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Evidence for the Canon

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We have studied how the canon was assembled. ... he (Peter) mentioned, whether saying or doings of Christ, not, however, in order. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Evidence for the Canon


1
Evidence for the Canon
  • Are the documents reliable?
  • Are there variant readings?
  • Do these variants make the Bible less reliable?

2
Introduction
  • We have studied how the canon was assembled.
  • We have studied how the original documents were
    written
  • Now the focus is on the reliability of the Bible.

3
Introduction
  • Some questions that need to be answered
  • Are the books we have reliable?
  • Are they accurate to the original work?
  • Would Peter, Luke or Paul recognize the books
    that claim their authorship?
  • What about the variant readings?
  • What about number of documents and fragments
    discovered?

4
New Testament
  • Scholars testify
  • Philip Schaff Fewer than 400 out of 150,000
    documents have any problem.
  • None of these variants include an article of
    faith or precept of duty which is not abundantly
    sustained by other and undoubted passages.

5
New Testament
  • Scholars testify
  • Geisler and Nix If one word is misspelled in
    3,000 different manuscripts, this is counted as
    3,000 variants or readings.
  • F. F. Bruce The wealth of attestation is such
    that the true reading is almost invariably bound
    to be preserved by at least one of the thousands
    of witnesses.

6
New Testament
  • Scholars testify
  • Sir Fredric Kenyon No fundamental doctrine of
    the Christian faith rest on a disputed reading.
  • It cannot be too strongly asserted that in
    substance the text of the Bible is certain.

7
New Testament
  • Scholars testify
  • Sir Fredric Kenyon Especially is this the case
    with the New Testament. The number of manuscripts
    of the NT, of early translations from it, and of
    quotations from it in the oldest writers of the
    Church, is so large that it is practically
    certain that the true reading of every doubtful
    passage is preserved in some one or other of
    these ancient authorities.

8
New Testament
  • Scholars testify
  • Howard Vos From the standpoint of literary
    evidence the only logical conclusion is that the
    case for the reliability of the New Testament is
    infinitely stronger than for any other record of
    antiquity.

9
Manuscripts of Antiquity
10
Manuscripts of NT
11
Manuscript Evidence
  • A. T. Robertson There are more than 13,000
    copies of complete works of the NT.
  • This does not include the 10s of thousands of
    fragments and partials
  • This does not include the quotations by early
    church fathers
  • This does not count the 76 complete papyri of the
    entire NT.

12
Manuscript Evidence
  • Sir Fredric Kenyon The interval then between
    the dates of the original composition and the
    earliest extant evidence becomes so small as to
    be in fact negligible, and the last foundation
    for any doubt that the Scriptures have come down
    to us substantially as they were written has now
    been removed. Both the authenticity and the
    general integrity of the books of the NT may be
    regarded as finally established.

13
Dating of NT Documents
  • Dating procedures for these documents include
  • Materials used
  • Letter size and form
  • Punctuation
  • Text divisions
  • Ornamentation
  • Color of ink
  • Texture and color of the parchment

14
Famous Early Documents
  • John Ryland a 2.5 X 3.5 inches contains John
    1831-33 from 117-138 AD
  • Chester Beatty Papyri A book of more than 220
    pages, 10 X 8 inches 200 AD
  • Bodmer Papyrus Earliest known copy of Luke and
    John printed in uncials 175-225 AD

15
Famous Early Documents
  • Codex Sinaiticus 350
  • Codex Vaticanus 325 250 AD
  • Many others too numerous to list all

16
Supported by Church Fathers
  • Tertullian 160 220
  • Origen 185 253 more than 6,000 writings
  • Ignatius 70 110
  • Polycarp 65 155 Student of John
  • Iraneaus 180 Student of Polycarp
  • Josephus 37-100 Jewish historian

17
Early Church Fathers
  • Eusebius 130 Mark, having been the
    interpreter of Peter wrote down accurately all
    that he (Peter) mentioned, whether saying or
    doings of Christ, not, however, in order. For he
    was neither a hearer nor a companion of the Lord
    but afterwards, as I said, he accompanied Peter,
    who adapted his teachings as necessity required,
    not as though he were making a compilation of the
    sayings of the Lord.

18
Early Church Fathers
  • Iraneaus (180) He was a student of Polycarp,
    who was a student of John. Iraneaus became the
    bishop of Lyons (now part of France). He
    converted almost the entire population of Lyons
    and sent other missionaries to other parts of
    pagan Europe.
  • Polycarp (70-156) He was a disciple of John.
    He was burned at the stake at 86 years of age.

