Criteria Used In Choosing Among Conflicting Readings In New Testament Witnesses
Islamic Awareness
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First Composed: 23 April 2000
Last Updated: 23 April 2000
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Assalamu ʿalaykum wa rahamatullahi wa barakatuhu:
Contrary to the uneducated claims of some of the Christian missionaries that the New Testament in their hands is the "Word" of God, it was shown that the text of the modern day New Testament is based on the deliberations of a Committee. Frequently it had happened that the members of the Committee differed in their evaluation of the textual evidence, and thus many readings were adopted on the basis of majority vote. In other words, these readings were elected in a democratic fashion. In special cases, when a member holding a minority opinion had strong feelings that the majority had seriously gone astray, opportunity was given for him to express his own point of view.[1]
It was also added that the text of the modern day Greek New Testament is a working text (and the Nestle-Aland text is in its 27th edition) and that it is based on the relative degree of certainty in the mind of the Committee, i.e., the text itself is probabilistic in nature. What was not discussed was the actual criteria adopted by the Committee to reach the conclusion concerning the relative degree of certainty of the readings in the Greek New Testament. In this document we will discuss this issue. The material below is taken from Bruce Metzger's book A Textual Commentary On The New Testament.[2] It will be seen how deeply the human input is involved in selecting what could be the "Word" of God.
Of the approximately five thousand Greek manuscripts of all or part of the New Testament that are known today, no two agree exactly in all particulars. Confronted by a mass of conflicting readings, editors must decide which variants deserve to be included in the text and which should be relegated to the apparatus. Although at first it may seem to be a hopeless task amid so many thousands of variant readings to sort out those that should be regarded as original, textual scholars have developed certain generally acknowledged criteria of evaluation. These considerations depend, it will be seen, upon probabilities, and sometimes the textual critic must weight one set of probabilities against another. Furthermore, the reader should be advised at the outset that, although the following criteria have been drawn up in a more or less tidy outline form, their application can never be undertaken in a merely mechanical or stereotyped manner. The range and complexity of textual data are so great that no neatly arranged or mechanically contrived set of rules can be applied with mathematical precision. Each and every variant reading needs to be considered in itself, and not judged merely according to a rule of thumb. With these cautionary comments in mind, the reader will appreciate that the following outline of criteria is meant only as a convenient description of the more important considerations that the Committee took into account when choosing among the variant readings.
The chief catagories or kinds of criteria and considerations that assist one in evaluating the relative worth of variant readings are those which involve (I) External Evidence, having to do with the manuscripts themselves, and (II) Internal Evidence, having to do with two kinds of considerations, (A) those concerned with Transcriptional Probabilities (i.e., relating to the habits of scribes) and (B) those concerned with Intrinsic Probabilities (i.e. relating to the style of the author).
I. External Evidence, involving considerations bearing upon:
II. Internal Evidence, involving two kinds of probabilities:
It is obvious that not all of these criteria are applicable in every case. The textual critic must know when it is appropriate to give greater consideration to one kind of evidence and less to another. Since textual criticism in an art as well as a science, it is inevitable that in some cases different scholars would come to different evaluations of the significance of the evidence. This divergence is almost inevitable when, as sometimes happens, the evidence is so divided that, for example, the more difficult reading is found only in the later witnesses, or the longer reading is found only in the early witnesses.
In order to indicate the relative degree of certainty in the mind of the Committee for the reading adopted as the text, an identifying letter is included within braces at the beginning of each set of textual variants. The letter {A} signifies that the text is virtually certain, while {B} indicates that there is some degree of doubt concerning the readings selected for the text. The letter {C} means that there is a considerable degree of doubt whether the text or the apparatus contains the superior reading, while {D} shows that there is a very high degree of doubt concerning the readings selected for the text. In fact, among the {D} decisions sometimes none of the variant readings commend itself as original, and therefore theonly recourse was to print the least unsatisfactory reading.
We will now illustrate some examples to show the deliberations of the committee on various verses of the New Testament. We will deal with only a few examples. Interested reader is urged to go through the reference for many examples that deal with the gamut of the New Testament. Notice the use of alphabets A, B, C and D within braces to indicate the degree of certainty of the reading.
Examples from Gospel according to Mark
The above example discusses the Committee deliberations concerning the verses Mark 3:29 and 3:32.[3]
Examples from Gospel according to Luke
The above example discusses the Committee deliberations concerning the verses Luke 3:32 and 3:33.[4]
Examples from Gospel according to John
The above example discusses the Committee deliberations concerning the verses John 8:10 and 8:16.[5]
5. Our Comments
We have seen the true nature of the modern day Greek New Testament and the methodology involved in reaching its text. In conclusion, it is the work of humans whose decision lead to include or exclude the reading to which is attached a probability. And hence claiming it to be a "Word" of God is too far-fetched!
[1] B. M. Metzger, A Textual Commentary On The New Testament: A Companion Voume To The United Bible Societies' Greek New Testament, 1971, United Bible Societies, London & New York, pp. vi-vii for the discussion.
[2] ibid., pp. xxiv-xxviii.
[3] ibid., p. 82.
[4] ibid., p. 136.
[5] ibid., p. 223.