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Title: Scribal Errors: Can the Bible be Trusted?


1
Scribal Errors Can the Bible be Trusted?
  • A Textual
  • Critical Perspective
  • Presented by
  • Clinton Baldwin
  • 7/23/05

2
x
  • The History of the New Testament Text An
    Overview

3
The Revelations of God
  • Nature Psa 191
  • Human beings/relationships Isa 4915
  • Personal Experience Acts 1727,28
  • The written word 2Tim 316
  • The living word Jesus Christ John 118

4
Jesus the Greatest Revelation of God
  • Jesus is the greatest revelation of God to
    humanity Heb 11-3
  • He is the only perfect revelation of God
  • All other revelations point to Jesus and are
    meant to glorify Him John 539-40
  • We should be careful not to attribute to the
    other revelations that which was meant to be
    attributed to Jesus.

5
The History of the NT Text
  • 1. The Christ event 4BC - AD30
  • 2. Oral tradition of the Christ event AD30 95
  • 3. The written accounts
  • The Pauline Letters 1Thess - AD 49
  • The Gospels 60s
  • The Johannine Writings 93/95

6
Some Sources of Gospel Materials (Intro)
  • The gospel writers pulled from different sources.
  • Q, Matthew and Luke
  • M Matthew
  • L Luke
  • Mark Mathew and Luke
  • Note A similar phenomenon with Ellen
    White

7
The History of the New Testament Text An
Overview
  • The Bible was written in different ancient
    languages
  • The Old Testament was originally written in
    Hebrew and Aramaic
  • The New Testament in Greek

8
The History of the NT Text An Overview
  • No autograph of the New Testament is extant
  • What we have are copies of copies of copies
  • They were first copied on papyrus, then on vellum
    or parchment
  • First on scrolls, then in codices, i.e., book
    form
  • The form of writing were first all capital
    letters uncials, later cursive - minuscules
    (9th Cen)

9
The History of the New Testament Text (contd)
  • Currently, there are approximately 5,664 mss of
    the Greek NT
  • No two mss are exactly alike
  • Why? They were copied by hand under various
    circumstances
  • Thus thousand of errorsApproximatley 300,000

10
Origen (186-255 AD)
  • It is a recognized fact that there are much
    diversity in our copies, whether by the
    carelessness of certain scribes, or by some
    culpable rashness in the correction of the text,
    or by some people making arbitrary additions or
    omissions in their corrections.
  • Selections from the Commentaries and Homilies of
    Origen, trans.by R. B. Tollinton (London Society
    for Promoting Christian Knowledge, 1929) 109-110.

11
Types of Errors
  • 1. Eye sight
  • Homoeoteleuton the scribe skips from one
    letter or word to the same letter or word
    farther down the page.
  • 1 . . . . . . . .. autos ek tou
  • 2 kosmos .
  • 3 . . . . . . . . .
    autos ek tou
  • 4 ponhrou .
  • John 1715 I do not pray that you
    should take them from the world, but that you
    should keep them from the evil one

12
Types of Errors (contd)
  • Metathesis
  • Changing the order of letters or words. Example
  • Mark 1465, e?aß?? (received), for eßa???
    (struck).
  • kai. oi uphre,tai rapi,smasin auvto.n
    elabonÅ and the guards receive him with blows.

13
Types of Errors (contd)
  • Of Hearing
  • Iticism e.g. e? for ?? or o for
    w
  • Romans 51 ecwmen for ecomen
  • Therefore having been justified by faith
    let us have ecwmen peace with God.
    instead of we have peace ecomen with God
  • 1 Cor 1654 vneikos (conflict) for nikos
    (victory)
  • death is swallowed up in
    conflict, instead of death is
    swallowed up in victory

14
Types of Errors (contd)
  • Wrong division of words
  • in 1Timothy 316, some manuscripts read
    ?µ??????µe? ?? µe?a we acknowledge how great,
    for ?µ??????µe??? µe?a confessedly great.
  • Error of Judgment sometimes a copyist made a
    judgment call as to whether or not a glossary in
    the margin of his text ought to be included in
    the main body of the text
  • The troubling of the water John 53-4

15
Troubling of the Water John 53,4
  • 3b waiting for the moving of the water,
  • 4 For an angel went down at a certain season into
    the pool and troubled the water whoever then
    first after the troubling of the water stepped in
    was made whole of whatever disease he had.

