KJV vs Modern Translations: Comparing the NIV, ESV, NASB, and NLT to the Authorized Version
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Should Christians trust the NIV, ESV, NASB, and NLT, or does the Authorized Version stand apart as the preserved word of God in English?
In KJV vs Modern Translations, David Michael Curtis examines the textual, doctrinal, and practical differences between the King James Version and today’s most popular modern Bible versions. Rather than treating this as a debate over style or reading level, this book argues that the issue reaches far deeper. It is a question of authority, preservation, manuscript tradition, and whether key doctrinal truths are weakened when the text itself changes.
This book contrasts the Byzantine text tradition behind the KJV with the Alexandrian foundation used in many modern translations. It also challenges the idea that newer scholarship automatically produces a purer Bible. Drawing from a topical Bible study approach, the book argues that believers need a stable and complete textual standard if they are to compare Scripture with Scripture and build doctrine from the full counsel of God.
Inside, readers will find summary answers and deeper treatments covering Sola Scriptura, manuscript history, doctrinal implications of textual differences, the limits of human systems of interpretation, and common objections raised against the King James Bible. The result is a direct, unapologetic defense of the Authorized Version for readers who want to test the claims of modern translations against Scripture itself.
This book is written for serious Bible readers, KJV defenders, independent Baptists, house church believers, and anyone wrestling with the modern Bible version debate.