The Bible warns that there would be those who would corrupt the word of God (2nd Corinthians 2:17) and handle it deceitfully (2nd Corinthians 4:2). There would arise false gospels with false epistles (2nd Thessalonians 2:2), along with false prophets and teachers who would not only bring in damnable heresies but would seek to make merchandise of the true believer through their own feigned words (2 Peter 2:1-3).
Westcott and Hort were responsible for the greatest feat in textual criticism. They were responsible for replacing the Universal Text of the Authorized Version with the Local Text of Egypt, and the Roman Catholic Church. Both Westcott and Hort were known to have resented the preeminence given to the Authorized Version and its underlying Greek Text. They had been deceived into believing that the Roman Catholic manuscripts, Vaticanus and Aleph, were better because they were older. This they believed, even though Hort admitted that the Antiochian or Universal Text was equal in antiquity.
Hort said: "The fundamental Text of late extant Greek MSS generally is beyond all question identical with the dominant Antiochian or Graeco-Syrian Text of the second half of the 4th century." (Hort, The Factor of Genealogy, page 92—as cited by Burgon, Revision Revised, page 257).
Brooke Foss Westcott (1825-1901) and Fenton John Anthony Hort (1828-1892) produced a Greek New Testament in 1881 based on the findings of Tischendorf. They also developed a theory of textual criticism that underlay their Greek N.T. and several other Greek N.T. such as Nestle's text and the United Bible Society's text. Westcott and Hort believed the Greek text that underlies the K.J.V. was perverse and corrupt. Hort called the Textus Receptus vile and villainous (Life and Letters of Fenton John Anthony Hort, Vol. I, p.211).
Here's what Westcott and Hort said about the Scriptures: "I reject the word infallibility of Holy Scriptures overwhelmingly." (Westcott, The Life and Letters of Brook Foss Westcott, Vol. I, p.207). "Our Bible as well as our Faith is a mere compromise." (Westcott, On the Canon of the New Testament, p. vii).
"Evangelicals seem to me perverted. . .There are, I fear, still more serious differences between us on the subject of authority, especially the authority of the Bible." (Hort, The Life and Letters of Fenton John Anthony Hort, Vol. I, p.400)
Concerning Hell: Westcott wrote, "(Hell is) not the place of punishment of the guilty, (it is) the common abode of departed spirits." (Westcott, Historic Faith, pp.77-78).
Hort wrote, "We have no sure knowledge of future punishment, and the word eternal has a far higher meaning." (Hort, Life and Letters, Vol. I, p.149).
Concerning Creation:
Westcott wrote, "No one now, I suppose, holds that the first three chapters of Genesis, for example, give a literal history. I could never understand how anyone reading them with open eyes could think they did." (Westcott, cited from Which Bible? Page 191).
Hort wrote, "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..... My feeling is strong that the theory is unanswerable." (Hort, cited from Which Bible? p. 189)
Hort said, "Now if there be a devil, he cannot merely bear a corrupted and marred image of God; he must be wholly evil, his name evil, his every energy and act evil. Would it not be a violation of the divine attributes for the Word to be actively the support of such a nature as that?"
Hort also shrank from the belief in a literal, eternal hell. He said, "I think Maurice's letter to me sufficiently showed that we have no sure knowledge respecting the duration of future punishment, and that the word eternal has a far higher meaning than the merely material one of excessively long duration; extinction always grates against my mind as something impossible.
There was also his rejection of Christ's atoning death for the sins of all mankind. Hort wrote, "The fact is, I do not see how God's justice can be satisfied without every man's suffering in his own person the full penalty for his sins." 103
He also considered the teachings of Christs atonement as heresy! "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." 104
The fact is, that Hort believed Satan more worthy of accepting Christ's payment for sins than the Father. He said, "I confess I have no repugnance to the primitive doctrine of a ransom paid to Satan, though neither am I prepared to give full assent to it. But I can see no other possible form in which the doctrine of a ransom is at all tenable; anything is better than the notion of a ransom paid to the Father."
There is so much more, but I will stop here.
Westcott and Hort
Exploring the details of Christianity
Moderator: Moderators
-
- Guru
- Posts: 1004
- Joined: Wed Nov 20, 2024 3:37 pm
- Been thanked: 72 times
Return to “Theology, Doctrine, and Dogma”
Jump to
- Information
- ↳ Announcements
- ↳ Comments, Suggestions, and Questions
- ↳ Registration and Login
- Awards
- Debate
- ↳ Christianity and Apologetics
- ↳ Theology, Doctrine, and Dogma
- ↳ Science and Religion
- ↳ Philosophy
- ↳ Politics and Religion
- ↳ Right and Wrong
- ↳ Current Events
- ↳ Religion in Entertainment
- ↳ Non-Christian Religions and Philosophies
- ↳ Religion and Sexuality
- Spotlight
- ↳ Spotlight on Racism
- ↳ Shroud of Turin
- Specialized Debate
- ↳ Book debates
- ↳ Head-to-head
- ↳ H2H Requests
- General Discussion
- ↳ General Chat
- ↳ Questions for a Group
- ↳ Questions About a Belief
- ↳ Putting Our Heads Together
- ↳ Holy Huddle Room
- ↳ Definitions and Explanations
- ↳ Random Ramblings
- Custom Usergroup Discussion
- ↳ Bible Study
- ↳ Islam
- ↳ Science And Technology
- ↳ Around The Camp Fire
- Miscellaneous
- ↳ Probation
- ↳ MPG
- ↳ The Outer Darkness
- ↳ Judaism
- ↳ Catholicism
- ↳ Psychology/Sociology
- ↳ Seminary Students
- ↳ Seminary Life
- ↳ Research Questions/Discussions
- ↳ The LGBTQIA Refuge
- ↳ Many Paths
- ↳ Logics
- ↳ Physical Fitness and Health
- ↳ The A Room
- ↳ Book Club
- ↳ Ethical Dilemmas