Ok, I should check the Orange Book myself and see what it says about the verses. Clear enough.
Ok, found what I was looking for, in the Orange Book, pages 127-128.
The Orange Book, page-127-128 says
"In proceeding as a workman, there is basic information which must be kept in
mind, the first of which is that no translation or version of the Bible may
properly be called the Word of God.
The Bible from which I have been quoting is called the King James Version.
It is not the King James Translation. If I had a King James translation in my
hands, I would have a Bible that is worth a great deal of money as a collector's
item. Once a translation has been made from an original text, like the Stephens
Text from which the King James was translated, the first copy is called a
translation. When scholars begin to rework the translation in any way, it becomes
a version.
Now, I said that no translation, let alone a version, may properly be called the
Word of God. As far as anybody knows, there are no original texts in existence
today. The oldest dated Biblical manuscript is from 464 AD and written in
Aramaic in Estrangelo script. There are older Aramaic manuscripts written in the
Estrangelo script which predate 464 AD, but these are not Biblical texts.
What students or scholars refer to as 'originals' really date from 464 AD and
later. These manuscripts are not originals--the originals are those which holy
men of God wrote as they were moved by the Holy Spirit. At best, we have copies
of the originals. When I refer to the Word of God, I do not mean a copy or a
translation or a version; I mean that Word of God which was originally given by
revelation to holy men.
Since we have no originals and the oldest manuscripts that we have date back to
the fifth century AD,
how can we get back to the authentic prophecy which was given when holy men of
God spoke?
To get the Word of God out of any translation or out of any version,
we have to compare one word with another word
and one verse with another verse.
We have to study the context of all the verses.
If it is the Word of God, then if cannot have a contradiction
for God cannot contradict Himself.
Error has to be either in the translation or in one's own understanding.
When we get back to that original, God-breathed Word-
which I am confident we can-
then once again we will be able to say with all the authority of the
prophets of old, 'Thus saith the Lord'. "