
8 June 2026 Apocrypha, Translation Clarity Nehemiah 8 Memorable Monday
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Title: King James Bible History After 1611, Apocrypha, Translation Clarity Nehemiah 8
This episode of Memorable Monday with Rocky Stevenson Pastor of Benoni Bibe Church continues the historical journey of the King James Bible after its initial publication in 1611. Many readers assume the “1611 King James Version” has remained unchanged, but church history tells a more detailed story involving printing variations, early revisions, and later standardisation—especially the influential 1769 Oxford edition that shaped the text most people read today.
We also explore the presence of the Apocrypha in early King James Bibles and how its inclusion and later omission reflects broader Protestant decisions about the biblical canon. Far from undermining Scripture, these developments highlight how God preserved His Word through careful transmission, printing, and revision across centuries.
Key Scriptures include Nehemiah | 8:8, where God’s Word is translated and explained so that it is understood, and 1 Corinthians | 14:9, which emphasises clarity in communication. These passages frame the biblical principle that Scripture is meant to be understood by God’s people.
The episode then traces the spread of the King James Bible in early America, including the role of the Pilgrims, the American Bible Society (1816), Noah Webster’s 1833 revision, and the later American Standard Version of 1901.
Join us as we consider how Bible translation history reveals both human labour and divine providence, and reflect on how we can read Scripture faithfully and clearly today.
#KingJamesBible
#BibleHistory
#1611KJV
#Apocrypha
#Nehemiah8v8
#1Corinthians14v9
#BibleTranslation
#ChurchHistory
#ReformationBible
#AmericanBibleSociety
#NoahWebster
#AmericanStandardVersion
#BiblicalHermeneutics
#WordOfGod
#ScriptureClarity
This episode of Memorable Monday with Rocky Stevenson Pastor of Benoni Bibe Church continues the historical journey of the King James Bible after its initial publication in 1611. Many readers assume the “1611 King James Version” has remained unchanged, but church history tells a more detailed story involving printing variations, early revisions, and later standardisation—especially the influential 1769 Oxford edition that shaped the text most people read today.
We also explore the presence of the Apocrypha in early King James Bibles and how its inclusion and later omission reflects broader Protestant decisions about the biblical canon. Far from undermining Scripture, these developments highlight how God preserved His Word through careful transmission, printing, and revision across centuries.
Key Scriptures include Nehemiah | 8:8, where God’s Word is translated and explained so that it is understood, and 1 Corinthians | 14:9, which emphasises clarity in communication. These passages frame the biblical principle that Scripture is meant to be understood by God’s people.
The episode then traces the spread of the King James Bible in early America, including the role of the Pilgrims, the American Bible Society (1816), Noah Webster’s 1833 revision, and the later American Standard Version of 1901.
Join us as we consider how Bible translation history reveals both human labour and divine providence, and reflect on how we can read Scripture faithfully and clearly today.
#KingJamesBible
#BibleHistory
#1611KJV
#Apocrypha
#Nehemiah8v8
#1Corinthians14v9
#BibleTranslation
#ChurchHistory
#ReformationBible
#AmericanBibleSociety
#NoahWebster
#AmericanStandardVersion
#BiblicalHermeneutics
#WordOfGod
#ScriptureClarity

