The Encyclopedia Foundation is based upon stories wrote by Dr. Isaac Asimov, not a religious believer. It may then raise eyebrows then that we intend on preserving
the King James Version of the Holy Bible. On the very first metal
plate. The 13th Edition of the Encyclopedia Britannica, the Harvard
Five Foot Shelf of Knowledge, The Complete Works of William
Shakespeare…and that Bible.
We are including it for several reasons.
One,
it is of vast cultural significance. Those fifty books of the Harvard
Series are. No one questions that. The Complete Works of William
Shakespeare are. No one questions that.
Likewise, obviously the Bible is. Specifically – at least for English speaking Westerners – the King James Version.
But
besides being of cultural significance, we at the Encyclopedia
Foundation are perhaps more aware of its role in history than others.
You see, for a long time, books being so expensive, it was about the
only book a person had. Books were hand wrote, so if you could only
afford one, that was the one to get.
Even when printers got
rolling, books were still expensive. Unless you were rich, one book was
what you’d have, and the Bible was your best bet. Not only for the
religious instruction, but for the moral instruction, the history of it,
the sheer abundance of stories, the proverbs, the adventures, the
political lesson, the teachings of warfare, and guide to political
intrigue, sanitation rules, how to maintain an army camp without
diseases ravaging it…and on and on and on.
It wasn’t gun that let
the Spanish conquer the Aztecs and Incas. It was literacy. The
Spanish could read, they had books – including the Bible. Any educated
man had read that. They had then thousands of years of experience in
warfare and political intrigue.
What did the Incan’s have?
Nothing. Whatever their personal experience was. Whatever stories they
remembered from grandpa. They were hopelessly naïve and educationally
outclassed. And that Bible, regarded by many as some silly religious
book, was actually the prime book that educated those in positions of
power.
Do you want to know how to keep diseases out of a military
camp in the field? Deuteronomy 23:13, “And thou shalt have a paddle
upon thy weapon; and it shall be, when thou wilt ease thyself abroad,
thou shalt dig therewith, and shalt turn back and cover that which
cometh from thee.”
The Spanish knew this. The Incans didn’t.
For those of you busy calling out that diseases killed more Natives than
Spanish steel or books did. True enough. Diseases did kill more.
Pity their armies massed in the hundreds of thousands hadn’t heard of
Moses. If so, they might still be here.
If one could have one
book set, the Encyclopedia Foundation has made clear that it should be
the 13th Edition of (say it with me!) the Encyclopedia Britannica. But
if one could have just one single book with which to start over…well, if
you think about it, then no matter your faith, the Bible would be at
the top of the list. No other book packs so much diversity into it.
As to which “version”, that is so contentious. Everyone has a “version”.
Fortunately
for us, the King James Version is of obvious and unquestioned
historical and cultural significance. So we are spared having to defend
our choice. We pick the historically significant one.
No comments:
Post a Comment