THE BIBLE'S MANUSCRIPT EVIDENCE:
(1) New Testament
Manuscript Copies:
Because the Bible is a
book, it was initially made up of manuscripts. Consequently a primary means for
ascertaining its credibility today are the number of copies from those
manuscripts which are currently in one's possession. The more copies we have
the better we can compare between them and thus know if the document we now
read corresponds with the original. It is much like a witness to an event. If
we have only one witness to the event, there is the possibility that the
witness's agenda or even an exaggeration of the event has crept in and we would
never know the full truth. But if we have many witnesses, the probability that
they all got it wrong becomes minute.
Because of time and wear
many of the historical documents from the ancient world have few manuscripts to
which we can refer. This is specially
true when we consider the secular historians and philosophers. For instance, we
only have eight copies of Herodotus's historical
works, whose originals were written in 480-425 BC. Likewise, only 5 copies of
Aristotle's writings have found their way to the 20th century, while only 10
copies of the writings of Caesar, along with another 20 copies of the historian
Tacitus, and 7 copies from the historian Pliny, who all originally wrote in the
first century, are available today (McDowell 1972:42). These are indeed very
few.
When we consider the New
Testament, however, we find a completely different scenario. We have today in
our possession 5,795 known Greek manuscripts of the New
Testament, another 10,000 Latin Vulgates, and 9,300 other
early versions (MSS), giving us more than 25,000 manuscript
copies of portions of the New Testament in existence today! Though
we do not have any originals, with such a wealth of documentation at our
disposal with which to compare, we can delineate quite closely what those
originals contained.
When we look at the rest
of the New Testament books, there is no longer any solid basis for dating them
later than 80 AD, or 50 years after the death of Jesus Christ (Robinson
1976:79). Most of the New Testament was likely written before the fall of
Jerusalem in 70 AD, and perhaps before the fire of Rome (64 AD), and the
subsequent persecution of Christians, since none of these events, which would
have had an enormous impact on the nascent Christian community
are mentioned in any of the New Testament writings. Had the documents been
compiled in the second century as Muslims claim, then certainly they would have
mentioned these very important events.
This same logic can be
taken a step further. Take for instance the martyrdoms of James in 62 AD, Paul
in 64 AD, and Peter in 65 AD. All were leaders in the nascent church. Thus
their deaths were momentous events for the early Christian community. Yet we
find none of the deaths referred to in any of the 27 canonized books of the New
Testament (and significantly not in Acts, the most comprehensive historical
record we have of the early church). The only explanation can be that they were
all written prior to these events, and thus likely before 62 AD, or a mere 30
years after the death of Jesus, of whose life they primarily refer.
(2) Available
Manuscripts:
A further criticism
concerns whether the copies we possess are credible. Since we do not possess
the originals, people ask, how can we be sure they are identical to them? The
initial answer is that we will never be completely certain, for there is no
means at our disposal to reproduce the originals. This has always been a
problem with all known ancient documents. Yet this same question is rarely
asked of other historical manuscripts which we refer to constantly. If they are
held to be credible, let's then see how the New Testament compares with them. Let's
compare below the time gaps for the New Testament documents with other credible
secular documents.
There were several
historians of the ancient world whose works are quite popular. Thucydides, who
wrote History of the Peloponnesian War, lived from 460 BC to 400 BC. Virtually
everything we know about the war comes from his history. Yet, the earliest copy
of any manuscripts of Thucydides' work dates around 900 AD, a full 1,300 years
later! The Roman historian Suetonius lived between AD 70 to
140 AD. Yet the earliest copy of his book The Twelve Caesars is dated
around AD 950, a full 800 years later. The chart below reveals the time gaps of
these and other works from the ancient world and compares them to the earliest
New Testament manuscripts (taken from McDowell 1972:42, & Bruce
1943:16-17).
