If you are reading from a King James Version, then yes.
Information on the authorized version of the King James version of the Holy Bible can be found on sites on the web. These include Bible Gateway and AV 1611.
The Bible version that predates the King James Version is the Geneva Bible.
The word "receive" is in the King James Version of the Bible 176 times. It is in 167 verses. Please see the related link below.
King James version of the Bible was completed in 1611.
The King James Version (KJV) Bible was written in 1611.
Yes, King James did not change the Bible when he commissioned the King James Version. Instead, he authorized a new translation of the Bible into English, which became known as the King James Version.
The New International Version of the Bible NIV and the New King James Version of the Bible NKJV.
No, the King James Version of the Bible is not the original version. The original texts of the Bible were written in Hebrew, Aramaic, and Greek, and the King James Version is a translation of those texts into English that was completed in 1611.
The King James Version is a translation of the Bible in English by King James I of England. It is not considered a Catholic version.
The King James version of the Bible was first published in 1611.
There are 783,137 in the King James Version of the Bible. This Bible was translated in the year 1611. There is a more modern English version called the New King James Version.
Before the King James Version, the Bible existed in various translations and versions, including the Latin Vulgate, the Geneva Bible, and the Bishop's Bible.