It might be noteworthy to mention that Sanders is a professor of military history, not a theologian. He uses these three tests of reliability in his own study of historical military events.
We will look now at the bibliographical, or textual evidence for the Bible's reliability.
The Dead Sea Scrolls include a complete copy of the Book of Isaiah, a fragmented copy of Isaiah, containing much of Isaiah 38-6, and fragments of almost every book in the Old Testament. The majority of the fragments are from Isaiah and the Pentateuch (Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, and Deuteronomy). The books of Samuel, in a tattered copy, were also found and also two complete chapters of the book of Habakkuk. In addition, there were a number of nonbiblical scrolls related to the commune found.
These materials are dated around 100 B.C. The significance of the find, and particularly the copy of Isaiah, was recognized by Merrill F. Unger when he said, "This complete document of Isaiah quite understandably created a sensation since it was the first major Biblical manuscript of great antiquity ever to be recovered. Interest in it was especially keen since it antedates by more than a thousand years the oldest Hebrew texts preserved in the Massoretic tradition."{2}
The supreme value of these Qumran documents lies in the ability of biblical scholars to compare them with the Massoretic Hebrew texts of the tenth century A.D. If, upon examination, there were little or no textual changes in those Massoretic texts where comparisons were possible, an assumption could then be made that the Massoretic Scribes had probably been just as faithful in their copying of the other biblical texts which could not be compared with the Qumran material.
What was learned? A comparison of the Qumran manuscript of Isaiah with the Massoretic text revealed them to be extremely close in accuracy to each other: "A comparison of Isaiah 53 shows that only 17 letters differ from the Massoretic text. Ten of these are mere differences in spelling (like our "honor" and the English "honour") and produce no change in the meaning at all. Four more are very minor differences, such as the presence of a conjunction (and) which are stylistic rather than substantive. The other three letters are the Hebrew word for "light." This word was added to the text by someone after "they shall see" in verse 11. Out of 166 words in this chapter, only this one word is really in question, and it does not at all change the meaning of the passage. We are told by biblical scholars that this is typical of the whole manuscript of Isaiah."{3}
Papyrus and Parchment
During the early Christian era, the writing material most commonly used was papyrus. This highly durable reed from the Nile Valley was glued together much like plywood and then allowed to dry in the sun. In the twentieth century many remains of documents (both biblical and non-biblical) on papyrus have been discovered, especially in the dry, arid lands of North Africa and the Middle East.
Another material used was parchment. This was made from the skin of sheep or goats, and was in wide use until the late Middle Ages when paper began to replace it. It was scarce and more expensive; hence, it was used almost exclusively for important documents.
Examples
1. Codex Vaticanus and Codex Siniaticus
These are two excellent parchment copies of the entire New Testament which date from the 4th century (325-450 A.D.).{5}
2. Older Papyrii
Earlier still, fragments and papyrus copies of portions of the New Testament date from 100 to 200 years (180-225 A.D.) before Vaticanus and Sinaticus. The outstanding ones are the Chester Beatty Papyrus (P45, P46, P47) and the Bodmer Papyrus II, XIV, XV (P46, P75).
From these five manuscripts alone, we can construct all of Luke, John, Romans, 1 and 2 Corinthians, Galatians, Ephesians, Philippians, Colossians, 1 and 2 Thessalonians, Hebrews, and portions of Matthew, Mark, Acts, and Revelation. Only the Pastoral Epistles (Titus, 1 and 2 Timothy) and the General Epistles (James, 1 and 2 Peter, and 1, 2, and 3 John) and Philemon are excluded.{6}
3. Oldest Fragment
Perhaps the earliest piece of Scripture surviving is a fragment of a papyrus codex containing John 18:31-33 and 37. It is called the Rylands Papyrus (P52) and dates from 130 A.D., having been found in Egypt. The Rylands Papyrus has forced the critics to place the fourth gospel back into the first century, abandoning their earlier assertion that it could not have been written then by the Apostle John.{7}
4. This manuscript evidence creates a bridge of extant papyrus and parchment fragments and copies of the New Testament stretching back to almost the end of the first century.
