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7. PURITY OF NEW TESTAMENT TEXT |
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Is
each of the known Greek manuscripts and manuscript fragments, of a
particular New Testament book, a “pure" representation of a
unique autograph? This question cannot be answered with certainty since no
autographs have been found. However,
the available evidence supports a “yes" answer. By
1968, the existence of approximately 5358 Greek New Testament
manuscripts and manuscript fragments had been documented by scholars.
Among these, more than 200,000 variants have been detected. To put this in perspective, the following facts should be
considered:
Because
the New Testament contains roughly 200,000 words and only 400 are the
subject of serious controversy, it must be concluded that the Greek New
Testament text, derived from all 5358 manuscripts and manuscript
fragments, is more than 99% “pure."
This compares with a 95% “purity" for the Iliad based on
643 manuscripts and a 90% “purity" for the Mahabharata (the
national epic of India). Even
the Koran, which originated in the seventh century A.D., suffered from a
large collection of variants that necessitated the Orthmanic revision.
The New Testament has not only survived in more manuscripts than
any other ancient writing but it has survived in a much “purer"
form than any other great book. In
addition, it is interesting to note that not one shred of Christian
doctrine hangs on debatable text. The documented high degree of agreement, among the Greek manuscripts and manuscript fragments of a particular New Testament book, cannot logically be viewed as accidental. More likely it implies that each manuscript and fragment reflects a unique autograph as its ultimate source. (11) |
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© Copyright reserved by Bruce D. McLaughlin - 2001.