Introduction
Many skeptics believe
that the Bible has been drastically changed over the
centuries. In reality, the Bible has been translated
into a number of different languages (first Latin, then
English and other languages, see History of the Bible).
However, the ancient manuscripts (written in Hebrew,
Aramaic, and Greek) have been reliably copied over the
centuries - with very few alterations.
Old
Testament
How do we know the
Bible has been kept intact for over 2,000 years of
copying? Before the discovery of the Dead Sea Scrolls,
our earliest Hebrew copy of the Old Testament was the
Masoretic text, dating around 800 A.D. The Dead Sea
Scrolls date to the time of Jesus and were copied by the
Qumran community, a Jewish sect living around the Dead
Sea. We also have the Septuagint which is a Greek
translation of the Old Testament dating in the second
century B.C. When we compare these texts which have an
800-1000-year gap between them we are amazed that 95% of
the texts are identical with only minor variations and a
few discrepancies.
New
Testament
There are tens of
thousands of manuscripts from the New Testament, in part
or in whole, dating from the second century A.D. to the
late fifteenth century, when the printing press was
invented. These manuscripts have been found in Egypt,
Palestine, Syria, Turkey, Greece, and Italy, making
collusion unlikely. The oldest manuscript, the John
Rylands manuscript, has been dated to 125 A.D. and was
found in Egypt, some distance from where the New
Testament was originally composed in Asia Minor. Many
early Christian papyri, discovered in 1935, have been
dated to 150 A.D., and include the four gospels. The
Papyrus Bodmer II, discovered in 1956, has been dated to
200 A.D., and contains 14 chapters and portions of the
last seven chapters of the gospel of John. The Chester
Beatty biblical papyri, discovered in 1931, has been
dated to 200-250 A.D. and contains the Gospels, Acts,
Paul's Epistles, and Revelation. The number of
manuscripts is extensive compared to other ancient
historical writings, such as Caesar's "Gallic Wars" (10
Greek manuscripts, the earliest 950 years after the
original), the "Annals" of Tacitus (2 manuscripts, the
earliest 950 years after the original), Livy (20
manuscripts, the earliest 350 years after the original),
and Plato (7 manuscripts).
Manuscript Evidence
for Ancient Writings
Author |
Written |
Earliest Copy |
Time Span |
# Mss. |
Caesar |
100-44 B.C. |
900 A.D. |
1,000 yrs |
10 |
Plato |
427-347 B.C. |
900 A.D. |
1,200 yrs |
7 |
Thucydides |
460-400 B.C. |
900 A.D. |
1,300 yrs |
8 |
Tacitus |
100 A.D. |
1100 A.D. |
1,000 yrs |
20 |
Suetonius |
75-160 A.D. |
950 A.D. |
800 yrs |
8 |
Homer (Iliad) |
900 B.C. |
400 B.C. |
500 yrs |
643 |
New Testament |
40-100 A.D. |
125 A.D. |
25-50 yrs |
24,000 |
Thousands of early Christian writings and lexionaries (first
and second century) cite verses from the New Testament.
In fact, it is nearly possible to put together the
entire New Testament just from early Christian writings.
For example, the Epistle of Clement to the Corinthians (dated
95 A.D.) cites verses from the Gospels, Acts, Romans, 1
Corinthians, Ephesians, Titus, Hebrews, and 1 Peter. The
letters of Ignatius (dated 115 A.D.) were written to
several churches in Asia Minor and cites verses from
Matthew, John, Romans, 1 & 2 Corinthians, Galatians,
Ephesians, Philippians, 1 & 2 Timothy and Titus. These
letters indicate that the entire New Testament was
written in the first century A.D. In addition, there is
internal evidence for a first century date for the
writing of the New Testament. The book of Acts ends
abruptly with Paul in prison, awaiting trial (Acts
28:30-31
(1)). It is likely that Luke
wrote Acts during this time, before Paul finally
appeared before Nero. This would be about 62-63 A.D.,
meaning that Acts and Luke were written within thirty
years of ministry and death of Jesus. Another internal
evidence is that there is no mention of the destruction
of Jerusalem in 70 A.D. Although Matthew, Mark and Luke
record Jesus' prophecy that the temple and city would be
destroyed within that generation (Matthew 24:1-2
(2),Mark
13:1-2
(3), Luke 21:5-9,20-24,32(4)),
no New Testament book refers to this event as having
happened. If they had been written after 70 A.D., it is
likely that letters written after 70 A.D. would have
mentioned the fulfillment of Jesus' prophecy. As stated
by Nelson Glueck, former president of the Jewish
Theological Seminary in the Hebrew Union College in
Cincinnati, and renowned Jewish archaeologist, "In my
opinion, every book of the New Testament was written
between the forties and eighties of the first century
A.D."
Conclusion
With all of the
massive manuscript evidence you would think there would
be massive discrepancies - just the opposite is true.
New Testament manuscripts agree in 99.5%
(5) of the text (compared to only 95% for the Iliad). Most
of the discrepancies are in spelling and word order. A
few words have been changed or added. There are two
passages that are disputed but no discrepancy is of any
doctrinal significance (i.e., none would alter basic
Christian doctrine). Most Bibles include the options as
footnotes when there are discrepancies. How could there
be such accuracy over a period of 1,400 years of copying?
Two reasons: 1) The scribes that did the copying had
meticulous methods for checking their copies for errors.
2) The Holy Spirit made sure we would have an accurate
copy of God's word so we would not be deceived. The
Mormons, theological liberals as well as other cults and
false religions such as Islam that claim the Bible has
been tampered with are completely proven false by the
extensive, historical manuscript evidence.
NOTES
===========================
1. And he stayed two full
years in his own rented quarters, and was welcoming all
who came to him, preaching the kingdom of God, and
teaching concerning the Lord Jesus Christ with all
openness, unhindered. (Acts
28:30-31)
2. And Jesus came out from
the temple and was going away when His disciples came up
to point out the temple buildings to Him. And He
answered and said to them, "Do you not see all these
things? Truly I say to you, not one stone here shall be
left upon another, which will not be torn down." (Matthew
24:1-2)
3. And as He was going out
of the temple, one of His disciples said to Him,
"Teacher, behold what wonderful stones and what
wonderful buildings!" And Jesus said to him, "Do you see
these great buildings? Not one stone shall be left upon
another which will not be torn down." (Mark
13:1-2)
4. And while some were
talking about the temple, that it was adorned with
beautiful stones and votive gifts, He said, "As for
these things which you are looking at, the days will
come in which there will not be left one stone upon
another which will not be torn down." (Luke
21:5-6)
5. Metzger, Bruce M. 1992.
The Text of the New Testament: Its Transmission,
Corruption, and Restoration. Oxford, Oxford
University Press.