16
Types of Errors (contd)
  • Haplography
  • writing of a letter or word once when it should
    have been written twice. Example
    1Thessalonians 27
    e?e????µe? hp??? (we became gentle,) for
    e?e????µe? ?hp???, we became infants.
  • Dittography
  • The writing of a letter or word twice
    instead of once.
    Example Mark 1227 o ?e?? ?e?? for ?e??

17
x
  • Errors due to Diverse Theological opinions
  • Marcion
  • Anti-Judaic
  • As a result of these errors there emerged 1000s
    of divergent and convergent mss

18
Codex Bezae (D-05) 4th cen
  • Mark 226
  • . which is not lawful to eat except only for the
    priests
  • The same day seeing someone working on the
    Sabbath, he said to him, man if indeed you know
    what you are doing then you are blessed. But if
    you do not know then you are accursed and a
    transgressor of the law.

19
1John 57,8
  • The father, the word and the Holy Ghost and
    these three are one. And there are three that
    bear witness on earth.
  • Erasmus (1516 AD)
  • 1. Monk, (Froy or Roy) copied from Latin vulgate
    about 1520 AD
  • Only eight late Greek mss.
  • 61, (16th) 88 (12th), 110 (16th), 221
    (10th),
  • 429 (16th) 636 (16th), 918 (16th) 2318
    (18th)

20
Correct rendering
  • As Found in ?, A, B, y, 33, 81, 323,et al.
  • For there are three that bear record, the spirit
    and the water and the blood and these three agree
    in one.

21
Codex Bezae (D) Brixianus (f)
  • Mark 1011, 12
  • Whoever divorces his wife and marries another
    commits adultery against her and if a woman goes
    out from her husband and marries another, she
    commits adultery.

22
Better rendering
  • As found in ?, B
  • Whoever divorces his wife and marries another,
    commits adultery against her, and if she divorces
    her husband and marries another she commits
    adultery.

23
Woman Caught in Adultery John 753-811
  • First appeared in the 9th Cen.
  • Appeared in different places
  • after John 752 ( D Byzantine text)
  • after John 736 (225 )
  • after John 2125 (f1)
  • after Luke 2138 (f13)
  • after Luke 24 53 (1353)
  • Many different renderings
  • omitted by earliest mss e.g., P66, P75, ?, B,

24
Miscellaneous
  • There are six different endings to Marks gospel
  • The benediction of the Lords prayer

25
Text-types
  • Eventually manuscripts in certain localities
    began to have similar patterns of errors
  • Text-types The largest identifiable group of
    manuscripts

26
Text- Types

Alexandrian
Western
Caesarean ?
Byzantine
27
Text-Types
  • Western North Africa, Italy, and S.
    France
  • Alexandrian Alexandria, Egypt
  • Byzantine Byzantine Empire
  • (80 of all mss)
  • Caesarean ? Probably originate in
    Caesarea or Egypt

28
Dates/Characteristics
  • Western 2nd Cen.
  • Alexandrian late 3rd early 4th Cen.
  • Byzantine 4th 9th Cen.
  • Caesarean ?
  • Characteristic of Text-types
  • Western Paraphrase, harmonizations,
    assimilation
  • Alexandrian Shorter more difficult,
    non-harmonious readings
  • Byzantine Smoother, easier, more
    harmonious, more
    straight-forward readings

29
Determining the Originalor the Earliest Original
  • The shorter reading
  • The harder reading
  • The older reading
  • The more widespread reading
  • The reading from the better mss
  • The reading more in keeping with the authors
    style
  • The reading that explains the rise of the other
    reading, and which cannot itself be explained
    by the other readings

30
Choosing a Translation
  • Those done by a committee, e.g., RSV, NIV, NARSB,
    etc.,
  • Avoid individual translations, e.g., The Living
    Bible, The Clear Word.
  • The KJV not the best for in-depth bible study

31
KJV-Brief Background
  • 1) Erasmus (1469-1536 AD)
  • i) The first printed text to be published,
    that of Erasmus in 1516 AD
  • ii) Based on 4 or 5 12th century mss, has
    readings found in no Greek ms
  • iii) His only ms of Revelation lacked the
    last six verses therefore he translated it from
    the Vulgate
  • iv) 1John 5 7, 8 - the Trinitarian text
  • v) Acts 96 And he Trembling and
    astonished said, Lord what wilt thou have
    me to do. found in no Greek
    manuscripts (Assimilation to Act 2210).