19
NT Evidence
  • Luke 11-3 Some who followed Christ wrote of
    his life
  • 2 Peter 116 We were eyewitnesses of his
    majesty
  • 1 John 13 That which we have seen and heard
  • Acts 222 Miracles God did in your midst

20
NT Evidence
  • John 2030-31 Signs done in the presence of his
    disciples
  • Luke 31-2 All the current leaders are listed
    by name and title
  • Acts 2624-26 Apostles did not do things
    hidden, in a corner

21
F. F. Bruce
  • Indeed, the evidence is that the early
    Christians were careful to distinguish between
    the saying of Jesus and their own inferences or
    judgments. Paul, for example, when discussing the
    vexed questions of marriage and divorce in 1
    Corinthians 7, is careful to make this
    distinction between his own advice on the subject
    and the Lords decisive ruling I, not the
    Lord and again, Not I, but the Lord.

22
OT Reliability
  • Not as many manuscripts as the NT
  • The Talmudists (100-500 AD)
  • Jews who spent time cataloging civil and
    religious law
  • They had an intricate system for transcribing
    scrolls for the synagogues

23
Talmudist Rules
  • Only written on skins of clean animals
  • Fastened together with strings from clean animals
  • Prepared for the use in synagogues only
  • Every skin must contain a certain number of
    columns, equal throughout the codex
  • Ink should be black not red, green or other
    colors

24
Talmudist Rules
  • Each column must be at least 48 letters
  • Each column should not be more then 60 lines
  • The original must be an authentic copy
  • Space between every consonant a hairs breadth
  • Name of God must be written with a new pen, newly
    dipped in ink

25
Talmudist Rules
  • Never allow an interruption during the writing of
    a name of God
  • Even if the king speaks to you
  • Write the name of God with washed hands
  • If any rules are broken the scroll must be
    burned, destroyed or just used in a school for
    practice

26
Massoretic Period (500-990)
  • Massorites Word means tradition
  • They sought to hold on to the tradition of using
    Hebrew as it became a dead language
  • They added vowel markings to insure proper
    pronunciation

27
Massoretic Period (500-990)
  • They also added the calculations to insure
    accuracy
  • They counted letters per line
  • They counted words per line
  • They counted lines per page
  • The counted words per page
  • All the totals were checked against the authentic
    document being copied

28
Archaeology for OT
  • Walls of Jericho Garstand As to the main
    fact, the, there remains no doubt the walls fell
    outwards so completely that the attackers would
    be able to clamber over their ruins into the
    city.

29
Archaeology for OT
  • Sodom and Gomorrah W. F. Albright, M. G. Kyle
    They found at the southeast corner of the Dead
    Sea five oases made fresh water streams, and
    centrally located high place for religious
    festivals. The pottery found in that area dated
    between 2500 and 2000 BC.
  • Thousands of other examples could be cited.

30
OT Reliability
  • Robert Dick Wilson In 144 cases of
    transliteration from Egyptian, Assyrian,
    Babylonian and Moabite into Hebrew and in 40
    cases of the opposite, or 184 cases in all, the
    evidence shows that for the 2300 to 3900 years
    the text of the proper names in the Hebrew Bible
    has been transmitted with the most minute
    accuracy.

31
The Hebrew Text
  • Cairo Codex 895 AD This book is a Massoretic
    text of the Old Testament. It is kept in the
    British Museum.
  • Codex Babylonicus Earliest complete OT 1008
    AD This codex is at a museum in St. Petersburg,
    Russia
  • Aleppo Codex 900 AD It was discovered in 1958
  • British Museum Codex 950 AD This book
    contains Genesis through Deuteronomy

32
Dead Sea Scrolls
  • 40,000 fragments located here
  • 500 complete books
  • Every book in the OT was found here except Esther
  • There are commentaries on almost every OT book
  • Discovered in 1947

33
Dead Sea Scrolls
  • City of Qumran
  • Occupied by Essenes strict sect seeking to
    preserve the Jewish religion
  • Leather scrolls preserved in clay jars, sealed
    tops
  • Value of the Dead Sea Scrolls
  • Isaiah scroll from around 150 BC
  • 1,000 years older than previously known
  • No significant changes in the text

34
Conclusions
  • New Testament
  • The evidence is overwhelming.
  • The books of the NT are reliable.
  • Old Testament
  • The documents are reliable
  • Archaeology supports the OT
  • We have the Word of God.
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