|
Author |
Date Written |
Earliest Copy |
Time Span |
Copies (extent) |
|
|
||||
|
Secular Manuscripts: |
||||
|
Herodotus (History) |
480 - 425 BC |
900 AD |
1,300 years |
8 |
|
Thucydides (History) |
460 - 400 BC |
900 AD |
1,300 years |
? |
|
Aristotle
(Philosopher) |
384 - 322 BC |
1,100 AD |
1,400 years |
5 |
|
Caesar (History) |
100 - 44 BC |
900 AD |
1,000 years |
10 |
|
Pliny (History) |
61 - 113 AD |
850 AD |
750 years |
7 |
|
Suetonius (Roman
History) |
70 - 140 AD |
950 AD |
800 years |
? |
|
Tacitus (Greek
History) |
100 AD |
1,100 AD |
1,000 years |
20 |
|
|
||||
|
Biblical Manuscripts: (note: these are individual manuscripts) |
||||
|
Magdalene Ms
(Matthew 26) |
1st century |
50-60 AD |
co-existant (?) |
|
|
John Rylands (John) |
90 AD |
130 AD |
40 years |
|
|
Bodmer Papyrus II (John) |
90 AD |
150-200 AD |
60-110 years |
|
|
Chester Beatty
Papyri (N.T.) |
1st century |
200 AD |
150 years |
|
|
Diatessaron by Tatian
(Gospels) |
1st century |
200 AD |
150 years |
|
|
Codex Vaticanus (Bible) |
1st century |
325-350 AD |
275-300 years |
|
|
Codex Sinaiticus (Bible) |
1st century |
350 AD |
300 years |
|
|
Codex Alexandrinus (Bible) |
1st century |
400 AD |
350 years |
|
(Total New Testament manuscripts = 5,795 Greek MSS, 10,000 Latin Vulgates, 9,300 others = 25,000 copies).
What one notices almost
immediately from the table is that the New Testament manuscript copies which we
possess today were compiled very early, a number of them hundreds of years
before the earliest copy of a secular manuscript. This not only shows the
importance the early Christians gave to preserving their scriptures, but the
enormous wealth we have today for early Biblical documentation.
What is even more
significant however, are the differences in time spans between the original
manuscripts and the copies of both the biblical and secular manuscripts. It is
well known in historical circles that the closer a document can be found to the
event it describes the more credible it is. The time span for the biblical
manuscript copies listed above are all within 350 years of the originals, some
as early as 130-250 years and one even purporting to coexist with the original
(i.e. the Magdalene Manuscript fragments of Matthew 26), while the time span
for the secular manuscript copies are much greater, between 750-1,400 years!
This indeed gives enormous authority to the biblical manuscript copies, as no
other ancient piece of literature can make such close time comparisons.
Because of its
importance to our discussion here a special note needs to be given to the
Magdalene Manuscript mentioned above. Until two years ago, the oldest assumed
manuscript which we possessed was the St. John papyrus (P52), housed in the
John Rylands museum in Manchester, and dated at 120
AD (Time April 26, 1996, pg.8). Thus, it was thought that the earliest New
Testament manuscript could not be corroborated by eyewitnesses to the events.
That assumption has now changed, for three even older manuscripts, one each
from the gospels of Matthew, Mark and Luke have now
been dated earlier than the Johannine account. It is
two of these three findings which I believe will completely change the entire
focus of the critical debate on the authenticity of the Bible. Let me explain.
The Lukan
papyrus, situated in a library in Paris has been dated to the late 1st century
or early 2nd century, so it predates the John papyrus by 20-30 years (Time
April 26, 1996, pg.8). But of more importance are the manuscript findings of
Mark and Matthew! New research which has now been uncovered by Dr. Carsten Thiede, and is published
in his newly released book on the subject, the Jesus Papyrus mentions a fragment
from the book of Mark found among the Qumran scrolls (fragment 7Q5) showing
that it was written sometime before 68 AD It is important to remember that
Christ died in 33 AD, so this manuscript could have been written, at the
latest, within 35 years of His death; possibly earlier, and thus during the
time that the eyewitnesses to that event were still alive!
The most significant
find, however, is a manuscript fragment from the book of Matthew (chapt.26)
called the Magdalene Manuscript which has been analysed
by Dr. Carsten Thiede, and
also written up in his book The Jesus Papyrus. Using a sophisticated analysis
of the handwriting of the fragment by employing a special state-of-the-art
microscope, he differentiated between 20 separate micrometer layers of the
papyrus, measuring the height and depth of the ink as well as the angle of the
stylus used by the scribe. After this analysis Thiede
was able to compare it with other papyri from that period; notably manuscripts
found at Qumran (dated to 58 AD), another at Herculaneum (dated prior to 79
AD), a further one from the fortress of Masada (dated to between 73/74 AD), and
finally a papyrus from the Egyptian town of Oxyrynchus.
