![]() It was not through any special merit of her own that she was "highly favored."īut the popes have transformed her into a goddess-level being, exempt from original sin, given an early ticket to heaven (bodily assumption), lobbyist #1 in heaven's politics with constant access to Christ's ear, co-redeemer of mankind, and with divine ability to hear millions of prayers at once and respond appropriately to each. The Bible portrays Mary as just another virgin girl who was especially chosen for the task of bearing Jesus' body. In Isaiah 7:14, "a virgin (una virgen) shall conceive," is changed to the virgin (la virgen). Some changes relate to the turning of Jesus' mother, Mary, into the Virgin Mary goddess of Catholicism. ![]() This shows how the influence of the Vatican began to creep into the Spanish Bibles just as the English versions were beginning to change the same way. Oddly enough, even the older Reina-Valera versions, 18 use "incredulidad" (unbelief). ![]() Other evidence of this pollution appears in Romans 11:30-32 where "did not believe" (no creisteis) and "unbelief" (incredulidad) in the KJV and RVG were changed to "disobedient," (desobedientes) in the RV 1960, LBA and NVI. Both "keep" and "obey" are entirely different from "believe," reinserting salvation by works that Martin Luther and the other fathers of the Reformation fought Rome over. The LBA also uses "keep," (guarda) but the NVI uses "obedece" (obey). ![]() The RV 1960 says "does not keep them" (no las guarda,). In John 12:47 Jesus said that if anyone hear His words and "believe not," KJV, ("no cree" RVG), will be judged. In the Appendix of Emanuel Rodriquez's book, God's Bible in Spanish: How God Preserved His Words in Spanish Through the RVG, he lists several verses where obedience is substituted for believing. One of the main areas of concern by the translators of the Reina-Valera-Gómez Spanish Bible was the shift toward Roman Catholic doctrine found in the Reina-Valera 1960 version and other modern versions such as the Spanish translation of the NIV, the NVI, and the LBA, the Spanish NASB.
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