Wednesday, March 21, 2012

Critical Editions of the Greek New Testament

PART 7 IN A SERIES ON TRANSLATION

We do not have the original copies, the “autographs” as scholars call them, of any of the books of the Bible. They are lost to time and history, probably worn out and discarded long ago. If they exist at all anymore, it is most likely as scraps and fragments which, if they were found today, probably could not be identified as the originals.

What we do have is thousands of manuscripts of New Testament texts, some remarkably complete, many just torn bits of papyrus. They are copies of copies of copies of the originals. And therein lies the problem.

Copyists make errors. Try copying a paragraph or two out of a book sometime and see how you do. Now imagine someone copying your copy. They would probably duplicate your errors--or try to correct them--and add new errors of their own. With each fresh copy, discrepancies multiply and variant readings proliferate.

There are literally more variant readings than there are words in the entire New Testament. How can we possibly know what the originals said?

The situation is not so hopeless as it may sound. For one thing, most of the variants are quite minor and do not affect the meaning of the text. For another, there are scholars called text critics who catalog, collate, and compare all the known New Testament manuscripts to determine the most likely original reading from among the variants.

Text critics base their judgments on several criteria. Among them:

In general, older texts are preferred because they are closer in time to the original and there would have been less opportunity for mistakes to be made and reproduced.

Certain texts are considered more reliable than others because they show signs of being produced by careful, trained scribes.

Difficult readings are more likely to be original as scribes have a tendency to smooth out difficulties.
Shorter readings are also preferred as scribes are more likely to add words deliberately than to omit them.

Text critics have also described all sorts of mistakes that copyists are liable to make, skipping or repeating words or lines, mistaking words that sound alike (think of how often the English words “there,” “they’re” and “their” are interposed), etc.

Using criteria like these, text critics have produced what they believe to be the best possible approximation of the original texts of the New Testament.

From the 16th through the 19th centuries, Erasmus' Textus Receptus was the standard text underlying most translations of the New Testament. In 1881, British scholars Brooke Foss Westcott and Fenton John Anthony Hort published The New Testament in the Original Greek, the first of the modern critical editions. Today the standard critical texts are the 4 th edition of the United Bible Societies' Greek New Testament(UBS4) and the Nestle Aland Novum Testamentum Graece. These two have identical texts (and are actually quite close to Westcott and Hort's work) but they each have a different critical apparatus (that is, a set of scholarly notes). The UBS and NA texts are the basis for most modern translations. Some translators will occasionally disagree with the critical editions and choose a variant reading. In such cases, you will usually find a footnote in the translation.

Although I think that the critical texts are the best basis for a translation, not everyone would agree. Orthodox Bibles (which base their Old Testament on the Septuagint) use a majority text—that is, a text that uses the most commonly occuring readings, rather than the most likely variants—that was authorized in 1912 by the Patriarchate of Constantinople. The Orthodox text is close, but by no means identical to the Textus Receptus. There are also King James Version Onlyists who, in defiance of reason, insist that the Textus Receptus is the only proper basis for a translation of the New Testament (and usually that the King James Version is the only proper translation).



Illustrating this post are an image of P52, the oldest currently known manuscript of a New Testament text, and a picture of Westcott and Hort. Both pictures were found at wikipedia.com.

 






3 comments:

  1. Thanks, Brant! The whole thing is fascinating.

    I guess the mysterious part is how the Holy Spirit is at work in the whole process. I would guess that there is more to it than putting a puzzle together, as if there is no God, just the pieces to sort through, and that somehow God is present, ensuring that His message gets through - though in partnership with us, and therefore always imperfectly. Which I guess also ensures that none of us can ever think, "Well, we have that figured out - no need for God!"

    One question. How similar is the Greek of the Bible to modern Greek... or are they similar at all???

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    1. I remember when I took ancient Greek in college, my professor told the class, "When you finish this course, you won't be able to order a cheeseburger in Athens."

      Modern Demotic Greek has evolved a long way from the Koine Greek of the New Testament. Grammar and vocabulary have both changed (there was no word for "cheeseburger" in ancient Greek) to the point that there are modern Greek translations of the New Testament.

      As for the Holy Spirit, I figure that God is working less in the preservation of the original words of the text than in its interpretation in every age. The Spirit is not confined to the page, but works in the hearts and minds of believers...and especially in the community of the Church.

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  2. Further reflecting again...

    As I was thinking of it, I realized that unless the work of preserving God's word was done by disinterested unbelievers that of course the Holy Spirit was involved! I would just have to assume that those involved WERE believers, and that the Holy Spirit was at work in their lives just as He is in all believers - and I would think even more so, given the work they were doing!

    They didn't have cheeseburgers in ancient Greece??? And they thought it was the Golden Age! No golden arches???? Hardly!!!

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