It depends on what king, of what nation, and at what time. When God allowed Israel its kings in the Old Testament (especially its first three: Saul, David, and Solomon), they were true rulers over the Kingdom of Israel, answerable only to God. When the kingdom became divided into Israel and Judah, weak kings were commonplace and power struggles were frequent. "Foreign" kings in the OT like Nebuchadnezzar, Belshazzar (Babylon) and Shalmaneser (Assyria) held absolute power over their kingdoms. By the time of Christ, the Roman Empire controlled the Holy Land. The Romans (savvy conquerors that they were) allowed conquered states their "kings," provided they remain subservient to Caesar. These kings wielded far less power than those of the OT, and their authority was strictly limited by Roman law. The Herods of the New Testament were such kings.
In the King James versionthe word - authorities - appears oncethe word - authority - appears 37 times
I count 56 times ask where and I can say without being gibberish sorry 56 times
The word 'do' appears 1,271 times in the King James version of the Bible.
King David
King David
In the King James versionthe word - authorities - appears oncethe word - authority - appears 37 times
I count 56 times ask where and I can say without being gibberish sorry 56 times
37
The word 'do' appears 1,271 times in the King James version of the Bible.
King David
King David
350 times in the King James Version of the Bible.
140 times in the King James Version of the Bible
140 times in the King James Version of The Bible
In King James Bible it appears 3323 times.
The words "be not afraid" are in the King James Version of the Bible 26 times. They are in 26 verses.
The Bible was written long before King James. And his version was not originally called the King James Bible.