English “to be” emboldened in James 1:26 was translated from Greek verb 1510 einai which is predicated upon the grammatical subject performing the verb’s action and the grammatical object receiving the action performed. Both Hebrew and Greek are inflected languages, much different than English where feminine and masculine imply gender. Greek masculine indicates the performer of the verb’s action and feminine indicates the grammatical object receiving the action performed. Greek 846 autos is a generic pronoun that a flesh Greek to English translator translated into the disparate English pronouns “her” “him” “she” “he” “they” “them” “herself” “himself” “themselves” etc. Flesh translators frequently mistranslated singular when it should have been plural exemplified by singular “Deliverer” in Romans 11:26 and “that man” and “him” in Acts 17:31 which are in fact plural Deliverers and those men and them respectively. Greek verb 1510 einai best reflects God’s definition as “thou be” in Romans 2:25 in the context of Romans 2:25-29 and “I am” in Revelation 22:16 in the context of Revelation 22:16-19 and most interestingly as “to be” in Matthew 17:4 in the context of Matthew 16:28-17:1-13 and Mark 9:5 in the context of Mark 9:1-13 and Luke 9:33 in the context of Luke 9:27-36. When Matthew Mark and Luke reiterated the words Peter spoke in Matthew 17:4, Mark 9:5 and Luke 9:33 their gospels would have been hand written in Hebrew then translated into Greek in 325 AD at the behest of the Eastern Roman Emperor Constantine because Greek was the language of the Eastern Roman Empire while Latin was the language of the Western Roman Empire. The Greek verb 1510 einai was translated into English “to be” in Matthew 17:4 Mark 9:5 and Luke 9:33 in 1611 AD. In the aforementioned context, Jesus was the grammatical subject who performed the action of Greek verb 1510 einai and the apostles Peter, James and John were the grammatical objects who Jesus took with him to heaven to witness Jesus, Elijah and Moses in their celestial bodies radiating God’s light. The brilliance of The King James Bible in conjunction with the Strong’s Concordance is that God defines the Old Testament Hebrew and New Testament Greek words for human beings who follow God’s 2Timothy 2:15, 20-21 directive and studies every word in each verse containing either the Old Testament Hebrew or New Testament Greek words you would like God to define for you regardless of what the final King James Bible language is. I do not need money. I do not want to be your grammatical subject. I want to bring God’s will to fruition by showing you God’s process whereby God can define God’s Words for you; one word at a time. No human being can come between you and God unless you allow it.