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GUEST ARTICLE
Are the New Testament Books Historically Credible?
Article description: While uninformed modern critics
continue to question the credibility of the New Testament
documents, the evidence continues to pile up which establishes
their genuineness.
The twenty-seven documents
of the New Testament, as they came from the pens of the
original inspired writers, are referred to as autographs.
None of these compositions survive today. Does that then
mean that our copies of the New Testament Scriptures are
somehow suspect? Hardly. If one operated on the premise
that no document is genuine unless the original is possessed,
he would have to throw away the bulk of ancient literature.
There is but a smattering of
historical literary evidence for the Greek and Roman classics,
when compared with the document-support for the New Testament.
And yet no one dreams of disputing the authorship of the
noble compositions of Homer, Aristotle, or Tacitus. What
then ought to be conceded relative to the credibility of
the New Testament records? Consider several examples.
- Homer, the blind poet of Greece, lived some
900 years before the birth of Christ. He penned the Iliad and
the Odyssey. But not a single complete copy of
these works exists, that is earlier than the thirteenth
century A.D.; and there are no fragmented copies older
than the sixth century A.D. This means our modern versions
are, at the very least, fifteen centuries removed from
the originals.
- Plato was one of the most famous of the Greek
philosophers. He lived in the early fifth century before
Christ. He produced a number of important works, e.g.,
the Republic, Apology, Laws, etc. Only seven copies
of his works have survived, and none of these is earlier
than around A.D. 900. There is thus a gap of some 1,300
years between the original composition and the extant
copies of today.
- Aristotle lived in the fourth century before
our Lord. He wrote prolifically on science, politics,
ethics, etc. Of the five copies of his works that
have survived, the oldest dates from about 1100 A.D. —which
is some 1,400 years removed from the original.
- Julius Caesar (cir. 102-44 B.C.) penned his Gallic
War between 58-50 B.C. There remain only about
nine or ten reasonably good manuscripts, and they date
to some 900 years this side of the originals.
These four examples surely
are illustrative enough to make the point we wish to emphasize.
Contrast the statistics sited above with the fact that
we now possess, in the various libraries and museums of
the world, more than 5,300 copies (substantially
complete or fragmented) of the New Testament documents!
That is a breath-taking figure compared to the numbers
for the classics.
But let me be more precise.
There are more than 240 papyri Greek fragments containing
portions of the New Testament, and some of them are within
decades of the close of the New Testament canon.
- The Chester Beatty papyri contain much of the
Gospel records, Acts, the Pauline epistles, and the book
of Revelation. They date from the third century A.D.
- Papyrus 52, in the John Rylands Library of
Manchester, England, contains a portion of John 18. It
dates to the first half of the second century A.D.
- Several papyri in the Bodmer Library in Geneva,
Switzerland contain different segments of the New Testament,
including the Gospel of Luke, the Gospel of John, the
book of Acts, Jude, the epistles of Peter, James, John,
and Jude.
Add to the more than 5,300
Greek manuscripts thousands of ancient translations of
the Greek New Testament into other languages. For instance,
there are more than 8,000 copies of the Latin Vulgate;
it was the most translated work of antiquity. This is an
amazing fact in itself since ancient works were rarely rendered
from one language to another.
Finally, there are those quotations
from the New Testament that are found in the writings of
the “church fathers,” i.e., those works produced in the
first several centuries of the Christian era. It has been
noted that virtually the whole of the New Testament, with
the exception of about a dozen verses, could be reproduced
from these sources alone.
How astounding is the evidence
for the preservation of the New Testament records. We can
have every confidence in the reliability of the Book we
hold so dear.
--Wayne Jackson
© 2002 by Christian Courier
Publications. All rights reserved.
http://www.christiancourier.com/articles/print/
are_the_new_testament_books_historically_credible
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