The Appointed and Angelic Holy Bible
By Prophet Jacob R. Blandford
Part 1:
The Appointed Bible
On the title page of the 1611 Authorized Version we find this phrase...
“Appointed to be read in Churches”
Now compare that phrase with Revelation 22:16...
“I Jesus have sent mine angel to testify unto you these things in the churches.”
If you were to ask me if there was any translation of the holy scriptures available of the face of this earth, yea a truly Holy Bible (not a Bible with holes in it), sent indeed from Jesus and his angel... I would tell you it would be the King James Bible. Therefore, it is surely no coincidence that we find this similarity of phrases found on the title page and in the Book of Revelation. I know an angelic Bible when I see one, and I can follow church history and see that the Holy Spirit and the holy angels were very present and active during the Protestant Reformation. (Also, the holy angels and the Holy Spirit were present and heavily concentrated with Bible-believing Christians all throughout church history: beginning in
¶ The 1611 Holy Bible is that "appointed" Jacobean "law" and "testimony" spoken of in Psalm 78:5 for the house of Israel or the church (Gal. 6:16).
In Jesus Christ’s name, Amen & Amen.
Part 2:
The Angelic Bible
Your Bible (including translations) is suppose to be the word of God, not the words of men (see 1 Thess. 2:13).
Your Bible should be a HOLY Bible (see Rom. 1:2; 2 Tim. 3:15), and you are to receive it as if it was the words of the message from a heavenly and holy angel (see Rev. 1:1, 22:16; Acts 7:53; Gal. 3:19). In the Old Testament, the prophets, Elijah and Zechariah for example spoke through the ministries of angels.
If your Bible isn’t completely infallible, inerrant, supernatural, and miraculous it is not the holy and angelic word of God—it is a depraved imitation produced by men and men’s thinking, not the Holy Ghost. If you cannot receive your Bible as a “high” Bible, you shouldn’t receive it at all.
The phrase “Holy Bible”, “Holy Ghost” (2 Pet. 1:21), and “holy angel” (Acts 10:22) are all similar in the number of letters. “Holy” is the same and has four letters. And “Bible”, “Ghost”, and “angel” all have five letters. A total of nine letters. The Bible is God’s message and an angel is God’s messenger. (see Heb. 1:14, 2:2) See Revelation 1:1, 22:6, 16. See also the “holy place” and “holy crown” from the Book of Exodus. Also “holy water” from Numbers 5:17 (cf. Eph. 5:26).
Also, I believe Elizabethan/Jacobean English is more angelic than contemporary English. I just heard an angel shout “Amen” to that!!!