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01-30-2006, 12:20 PM | #11 | |
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Those of us who accept the historic NT, the Textus Receptus, and its English translations like Tyndale, Geneva and then the King James Bible, would agree that a small minority of manuscripts were rather grossly corrupted, but that is simply a non-issue since we have the historic New Testament. The problem is that rather insipid theories of the NT text, theories that have at base a view of errancy and error within the text, have made those small number of manuscripts the base for the corrupt modern versions. And most of the 'apologetic' web-sites go through the seminary indoctrination so they end up trying to defend conflicting texts. Really, it can't be done. Shalom, Steven Avery http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Messianic_Apologetic |
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01-30-2006, 12:32 PM | #12 | |
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I don't think people should go down the road of supposing the NT is textually corrupt; it isn't. On the contrary it is our best attested surviving ancient text. All texts suffer damage in transmission; the only question is whether they are destroyed in the process, and very few are. Where people go wrong is in supposing that for us to access the content of a text requires it to be transmitted exactly, or not at all. But people who lived in the manuscript era knew that no two manuscripts are alike. (Some of us know that no two printed editions are alike either...) But they lived with that, and to attack a text on these grounds means to deny the possibility of transmitting texts from antiquity to our own day. The distance between this and obscurantism is invisible to me. Let's be grateful for what has survived. Some stuff has survived fantastic obstacles. The sole manuscript of Tertullian's Ad Nationes is damaged. Water seeped into the parchment. At some date, in a salvage operation, the rotting margins were cut off. The result is that, particularly towards the end of Ad Nationes, words are missing. Yet these words form part of clauses, the clauses part of sentences, and the sentences part of the train of thought of the author. This means that the English translation does not have gaps in it, even though the Latin text does; it is possible for us to read what Tertullian had to say, even though, strictly speaking, it doesn't exist! Why would we wish to discard such knowledge? Whatever reason we might have, it would be a heavy price to pay. There are other ways to approach this issue. Note that textual critics must examine the deviations, in order to heal the text. But if it doesn't matter to a translation, it probably doesn't matter to anyone else. You can stare at glass and note each speck and defect, and see nothing else. Or you can look through it, into the world beyond. The historian does the latter, the text critic the former. All the best, Roger Pearse |
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01-30-2006, 12:33 PM | #13 | |
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All the best, Roger Pearse |
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01-30-2006, 01:25 PM | #14 | |
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See, this is where I get in trouble when debating with Christians (I don't if you are or not). Are you saying that questioning the reliability of the Bible by pointing out textual issues is a poor argument against the Bible because you believe the documents to be reasonably accurate or because you believe them to be God's divine transmission? Here is my problem (that I'm trying to work through) when I get the proselytizing Chrisitian who wants to 'prove' to me the truths of the Bible they turn into Josh McDowell and start reciting all these claims of textual accuracy. As I look into those claims I see a large number of inconsistencies between the main copies of the NT. Is the NT textually accurate (from the autographs to present day) or not? Is this an accepted fact by scholars? Again, not that a textually accurate NT would in turn 'prove' Christianity 'true'. |
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01-30-2006, 01:55 PM | #15 | |
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I have a watered down version at http://www.bowness.demon.co.uk/reli2.htm and http://www.bowness.demon.co.uk/reli1.htm But get the book. |
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01-30-2006, 02:00 PM | #16 | |
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If we didn't have so much amazingly well preserved evidence, we might not have been able to detect such changes. |
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01-30-2006, 02:03 PM | #17 | |
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Why have old, faded manuscripts when the Church has produced shiny new ones for you to look at? |
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01-30-2006, 02:34 PM | #18 | |||||
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Shalom, Steven Avery http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Messianic_Apologetic |
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01-30-2006, 02:40 PM | #19 | |
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On top of that virtually every disputed reading has substantial early church writer support from BEFORE the time of the earliest extant manuscripts (look at the ending of Mark discussion as an example) effectively destroying the "faded" and "shiny" comparison. Shalom, Steven Avery http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Messianic_Apologetic |
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01-30-2006, 05:41 PM | #20 | ||
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