How the New Testament Was Copied and Preserved
The New Testament has been preserved through thousands of manuscripts, primarily in Greek, with many textual variants that are generally insignificant. These manuscripts, along with early translations and quotations from church fathers, provide a robust foundation for reconstructing the original text. Scholars organize and evaluate these sources by date and text type, such as the earlier Alexandrian and the later, more numerous Byzantine manuscripts.
- ▪There are approximately 5,800 Greek manuscripts of the New Testament, which are the primary witnesses to the original text.
- ▪Textual variants number around half a million, but most are minor and do not affect core Christian teachings.
- ▪The two most significant manuscript families are the Alexandrian, known for earlier and less polished readings, and the Byzantine, which contains later, smoother, and more harmonized texts.
- ▪Early Christian writers like Irenaeus and Origen quoted the New Testament, offering additional evidence for its transmission.
- ▪Manuscripts are analyzed both chronologically and by text type to trace the development and geographic spread of textual variants.
Opening excerpt (first ~120 words) tap to expand
On Life & ScriptureHow the New Testament Was Copied and Preserved111×0:00Current time: 0:00 / Total time: -41:54-41:54Audio playback is not supported on your browser. Please upgrade.How the New Testament Was Copied and PreservedThe New Testament has been preserved through thousands of manuscripts containing many textual variants, yet careful comparison shows that these differences are largely insignificant.Jeremy SarberMay 04, 202611ShareTranscriptPreviously, we began examining the transmission of the New Testament. A brief reminder will suffice before moving forward. The copying of the New Testament differed significantly from that of the Old Testament.
…
Excerpt limited to ~120 words for fair-use compliance. The full article is at Hacker News (Newest).