How do we know that the Bible we have today is even
close to the original? Haven't copiers down through the centuries
inserted and deleted and embellished the documents so that the
original message of the Bible has been obscured?
These questions are
frequently asked to discredit the sources of information from which
the Christian faith has come to us.
Three Errors To Avoid
- Do not assume inspiration or infallibility of the
documents, with the intent of attempting to prove the inspiration or
infallibility of the documents. Do not say the bible is inspired or
infallible simply because it claims to be. This is circular
reasoning.
- When considering the original documents, forget about the
present form of your Bible and regard them as the collection of
ancient source documents that they are.
- Do not start with modern "authorities" and then move to the
documents to see if the authorities were right. Begin with the
documents themselves.
Procedure for Testing a Document's Validity
In his book,
Introduction in Research in English
Literary History, C. Sanders sets forth three tests of reliability
employed in general historiography and literary criticism.{1} These
tests are:
- Bibliographical (i.e., the textual tradition from
the original document to the copies and manuscripts of that document
we possess today)
- Internal evidence (what the document claims for itself)
- External evidence (how the document squares or aligns itself
with facts, dates, persons from its own contemporary world).
It might be noteworthy to mention that Sanders is a
professor of military history, not a theologian. He uses these three
tests of reliability in his own study of historical military events.
We will look now at the bibliographical, or textual
evidence for the Bible's reliability.
The Old Testament
For both Old and New Testaments, the crucial
question is: "Not having any original copies or scraps of the Bible,
can we reconstruct them well enough from the oldest manuscript
evidence we
do have so they give us a true, undistorted view of
actual people, places and events?"
The Scribe
The scribe was considered a professional person in
antiquity. No printing presses existed, so people were trained to copy
documents. The task was usually undertaken by a devout Jew. The
Scribes believed they were dealing with the very Word of God and were
therefore extremely careful in copying. They did not just hastily
write things down. The earliest complete copy of the Hebrew Old
Testament dates from c. 900 A.D.
The Masoretic Text
During the early part of the tenth century (916
A.D.), there was a group of Jews called the Massoretes. These Jews
were meticulous in their copying. The texts they had were all in
capital letters, and there was no punctuation or paragraphs. The
Massoretes would copy Isaiah, for example, and when they were through,
they would total up the number of letters. Then they would find the
middle letter of the book. If it was not the same, they made a new
copy. All of the present copies of the Hebrew text which come from
this period are in remarkable agreement. Comparisons of the Massoretic
text with earlier Latin and Greek versions have also revealed careful
copying and little deviation during the thousand years from 100 B.C.
to 900 A.D. But until this century, there was scant material written
in Hebrew from antiquity which could be compared to the Masoretic
texts of the tenth century A.D.
The Dead Sea Scrolls
In 1947, a young Bedouin goat herdsman found some
strange clay jars in caves near the valley of the Dead Sea. Inside the
jars were some leather scrolls. The discovery of these "Dead Sea
Scrolls" at Qumran has been hailed as the outstanding archeological
discovery of the twentieth century. The scrolls have revealed that a
commune of monastic farmers flourished in the valley from 150 B.C. to
70 A.D. It is believed that when they saw the Romans invade the land
they put their cherished leather scrolls in the jars and hid them in
the caves on the cliffs northwest of the Dead Sea.
The Dead Sea Scrolls include a complete copy of the
Book of Isaiah, a fragmented copy of Isaiah, containing much of Isaiah
38-6, and fragments of almost every book in the Old Testament. The
majority of the fragments are from Isaiah and the Pentateuch (Genesis,
Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, and Deuteronomy). The books of Samuel, in
a tattered copy, were also found and also two complete chapters of the
book of Habakkuk. In addition, there were a number of nonbiblical
scrolls related to the commune found.
These materials are dated around 100 B.C. The
significance of the find, and particularly the copy of Isaiah, was
recognized by Merrill F. Unger when he said, "This complete document
of Isaiah quite understandably created a sensation since it was the
first major Biblical manuscript of great antiquity ever to be
recovered. Interest in it was especially keen since it antedates by
more than a thousand years the oldest Hebrew texts preserved in the
Massoretic tradition."{2}
The supreme value of these Qumran documents lies in
the ability of biblical scholars to compare them with the Massoretic
Hebrew texts of the tenth century A.D. If, upon examination, there
were little or no textual changes in those Massoretic texts where
comparisons were possible, an assumption could then be made that the
Massoretic Scribes had probably been just as faithful in their copying
of the other biblical texts which could not be compared with the
Qumran material.
