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8. ACCURACY OF NEW TESTAMENT TEXT |
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Did
the New Testament autographs provide an accurate account of what a man
named Jesus said and did? This
question will be addressed with the help of an inverted logic tree.
At the top of the logic tree is a thesis (x) and its antithesis
(not-x). One is true, the
other is false. This
initial thesis bifurcates into a composite thesis (x and y) and its
quasi-antithesis (x and not-y) where x and y are stand-alone
theses meaning each one can be independently true or false.
The actual antithesis corresponding to the composite thesis (x
and y) is given by not-(x and y) = not-x or not-y but this antithesis is
not assigned a location on the logic tree.
Instead, a node is related to its branches by the biconditional: x
if and only if [(x and y) or (x and not-y)] which is the tautology defined by “A if and only if B” where A = x and B = [(x and y) or (x and not-y)]; A and B have the same truth table as shown in Table 3. Table 3. Truth table for x vs [(x and y) or (x and not-y)]
Finally,
the process of successive bifurcation may be continued indefinitely. It
is frequently difficult to develop a procedure for determining the truth
of a complex premise. However,
if the premise can be expressed as a logical (“and” operator)
combination of theses and antitheses and placed at any branch tip
of a logic tree, a unique characteristic of logic trees can be utilized to
determine whether the premise is true or false.
When a logic tree is constructed according to the algorithm
described above, one and only one of the statements located at branch tips
must be true. A general
proof of this proposition will be left as an exercise for the interested
reader. However, proofs will
be outlined for the specific logic trees used in this book. Consider the generic three level logic tree in Figure 1.
Figure
1. Generic three level logic tree
The
statements located at branch tips are nA, B, C and nC.
The fact that one and only one of these four statements must be
true can be seen by: (1) assigning “false” to any group of three and
deducing the value of the fourth and (2) assigning “true” to any one
of the four and deducing the values of the other three:
Now
consider the logic tree, in Figure 2, concerning the accuracy of New
Testament text.
Figure 2. Logic tree concerning the accuracy of New Testament text
Analyses
of the logic trees in this book requires recognition that one and only one
of the following theses is always true: (a man is truthful); (a man is a
deliberate liar); (a man is insane).
A truthful man always tells the truth about important issues
regardless of the consequences. A
liar tells the truth or lies with equal facility depending on how his
objectives are best served. An
insane man tells the truth or lies with no connection to reality.
Finally, a specific individual may be insane but group insanity is
not logical. The
subsequent paragraphs of this chapter will examine the likelihood that
statements (1), (3) and (4) represent truth.
The falsity of these three statements and, therefore, the truth of
statement (2) cannot be established with certainty.
However, so much evidence can be amassed in support of this
position that a final step of faith is small and guided as opposed to
large and blind.
These
four sets of authors did not share a common background, philosophy or
religion. Why would they
independently invent or perpetuate the invention of a fictitious character
who would have been a virtual contemporary for each of them?
Furthermore, even if one or more of them did invent such a
character, why wasn't the hoax unmasked by eye-witnesses; why didn't
someone stand up and say, “This man Jesus never existed"?
I can't think of a good reason.
Can you? (3)
New Testament autographs accidentally provided an inaccurate account of
what Jesus said and did.
The
oldest known manuscript fragments have been dated in the early second
century A.D. This means the
autographs were known to some portion of the Christian community during
the first century. The fact
that the autographs were accepted by their readers as statements of truth
means that those autographs accurately described the beliefs of the
Christian community at that time. How
could first century Christians, including those who wrote the autographs,
have developed, totally by accident, inaccurate beliefs about what Jesus
said and did when eye-witnesses were available to challenge those beliefs? I can't think of a way.
Can you? The idea that New Testament autographs accidentally provided an inaccurate account of what a man named Jesus said and did is viable only if the events in the life of Jesus had been recorded long after the death of all eye-witnesses. For example, if the events in His life had been handed down by word of mouth until 300A.D. and then finally began to be written down in what we now refer to as New Testament autographs, it is reasonable to believe that what He said and did could have become distorted. What was recorded would have been consistent with the beliefs of the Christian community of 300A.D. but those beliefs would have been erroneous. (4)
New Testament autographs deliberately provided an inaccurate account of
what Jesus said and did. This
means the New Testament autographs contained deliberate lies set forth by
certain individuals in the first century Christian community.
Since eye-witnesses were alive to challenge these lies, the hoax
could not have been perpetrated without the “clout" of the eleven
apostles. These apostles must
have been at least willing conspirators if not the actual originators of
the fraud. Since
individuals do not usually conspire to defraud without anticipating some
kind of gain, it is reasonable to ask, “What did the apostles get for
their trouble?" There is
no record to indicate they achieved wealth or political power.
Instead, the apostles, along with the rest of the first century
Christians, received persecution, torture and death as a reward for their
beliefs. Yet no apostle ever
recanted his story. When,
in recorded history, have sane men ignored personal gain and freely chosen
persecution, torture and death to preserve what they knew to be a lie?
If
you can rationalize the idea that eleven men, and their associates, risked
their lives, with no hope of personal gain, to promulgate what they knew
to be a lie, then another question must be asked.
Why did anyone believe them? History
confirms that Christianity became a powerful evangelical force during the
first century. Were all the
converts more gullible than you? Were
they so dumb they could be convinced without evidence that a poor
carpenter rose bodily from the dead after spending three days in a tomb?
If these converts were only of average intelligence, they would
have demanded something more than the claims of a rag-tag bunch of amateur
preachers. Surely they would
have demanded something like the personal word of a trusted friend who
witnessed a miracle or even saw the resurrected Jesus with his own eyes. Some
autographs even offered bold challenges daring skeptics to refute their
claims (Acts 2:22; 26:24-28; 1 Cor 15:3-7). These challenges were thrust
in the face of Jew and Roman alike. No
one stepped forth to unmask the hoax.
Why? Finally, if you and your associates decided to concoct a hoax, focusing on a person claiming one-ness with God, would you agree to the fabrication of details that made this person seem susceptible to the same human frailties as you and I? If you personally were going to play the part of an apostle in this hoax, would you tolerate the fabrication of details that made you look selfish and petty? Such details were incorporated into the New Testament autographs:
If
you were fabricating events for a text which you planned to stuff down the
throats of gullible people, would you include these nine items? I
contend that statements (1), (3) and (4) on our logic tree must be viewed
as false based on all available evidence.
Therefore, the question asked at the beginning of this chapter can
be answered “yes" with near certainty.
(12,13,14) |
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