- Jan 28, 2003
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Mark,
Welcome aboard. Wow, we are getting a lot of interest in manuscripts here. Before we get too far off base, let me summarize my view. I have been saying that the story of the resurrection built up with time, with the earliest record in the epistles looking like a spiritual resurrection as far as I can tell; with the first Mark (through 16:8) saying only that a strange man said the body was missing; and with later books adding in details of a confirmed empty grave and sightings. I had also mentioned that some of this story could have been added in through the middle of the second century, but that is not critical to my case. For some reason, there has been a whole lot of interest in the manuscripts and if the story could have changed in the manuscripts, so off we go.
And we do know that Matthew had little concern to preserve Mark. Instead he took 90% of it with edits, and added content of his own. That is hardly accuracy in handing down the record.
No, that simply is not what scholars mean when they refer to a variant reading. If 500 copies have the same variant reading, then that is one variation, not 500. See The Number of Textual Variants: An Evangelical Miscalculation .
So yes, that was easy to dismiss, but only if you rely on alternative facts.
We do not have a single list from anybody that has all of the books of the New Testament before 367 AD. And that was just the opinion of one man. Later councils starting in 393 AD confirmed this list, but those were always local councils that did not represent all of Christianity. In fact, there never was a council representing all of Christianity that agreed to this list of books. It has just kinda been resolved by fatigue. See
The Formation of the New Testament Canon .
Welcome aboard. Wow, we are getting a lot of interest in manuscripts here. Before we get too far off base, let me summarize my view. I have been saying that the story of the resurrection built up with time, with the earliest record in the epistles looking like a spiritual resurrection as far as I can tell; with the first Mark (through 16:8) saying only that a strange man said the body was missing; and with later books adding in details of a confirmed empty grave and sightings. I had also mentioned that some of this story could have been added in through the middle of the second century, but that is not critical to my case. For some reason, there has been a whole lot of interest in the manuscripts and if the story could have changed in the manuscripts, so off we go.
No, that simply is not true. We have no two manuscripts of any significant length that agree on everything. And there are over 200,000 different variant readings in those manuscripts.Hang on, I'd like to jump in here for this one. Indeed Mark has a questionable ending, not a lot, but there are a couple of passages like that in the New Testament. That doesn't mean we don't know what the originals (autographs) looked like, we have 30,000 extant manuscripts to do not diverge in any significant way.
We don't even know who possessed the scriptures up to the middle of the second century. We have no way to be certain they took proper care in copying them.The New Testament was preserved in a lot the same way as the Old Testament, in fact most manuscripts have a word count with them. That's so you could go through and make sure you didn't add or subtract anything.
And we do know that Matthew had little concern to preserve Mark. Instead he took 90% of it with edits, and added content of his own. That is hardly accuracy in handing down the record.
A pretty typical claim, rather easy to dismiss:
It should be mentioned, however, that the 200,000 textual variants contained in the NT, "represent only 10,000 places in the New Testament. If one single word is misspelled in 3000 manuscripts, this is counted [by Biblical scholars] as 3,000 variants" (Geisler, 1986, p361). For instance, the word "Deid," which we know is "Died" could have appeared in over 3000 manuscripts, which would thus account for 3000 variants out of a total of 200,000 variants. Norman Geisler stated that "Textual scholars Westcott and Hort estimated that only one in sixty of these variants has significance. This would leave a text 98.3% percent pure." This means that out of the total number of variants within the New Testament, the text is 99% accurate and clean from any major doctrinal errors. (The Historical Reliability of the New Testament)
No, that simply is not what scholars mean when they refer to a variant reading. If 500 copies have the same variant reading, then that is one variation, not 500. See The Number of Textual Variants: An Evangelical Miscalculation .
So yes, that was easy to dismiss, but only if you rely on alternative facts.
That simply is not true. Amateurs copied the text from one church to another. Often those who copied were barely literate and didn't even understand what they were copying. See Misquoting Jesus.By and large people have no idea how the New Testament was written, or the Old Testament for that matter. The church would get a copy of a letter from Paul and later other epistles and the gospels, they would make a nearly exact copy and did that for centuries before professional clerics had the means to collect large numbers of scrolls. Text variation is negligible and certainly they didn't accumulate over time. When the Dead Sea Scrolls were discovered the oldest copy of the Masoretic Text (Hebrew Old Testament) was from the tenth century AD. When they finally got around to disclosing what was discovered from the finds it turns out the only differences were normal, negligible text variation after a thousand years.
We have no record of who possessed the copies after the first one left Mark's hands. You are simply guessing what their reliability was.Which is simply not true. John Mark who wrote Mark was a Levite, so was Barnabas and apparently they knew something about how sacred texts were preserved. The early church was Jewish and just as the Jews like having copies of the Law and Prophets on hand the early churches collected scrolls the represented the Apostolic witness.
3rd century! Huh?We didn't have an agreed on canon until the third century but when it was finally decided it was unanimous and the entire church from Syria to Rome was represented.
We do not have a single list from anybody that has all of the books of the New Testament before 367 AD. And that was just the opinion of one man. Later councils starting in 393 AD confirmed this list, but those were always local councils that did not represent all of Christianity. In fact, there never was a council representing all of Christianity that agreed to this list of books. It has just kinda been resolved by fatigue. See
The Formation of the New Testament Canon .
We have been looking a many of them. And here is another one, I John 5:7. It does not appear in a single Greek manuscript before 1500. It says, " For there are three that bear record in heaven, the Father, the Word, and the Holy Ghost: and these three are one." And that is the only place where that important concept is ever expressly mentioned in scripture. It was added to the Greek after 1500 AD.Actually we have no evidence of any changes or alterations other then normal text variation.
And the church was nearly unanimous on the sun orbiting the earth before Copernicus. What does that prove?They usually identify themselves, church tradition was uniform on the subject until about 150 years ago with the rise of modernist naturalistic assumptions dominating all academics.
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