What was learned? A comparison of the Qumran
manuscript of Isaiah with the Massoretic text revealed them to be
extremely close in accuracy to each other: "A comparison of Isaiah 53
shows that only 17 letters differ from the Massoretic text. Ten of
these are mere differences in spelling (like our "honor" and the
English "honour") and produce no change in the meaning at all. Four
more are very minor differences, such as the presence of a conjunction
(and) which are stylistic rather than substantive. The other three
letters are the Hebrew word for "light." This word was added to the
text by someone after "they shall see" in verse 11. Out of 166 words
in this chapter, only this one word is really in question, and it does
not at all change the meaning of the passage. We are told by biblical
scholars that this is typical of the whole manuscript of Isaiah."{3}
The Septuagint
The Greek translation of the Old Testament, called
the Septuagint, also confirms the accuracy of the copyists who
ultimately gave us the Massoretic text. The Septuagint is often
referred to as the LXX because it was reputedly done by seventy Jewish
scholars in Alexandria around 200 B.C. The LXX appears to be a rather
literal translation from the Hebrew, and the manuscripts we have are
pretty good copies of the original translation.
Conclusion
In his book,
Can I Trust My Bible, R. Laird
Harris concluded, "We can now be sure that copyists worked with great
care and accuracy on the Old Testament, even back to 225 B.C. . . .
indeed, it would be rash skepticism that would now deny that we have
our Old Testament in a form very close to that used by Ezra when he
taught the word of the Lord to those who had returned from the
Babylonian captivity."{4}
The New Testament
The Greek Manuscript Evidence
There are more than 4,000 different ancient Greek
manuscripts containing all or portions of the New Testament that have
survived to our time. These are written on different materials.
Papyrus and Parchment
During the early Christian era, the writing material
most commonly used was
papyrus. This highly durable reed from
the Nile Valley was glued together much like plywood and then allowed
to dry in the sun. In the twentieth century many remains of documents
(both biblical and non-biblical) on papyrus have been discovered,
especially in the dry, arid lands of North Africa and the Middle East.
Another material used was
parchment. This was
made from the skin of sheep or goats, and was in wide use until the
late Middle Ages when paper began to replace it. It was scarce and
more expensive; hence, it was used almost exclusively for important
documents.
Examples
1. Codex Vaticanus and Codex Siniaticus
These are two excellent parchment copies of the
entire New Testament which date from the 4th century (325-450
A.D.).{5}
2. Older Papyrii
Earlier still, fragments and papyrus copies of
portions of the New Testament date from 100 to 200 years (180-225
A.D.) before Vaticanus and Sinaticus. The outstanding ones are the
Chester Beatty Papyrus (P45, P46, P47) and the Bodmer Papyrus II, XIV,
XV (P46, P75).
From these five manuscripts alone, we can construct
all of Luke, John, Romans, 1 and 2 Corinthians, Galatians, Ephesians,
Philippians, Colossians, 1 and 2 Thessalonians, Hebrews, and portions
of Matthew, Mark, Acts, and Revelation. Only the Pastoral Epistles
(Titus, 1 and 2 Timothy) and the General Epistles (James, 1 and 2
Peter, and 1, 2, and 3 John) and Philemon are excluded.{6}
3. Oldest Fragment
Perhaps the earliest piece of Scripture surviving is
a fragment of a papyrus codex containing John 18:31-33 and 37. It is
called the Rylands Papyrus (P52) and dates from 130 A.D., having been
found in Egypt. The Rylands Papyrus has forced the critics to place
the fourth gospel back into the first century, abandoning their
earlier assertion that it could not have been written then by the
Apostle John.{7}
4. This manuscript evidence creates a bridge of
extant papyrus and parchment fragments and copies of the New Testament
stretching back to almost the end of the first century.
Versions (Translations)
In addition to the actual Greek manuscripts, there
are more than 1,000 copies and fragments of the New Testament in
Syria, Coptic, Armenian, Gothic, and Ethiopic, as well as 8,000 copies
of the Latin Vulgate, some of which date back almost to Jerome's
original translation in 384 400 A.D.
Church Fathers
A further witness to the New Testament text is
sourced in the thousands of quotations found throughout the writings
of the Church Fathers (the early Christian clergy [100-450 A.D.] who
followed the Apostles and gave leadership to the fledgling church,
beginning with Clement of Rome (96 A.D.).
It has been observed that if all of the New
Testament manuscripts and Versions mentioned above were to disappear
overnight, it would still be possible to reconstruct the entire New
Testament with quotes from the Church Fathers, with the exception of
fifteen to twenty verses!