The Magdalene Manuscript fragments matches all four, and in fact is almost a
twin to the papyrus found in Oxyrynchus, which bears
the date of 65/66 AD Thiede concludes that these
papyrus fragments of St. Matthew's Gospel were written no later than this date
and probably earlier. That suggests that we either have a portion of the original
gospel of Matthew, or an immediate copy which was written while Matthew and the
other disciples and eyewitnesses to the events were still alive. This would be
the oldest manuscript portion of our Bible in existence today, one which
co-exists with the original writers!
What is of even more
importance is what it says. The Matthew 26 fragment uses in its text nomina sacra (holy names) such as the diminutive
"IS" for Jesus and "KE" for Kurie
or Lord (The Times, Saturday, December 24, 1994). This is highly significant
for our discussion today, because it suggests that the godhead of Jesus was recognised centuries before it was accepted as official
church doctrine at the council of Nicea in 325 AD There is still ongoing discussion concerning the exact
dating of this manuscript. However, if the dates prove to be correct then this
document alone completely eradicates the criticism levelled
against the gospel accounts (such as the "Jesus Seminar") that the
early disciples knew nothing about Christ's divinity, and that this concept was
a later redaction imposed by the Christian community in the second century
(AD).
We have other manuscript
evidence for the New Testament as well:
(3) Versions or
Translations:
Besides the 25,000
manuscripts we have more than 15,000 existing copies of the various
versions written in the Latin and Syriac
(Christian Aramaic), some of which were written as early as 150 A.D., such as
the Syriac Peshitta (150- A.D.)
Because Christianity was
a missionary faith from its very inception (Matthew 28:19-20), the scriptures
were immediately translated into the known languages of that period. For that
reason other written translations appeared soon after, such as Coptic
translations (early 3rd and 4th centuries), Armenian (400 A.D.), Gothic
(4th century), Georgian (5th century), Ethiopic (6th century),
and Nubian (6th century). The
fact that we have so many translations of the New Testament points to its authenticity,
as it would have been almost impossible, had the disciples or later followers
wanted to corrupt or forge its contents, for them to have amassed all of the
translations from the outlying areas and changed each one so that there would
have been the uniformity which we find witnessed in these translations today.
(4) Lectionaries:
The practice of reading
passages from the New Testament books at worship services began from the 6th
century, so that today we have 2,445 lectionaries which have been catalogued from this period. If there had been a forgery, they too would
have all had to have been changed.
(5)
Early Church Father's Letters:
But possibly the
greatest attestation for the authority of our New Testament are the masses of
quotations taken from its pages by the early church fathers. Dean Burgon in his research found in all 86,489 quotes from the early
church fathers. In fact, there are 32,000 quotations
from the New Testament found in writings from before the council of Nicea in 325 A.D . J. Harold
Greenlee points out that the
quotations of the scripture in the works of the early church writers are so
extensive that the New Testament could virtually be reconstructed from them
without the use of New Testament manuscripts.
Sir David Dalrymple sought to do this, and from the second and third
century writings of the church fathers he found the entire New Testament
quoted except for eleven verses (McDowell 1972:50-51; 1990:48)! Thus, we
could throw the New Testament manuscripts away and still reconstruct it with
the simple help of these letters. Some examples of these are (from McDowell's Evidence...,
1972 pg. 51):
Clement (30- 95 A.D.) quotes from various sections of the New Testament.
Ignatius (70-110 A.D.) knew the apostles and quoted directly from 15 of
the 27 books.
Polycarp (70-156 A.D.) was a disciple of John and quoted from the New
Testament.
Thus the manuscript evidence at our disposal today gives us over 24,000
manuscripts with which to corroborate our current New Testament. The earliest
of these manuscripts have now been dated earlier than 60-70 A.D., so within the
lifetime of the original writers, and with an outside possibility that they are
the originals themselves. On top of that we have 15,000 early translations of
the New Testament, and over 2,000 lectionaries. And finally we have scriptural
quotations in the letters of the early Church fathers with which we could
almost reproduce the New Testament if we so wished. This indeed is substantial
manuscript evidence for the New Testament.
Christianity can claim more than 5,700 known Greek manuscripts of the New Testament,
10,000 Latin Vulgates and at least 9,300 other early versions, adding up to
over 25,000 corroborated New Testament manuscripts still in existence, most of which were written
between 25-400 years after the death of Christ (or between the 1st and 5th
centuries)
![]()
![]()