answer 1
The DVD doesn't deal with any particular translation such as the KJV...it strictly deals with the efforts and struggles of people like Wycliffe and Tyndale getting the Scriptures into the language of the common person.
answered 1 month, 4 weeks ago

by
busdriver72
Texas
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answer 2
Well, yes, the King James Version was the ONLY English translation for a few centuries. It was only in the 20th century that other translations and versions of the English Bible came to be. What is interesting to me is it is King Henry VIII who was on the English throne when Guttenburg made the printed copies of the Bible widely available. The question that isnot answered in this video is why it's called the King James and not King Henry Version. That needs additional research. But, even more important is the roles of some of the characters who brought the English Bible to even exist. And, there is some discussion of some of the characters in the Protestant Reformation as well. The viewer is introduced to the names of John Wycliffe, John Hus, Martin Luther, William Tyndale, Bishop Tunstle, Henry VIII and his wife, Ann, and the family to whom William Tyndale was the family tutor of some Sir in England (the video names him, but I can't remember it).
answered 7 months ago

by
Edith Biggar
northeast of Boston, MA
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answer 3
They discuss how each Bible came into being. Worth getting.
answered 10 months ago

by
1sweetpea
Saint John, NB, Canada
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answer 4
No, this DVD is actually the story of William Tyndale and the first English Bible Translation from the original texts.
answered 11 months ago

by
CustomerService
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