It has been observed that if all of the New Testament manuscripts and Versions mentioned above were to disappear overnight, it would still be possible to reconstruct the entire New Testament with quotes from the Church Fathers, with the exception of fifteen to twenty verses!
Author and Work | Author's Lifespan | Date of Events | Date of Writing* | Earliest Extant MS** | Lapse: Event to Writing | Lapse: Event to MS |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Matthew, Gospel |
ca. 0-70? | 4 BC - AD 30 | 50 - 65/75 | ca. 200 | <50 years | <200 years |
Mark, Gospel |
ca. 15-90? | 27 - 30 | 65/70 | ca. 225 | <50 years | <200 years |
Luke, Gospel |
ca. 10-80? | 5 BC - AD 30 | 60/75 | ca. 200 | <50 years | <200 years |
John, Gospel |
ca. 10-100 | 27-30 | 90-110 | ca. 130 | <80 years | <100 years |
Paul, Letters |
ca. 0-65 | 30 | 50-65 | ca. 200 | 20-30 years | <200 years |
Josephus, War |
ca. 37-100 | 200 BC - AD 70 | ca. 80 | ca. 950 | 10-300 years | 900-1200 years |
Josephus, Antiquities |
ca. 37-100 | 200 BC - AD 65 | ca. 95 | ca. 1050 | 30-300 years | 1000-1300 years |
Tacitus, Annals |
ca. 56-120 | AD 14-68 | 100-120 | ca. 850 | 30-100 years | 800-850 years |
Seutonius, Lives |
ca. 69-130 | 50 BC - AD 95 | ca. 120 | ca. 850 | 25-170 years | 750-900 years |
Pliny, Letters |
ca. 60-115 | 97-112 | 110-112 | ca. 850 | 0-3 years | 725-750 years |
Plutarch, Lives |
ca. 50-120 | 500 BC - AD 70 | ca. 100 | ca. 950 | 30-600 years | 850-1500 years |
Herodotus, History |
ca. 485-425 BC | 546-478 BC | 430-425 BC | ca. 900 | 50-125 years | 1400-1450 years |
Thucydides, History |
ca. 460-400 BC | 431-411 BC | 410-400 BC | ca. 900 | 0-30 years | 1300-1350 years |
Xenophon, Anabasis |
ca. 430-355 BC | 401-399 BC | 385-375 BC | ca. 1350 | 15-25 years | 1750 years |
Polybius, History |
ca. 200-120 BC | 220-168 BC | ca. 150 BC | ca. 950 | 20-70 years | 1100-1150 years |
*Where a slash occurs, the first date is conservative, and the second
is liberal.
**New Testament manuscripts are fragmentary. Earliest complete manuscript
is from ca. 350; lapse of event to complete manuscript is about 325 years.
To be skeptical of the 27 documents in the New Testament, and to say they are unreliable is to allow all of classical antiquity to slip into obscurity, for no documents of the ancient period are as well attested bibliographically as these in the New Testament.
B. F. Westcott and F.J.A. Hort, the creators of The New Testament in Original Greek, also commented: "If comparative trivialities such as changes of order, the insertion or omission of the article with proper names, and the like are set aside, the works in our opinion still subject to doubt can hardly mount to more than a thousandth part of the whole New Testament."{9} In other words, the small changes and variations in manuscripts change no major doctrine: they do not affect Christianity in the least. The message is the same with or without the variations. We have the Word of God.
Last eve I passed beside a blacksmith's door
And heard the anvil ring the vesper chime:
Then looking in, I saw upon the floor
Old hammers, worn with beating years of time.
"How many anvils have you had," said I,
"To wear and batter all these hammers so?"
"Just one," said he, and then, with twinkling eye,
"The anvil wears the hammers out, you know."
And so, thought I, the anvil of God's word,
For ages skeptic blows have beat upon;
Yet though the noise of falling blows was heard,
The anvil is unharmed . . . the hammer's gone.
Author unknown
Notes
© 1995 Probe Ministries