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04-18-2010, 07:16 AM | #21 | ||
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Codex Sinaiticus for example seems to have been corrected by a scribe contemporary with the original copyist. Andrew Criddle |
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04-18-2010, 01:25 PM | #22 | ||||||
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Judea, Egypt and Mesopotamia were part of the Roman Empire. Quote:
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Now, you made a blanket statement that scribes were slaves that has been found to be false. You made a blanket statement that scribes were not paid that has been found to be false. You have implied that no slave was paid that is false. Quote:
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You are DELIBERATELY mis-representing what I post even though my posts are recorded. Please read my post carefully and desist from making false claims Quote:
Now, it MUST BE that there were scribes who made copies that were 100% accurate once they established and maintained meticulous techniques to eliminate errors. |
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04-18-2010, 07:21 PM | #23 | |
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And, if you read a scroll that had an error you would know this how? Are you suggesting that people read multiple copies of the same book to see if there were errors? Ehrman has written that there are more "errors" in the NT than there are words in the NT. That is because once an error was written it stood every chance of being copied (and repeated) by other copists who most likely added errors of their own. This in no way deals with the doctrinal changes which were incorporated as xtianity evolved into the bureaucratic nightmare that we know today. Again. Don't take my word for it. Read Misquoting Jesus. This stuff is not news. It has been known for centuries. |
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04-18-2010, 07:49 PM | #24 | |
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Peter. |
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04-18-2010, 10:22 PM | #25 | |||
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Up to today people copy information by hand without any errors once they proof-read their copy. Do you not understand that scribes in antiquity were professionals, well-educated and had techniques to eliminate errors? Now, the NT and Church writings are a total different thing. Perhaps they were written in underground caves in the dead of night to conceal the identity of the writers. I cannot tell how any of the books of the NT were originally produced or who could have copied them, interpolated them and filled them with errors. I would expect the writings of Josephus, Philo, Suetonius, Tacitus, Pliny and similar writers to have been FAITHFULLY copied by scribes but I cannot say that the fables of Jesus believers who were operating in secret did use scribes. In "Against Marcion" by Tertullian it would appear that the writer, if what he wrote was true, did not use a scribe but some kind of brother, friend, Apostate or associate who transcribed his work full of mistakes and published it by fraudulent means. Examine Tertullian's "Against Marcion" 1.1 Quote:
And according to Jerome, some character called Rufinus, I don't know if he was a scribe or just a translator, was accused of manipulating, harmonising or falsifying the writings of other Church writers. See Jerome's "Apology Against Rufinus" for the details of forgeries and falsification of Church writings. It does not seem that the errors were done by the scribes themselves but perhaps "BROTHERS" or" APOSTATES" of the Church. It must not be forgotten that all the authors of the NT Canon are likely to be false which would imply that it was not the scribe who made the errors but those who were in control of the manuscripts. |
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04-19-2010, 02:37 AM | #26 |
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There is no proof-reading technique which can be guaranteed to produce 100% accuracy in absolutely every case. Ask anybody in the editing profession if you don't believe me.
No human technique or process is infallible because no human being is infallible. If scribal copying were infallibly 100% accurate, all the manuscripts of The Canterbury Tales, for example, would be letter-by-letter identical. But they aren't. There are many variations, and collating them is a major topic of Chaucerian research. |
04-19-2010, 01:31 PM | #27 |
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Exactly.
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04-23-2010, 09:44 PM | #28 | ||
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04-23-2010, 09:57 PM | #29 | ||
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Your position is an over worn apologist's misrepresentation of the real facts. The errors weren't all as minor as they argue nor are they as infrequent. |
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04-23-2010, 10:43 PM | #30 | |||
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The point is that the fact that Minimalist got from Bart Ehrman - the huge total number of manuscript variations in the NT - is spin doctoring. The primary reason why there are more total textual variants than words in the New Testament is that there are a huge number of manuscripts. Dividing the estimated range of numbers of total textual variants by the number of manuscripts does give you the average number of variants introduced per copy. Quote:
Peter. |
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