A Comparison
The evidence for the early existence of the New
Testament writings is clear. The wealth of materials for the New
Testament becomes even more significant when we compare it with other
ancient documents which have been accepted without question.
| Author and Work |
Author's Lifespan |
Date of Events |
Date of Writing* |
Earliest Extant MS** |
Lapse: Event to Writing |
Lapse: Event to MS |
Matthew,
Gospel |
ca. 0-70? |
4 BC - AD 30 |
50 - 65/75 |
ca. 200 |
<50 years |
<200 years |
Mark,
Gospel |
ca. 15-90? |
27 - 30 |
65/70 |
ca. 225 |
<50 years |
<200 years |
Luke,
Gospel |
ca. 10-80? |
5 BC - AD 30 |
60/75 |
ca. 200 |
<50 years |
<200 years |
John,
Gospel |
ca. 10-100 |
27-30 |
90-110 |
ca. 130 |
<80 years |
<100 years |
Paul,
Letters |
ca. 0-65 |
30 |
50-65 |
ca. 200 |
20-30 years |
<200 years |
Josephus,
War |
ca. 37-100 |
200 BC - AD 70 |
ca. 80 |
ca. 950 |
10-300 years |
900-1200 years |
Josephus,
Antiquities |
ca. 37-100 |
200 BC - AD 65 |
ca. 95 |
ca. 1050 |
30-300 years |
1000-1300 years |
Tacitus,
Annals |
ca. 56-120 |
AD 14-68 |
100-120 |
ca. 850 |
30-100 years |
800-850 years |
Suetonius,
Lives |
ca. 69-130 |
50 BC - AD 95 |
ca. 120 |
ca. 850 |
25-170 years |
750-900 years |
Pliny,
Letters |
ca. 60-115 |
97-112 |
110-112 |
ca. 850 |
0-3 years |
725-750 years |
Plutarch,
Lives |
ca. 50-120 |
500 BC - AD 70 |
ca. 100 |
ca. 950 |
30-600 years |
850-1500 years |
Herodotus,
History |
ca. 485-425 BC |
546-478 BC |
430-425 BC |
ca. 900 |
50-125 years |
1400-1450 years |
Thucydides,
History |
ca. 460-400 BC |
431-411 BC |
410-400 BC |
ca. 900 |
0-30 years |
1300-1350 years |
Xenophon,
Anabasis |
ca. 430-355 BC |
401-399 BC |
385-375 BC |
ca. 1350 |
15-25 years |
1750 years |
Polybius,
History |
ca. 200-120 BC |
220-168 BC |
ca. 150 BC |
ca. 950 |
20-70 years |
1100-1150 years |
*Where a slash occurs, the first date is
conservative, and the second is liberal.
**New Testament manuscripts are fragmentary. Earliest complete
manuscript is from ca. 350; lapse of event to complete manuscript is
about 325 years.
Conclusion
In his book,
The Bible and Archaeology, Sir
Frederic G. Kenyon, former director and principal librarian of the
British Museum, stated about the New Testament, "The interval, then,
between the dates of original composition and the earliest extant
evidence becomes so small as to be in fact negligible, and the last
foundation for any doubt that the Scriptures have come down to us
substantially as they were written has now been removed. Both the
authenticity and the general integrity of the books of the New
Testament may be regarded as finally established."{8}
To be skeptical of the 27 documents in the New
Testament, and to say they are unreliable is to allow all of classical
antiquity to slip into obscurity, for no documents of the ancient
period are as well attested bibliographically as these in the New
Testament.
B. F. Westcott and F.J.A. Hort, the creators of
The New Testament in Original Greek, also commented: "If
comparative trivialities such as changes of order, the insertion or
omission of the article with proper names, and the like are set aside,
the works in our opinion still subject to doubt can hardly mount to
more than a thousandth part of the whole New Testament."{9} In other
words, the small changes and variations in manuscripts change no major
doctrine: they do not affect Christianity in the least. The message is
the same with or without the variations. We have the Word of God.
The Anvil? God's Word.
Last eve I passed beside a blacksmith's door
And heard the anvil ring the vesper chime:
Then looking in, I saw upon the floor
Old hammers, worn with beating years of time.
"How many anvils have you had," said I,
"To wear and batter all these hammers so?"
"Just one," said he, and then, with twinkling eye,
"The anvil wears the hammers out, you know."
And so, thought I, the anvil of God's word,
For ages skeptic blows have beat upon;
Yet though the noise of falling blows was heard,
The anvil is unharmed . . . the hammer's gone.
Author unknown
Notes
- C.Sanders, Introduction in Research in English
Literacy (New York: MacMillan, 1952), 143.
- Merrill F. Unger, Famous Archaeological
Discoveries (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1957), 72.
- R. Laird Harris, Can I Trust My Bible?
(Chicago: Moody Press, 1963), 124.
- Ibid., 129-30.
- Merrill F. Unger, Unger's Bible Handbook
(Chicago: Moody Press, 1967), 892.
- Ibid.
- Ibid.
- Sir Fredric Kenyon, The Bible and Archaeology
(New York: Harper & Brothers, 1940), 288ff.
- B.F. Westcott, and F.J.A. Hort, eds., New
Testament in Original Greek, 1881, vol. II, 2.
Jimmy Williams
© 1995 Probe Ministries
International
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