32
Background (contd)
  • 2) Robert Stephanus
  • i) 1550 based on Erasmus edition
  • ii) Became the standard text of
    England
  • iii) First to divide the Bible into
    chapters and verses (i.e., 3rd
    edition,1551)
  • iv) Basis for the KJV of 1611

33
Background (contd)
  • 3) Theodore Beza
  • i) 1565 1604 published nine editions,
    based on Erasmus
  • ii) 1588-89, and 1598- editions also
    used as by KJV translators
  • 4) Abraham Elzevir Bonaventure (1633)
  • i) You therefore have the text which is
    now received by all in which we give
    nothing altered or corrupted
  • ii) The Received text or Textus Receptus
    -- TR
  • iii) TR reigned for 200 years until 1881

34
Background (contd)
  • The KJV is based on these editions which are all
    based on the Byzantine text.
  • The Byzantine text is the poorest of all the
    text-types.

35
Background (contd)
  • Is a comparatively late text, 350 AD
  • Conflate readings combinations of readings of
    the earlier text types
  • Inability of their readings to explain the other
    readings
  • Tend to smooth out difficult passages

36
Discoveries of Ancient Manuscripts
  • Oxyrhynchus Papyri Egypt
  • a) Discovered by Grenfell Hunt in 1897
  • b) Dated 200- 400 AD
  • c) 36 New Testament Papyri
  • d) The Shepherd of Hermas
  • e) The Didache
  • f) The Gospel of Thomas
  • h) The Acts of Paul
  • i)The Acts of Peter
  • j) The Acts of John
  • k) The Gospel of Mary

37
  • Oxyrhynchus Papyri 1897
  • Chester Beatty Papyri, 1931 P45, P46, P47

38
The Chester Beatty Papyri
  • Discovered in 1931
  • Eight OT mss
  • Three NT mss i.e., P45, P46, P47
  • Enoch
  • These mss were purchased by Chester Beatty from a
    Cairo dealer in 1931

39
The Dead Sea Scrolls
  • Founded in 1947 at Qumran in the Dead Sea region
  • Portions of 200 scrolls in 11 caves
  • These finds were mainly of OT books
  • Date from 200 BC

40
The Bodmer Papyri
  • Found in 1952 at Jabal Abu Mana Egypt
  • Purchased by Martin Bodmer, in 1950 60s from a
    Cairo dealer
  • Manuscripts include P66, P72, P75
  • Date 200 AD

41
Implications
  • A determination of what is written must precede
    interpretation of what is written
  • The original languages must be considered
  • Consult various Modern Translations

42
Implications
  • Jesus said And I will ask the father and He
    will give you another counselor to be with you
    forever- the Spirit of truth and when comes he
    will convict the world of guilt in regard to sin
    and righteousness and judgment.
  • John 1415168
  • The Christians guide is more than a book, it is
    a person.
  • God has not only given us a road map- the Bible,
    He has also given us a personal guide- Jesus/the
    Holy Spirit.
  • The Bible points to Jesus, John 539-40

43
x
  • The End

44
(No Transcript)
45
Gregory Number
  • In 1908 Casper Rene Gregory developed a system of
    recording the Greek mss.
  • Papyri P ---- P1 P2 P3 P98 etc
  • Uncials with an initial 0 ----- a 01, A 02
    B 03 etc.
  • Minuscules 1, 2, 3 etc.
  • Lectionaries l --- l 1 l2 l3 etc.

46
Rated Value of Readings UBS4
  • A The Reading is certain
  • B Almost Certain
  • C Not as certain as B, enclosed
  • D Great difficulty at arriving at a
    decision
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