pamphilus passed the
corrupted readings of Origen on to Eusebius, a close friend of
Constantine.
Pamphilus (240-309) Little-known personality
representing the central link between the corrupting hand of Origen and
modern English Bibles. Before his death in 254, Origen passed his
contaminated manuscripts and leadership of his catechetical school on to
his favored pupil, Pamphilus. Upon his own death in 309, Pamphilus did the
same with the church historian, Eusebius. With his charge from Constantine
to produce fifty new Bibles, Eusebius would have naturally directed his
scribes to employ the readings of Origen as their exemplar. See Origen.
Pantaenus (d. 190) The first supposedly
Christian headmaster of Alexandria's catechetical school of theology and
philosophy, referred to by Clement as "the deepest Gnostic."
Philo (20 B.C.-A.D. 50 ) Apostate Jewish
intellectual who founded Alexandria's infamous catechetical school of
science, theology, and philosophy. He is also credited with pioneering the
allegorical mode of hermeneutics.
Plato (c. 428-348) Pagan Greek philosopher who
was revered by Clement of Alexandria, Origin, Westcott, and Hort.
Pusey, Edward Bouverie (1800-1882) Apostate
leader of the pro-Vatican Oxford Movement; he exerted considerable
influence over Westcott.
Rainolds, John (1549-1607) Leader of the
four-man Puritan delegation, at Hampton Court, who specifically asked King
James for a new English Bible. On the translation committee, he died
before the project was completed.
Rogers, John (1500-1555) Tyndale's
faithful assistant who incorporated his masters "dungeon
works" of Joshua through 2 Chronicles (translated while in prison)
into his own translation under the pseudonym of Thomas Matthew. Rogers was
the first of Bloody Mary's victims, being burned at the stake in the
presence of his wife and eleven children.
Schaff, Philip (1819-1893) Ecumenical church
historian and professor at the apostate Union Theological Seminary,
selected by the English Revision Committee to chair their American
advisory board.
Scofield, Cyrus Ingerson (1843-1921) Civil War
veteran and accomplished attorney led to Christ by Y.M.C.A. soul winner,
Thomas McPheeters. With the financial backing of John T. Pirie, Scofield
published his famous reference Bible in 1909, which is heavily slanted
toward wrong doctrines. The New Scofield Reference Bible, released in 1967
while claiming to be based on the Majority Text, was translated from the
Nestle-Aland Text.
Scrivener, Prebendary Frederick H.A. (1813-1891)
Conservative Anglican scholar who continually opposed Hort throughout
the decade of work done by the Revision Committee of 1871-1881, in
preparation for the English Revised Version. Scrivener, an earnest Greek
scholar, believed only the Textus Receptus readings should be used.
His literary works include A Plain Introduction to the Criticism of the
New Testament for the Use of the Biblical Student and The
Authorized Edition of the Bible (1611): Its Subsequent Reprints and Modern
Representatives. Also see "Burgon."
Semler, Johann Salomo (1725-1791) One of the
earliest of the German theologians to apply the liberal critico-historical
method of "scientific" Bible study to Scripture.
Seplveda (16th century) Catholic scholar
cited by Tregelles for his correspondence with Erasmus over the purported
merits of Codex Vaticanus. Erasmus rejected the counsel and only used the
Majority Text, in the preparation of His Greek Text.
Simon, Priest Richard (1638-1712)
Catholic priest credited with being the founder of Old Testament
criticism. Simon rejected the traditional Mosaic authorship of Genesis
through Deuteronomy.
Smith, Miles (1554-1624) King James
translator who was selected to be on the final review board. He was
appointed to write the new Bibles preface, entitled The Translators
to the Reader.
Smith, Vance (19th century) Pastor of St.
Saviour's Gate Unitarian Church. His participation in the
Revision Committee of 1871-1881 evoked bitter controversy, especially with
regard to the role he played in removing the word, God, from 1
Timothy 3:16. This apostate worked closely with Westcott and Hort, in
controlling the translation of the English Revised Version.
Stanley, Dean Arthur Penrhyn (1815-1881)
Ecumenical Dean of Westminster who created a stir by inviting the
Unitarian Vance Smith to the Revision Committee Communion service of 1871.
He also made an unsuccessful bid to convert the Abbey into a national
shrine for all faiths. As early as 1848, Westcott wrote admiringly of him.
Stephenus, Robert (1503-1559) Also known as
Robert Estienne or Robert Stephen. French scholar and printer who, after
the death of Erasmus, published four editions of the Greek New Testament
in 1546, 1549, 1550, and 1551.
Tertullian (160-225) Ante-Nicene
"father" whose treatise On Persecution Against Heretics (A.D.
208) makes reference to the Apostles autographs (original writings) as
being extant in his day.
Tischendorf, Count Constantin (1815-1874)
German textual critic who discovered the Codex Sinaiticus at St. Catherine's
Monastery in 1844.
Tregelles, Samuel Prideaux (1813-1875) English
scholar who spent forty-two hours examining the Codex Vaticanus. His
own Greek New Testament, published in 1870, was decidedly anti-Receptus.
Tyndale, William (1494-1536) British scholar
who had a fabulous grasp of foreign languages and gave his beloved
countrymen their first printed English New Testament in 1525. Betrayed by
a Catholic agent, named Henry Phillips, Tyndale was thrown into a dungeon
and was strangled and burned at Vilvorde, Belgium. His last words were the
prayer, "Open the King of England's eyes." With 90 percent of
the Tyndale New Testament preserved in our Authorized Version, the pioneer
translator has been duly honored as the "Father of the English
Bible." As this book will reveal, Tyndale was the most important
English translator in all history!
Westcott, Brooke Foss (1825-1901) Liberal
Anglican scholar who conspired with Fenton Hort from 1853-1871, to produce
a radical Greek New Testament that is primarily based on the Codex
Vaticanus. Their corrupt Greek Text was used by the English
Revision Committee of 1871-1881; this produced the English Revised Version
New Testament of 1881.
Wiseman, Cardinal Nicholas Patrick Stephen (1802-1865)
Rector of the Vatican's English College at Rome from 1828-1840.
He returned to England, to become Archbishop of Westminster and a cardinal
in 1850. Among the hundreds of English Protestants who were secretly
weaned back to Catholicism by this persuasive papist were Prime Minister
William Gladstone, Archbishop Richard Chevenix Trench, and John Henry
Newman.
Wycliffe, John (1330-1384) English
Patriot and Reformer, known as "The Morning Star of the
Reformation" for producing the first entire Bible in English
(although translated from the Latin Vulgate, since he had no other sources
to work from). The one-hour rental fee for a hand-copied Wycliffe Bible
was an entire load of hay. Despised by the Pope, Wycliffe's body was
eventually unearthed and burned.