Jeffrey A. Miller, assistant professor of English at Montclair (N.J.) State University, found more than he bargained for while visiting a rare books library at Cambridge (England) University. Miller acquainted himself with pages of a notebook that had belonged to Samuel Ward, a 17th-century biblical scholar. When he returned home, he discovered the notebook held draft portions of the most enduring English translation of the Bible: the King James Version, which was published in 1611 and named for the newly ascended monarch. The draft is the first of the KJV that can be attributed to a particular translator.
Celebrating our neighbors
Focal verse “Little children, let us love not in word or speech but in deed and truth” (1 John 3:18). Reflection There’s an unwritten rule in rural America—at least in…