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Topic(s): Bible Study
Todd Clippard
With reference to the "original scriptures," to our knowledge
they do not exist. The early writings were on primitive paper or
animal skins, thus making them highly susceptible to the elements,
particularly humidity and light. Also, because the Bible was copied
extensively and circulated widely, there would be no way to know if
a manuscript was an original, even if it could be dated to the first
century.
However, there are thousands of manuscript copies of the New
Testament
writings, including some that date to the early second century. In
2003,
I had the privilege to see the oldest complete Bibles ever found --
the
Codex Sinaiticus and Codex Alexandrinus. Both are housed at the
British
Library in London. Both date to the late third - early fourth
century.
They are named from the area in which they were found - Sinaiticus
was found
on the Sinai Peninsula and Alexandrinus because it was found near
Alexandria
in Africa.
Translations are made using a body of manuscripts, comparing the
various
texts and determining the best renderings. Some question the
validity of
the Bible based upon a few variations within the manuscript bodies,
but
consider the following facts:
Of Plato's Republic there are 7 manuscripts dating to about 1400
years after
he died;
Of Aristotle's Rhetoric, there are only 49 manuscripts dating to
about 1200
years after he died;
And there are no original manuscripts of Shakespeare's work - around
the
year 1600.
Generally speaking, no one argues about the validity of these works
despite the miniscule and far removed manuscript evidence. But there
are 20,000+ catalogued manuscripts and fragments of the New
Testament, some dating to early 4th century. Of the variations
within these thousands of manuscripts:
1) the variations within them could be written on a single sheet of
paper:
(e.g., "John" vs "Johnn");
2) only 8 or 9 verses under suspicion as being non-canonical, that
is, may
not belong in the text (Acts 8:37; 1 John 5:7-8); and
3) of these variants or "suspicious" verses, not one changes or
alters in
any way one single Bible doctrine!
We can know the Bible is reliable because of the overwhelming
manuscript evidence. There is no reason to doubt its validity simply
because the original writings no longer exist.