BIBLIOLOGY OT TRANSMISSION. Randy Broberg. Maranatha Bible College Spring Semester, 2015

Similar documents
THE TRANSMISSION OF THE OLD TESTAMENT. Randy Broberg, 2004

Transmission: The Texts and Manuscripts of the Biblical Writings

The Origin of the Bible. Part 2a Transmission of the Old Testament

DEFENDING OUR FAITH: WEEK 4 NOTES KNOWLEDGE. The Bible: Is it Reliable? Arguments Against the Reliability of the Bible

Advanced Hebrew Open Book Quiz on Brotzman s Introduction

QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS

The Transmission of the OT Text

How did the Bible get chapters and verses?

How We Got OUf Bible III. BODY OF LESSON

LESSON 2 - THE BIBLE: HOW IT CAME TO US

HOW WE GOT THE BIBLE #1 THE BIBLE COMBS INTO BEING SYNOPSIS: The history of writing goes back to the remote past. Writing was being practised

BIBLIOLOGY OT TRANSMISSION THE DEAD SEA SCROLLS. Randy Broberg. Maranatha Bible College Spring Semester, 2015

Discovery of The Dead Sea Scrolls

AKC 4: The Physical Production of the Bible

How We Got Our Bible #1

Introduction. Importance: a light to our path (Ps. 119:105), a sweet taste (Ps. 119:103), a weapon in the fight against evil (Eph. 6:17),...

I Can Believe My Bible Because It Is Reliable

Mark McEntire Belmont University Nashville, Tennessee

How the Bible Came to Us

1 Chronicles - Nehemiah: Up from the Ashes

Introduction. Importance: a light to our path (Ps. 119:105), a sweet taste (Ps. 119:103), a weapon in the fight against evil (Eph. 6:17),...

1 The Bible - How it came to us

Survey of the Old Testament

Manuscript Support for the Bible's Reliability

Preservation & Transmission

Ancient New Testament Manuscripts Understanding Variants Gerry Andersen Valley Bible Church, Lancaster, California

BASIC FACTS ABOUT THE BIBLE. James Houston. What is the real difference between the conservative and the liberal views of Scripture?

We Rely On The New Testament

The Bible: Its History

Valley Bible Church Theology Studies. Transmission

The Amazing Bible. Part 1

How Did We Get the Bible?

Wheelersburg Baptist Church 4/15/07 PM. How Did We Get Our Bible Anyway?

IS THE NEW TESTAMENT RELIABLE?

INTRODUCTION. The Case for Christ

Background and Facts

THE BIBLE CAME FROM GOD. how did we get the bible

NT1000 Introduction to the New Testament

God s Ways and God s Words

"Fuldensis, Sigla for Variants in Vaticanus and 1Cor 14:34-5" NTS 41 (1995) Philip B. Payne

Let me read to you a brief snippet from a conversation I had with a co-worker a few years ago:

New Testament History, Literature, and Theology Session #4: Inspiration, canonicity and the transmission of the text.

The Ancient Texts of the Old Testament

Session # 1A: Starting From the Big Picture Overview

Questions from Last Week. The scrolls were written on parchment, with some on papyrus. Habbakkuk commentary: or 111 BCE-2 CE

IS THE OLD TESTAMENT RELIABLE?

Lesson 1- Formation of the Bible- Old Testament

Give Me the Bible Lesson 3

The Israelite Sojourn in Egypt: 430 or 215 Years? A Text Critical Analysis

APPROVED UNTO GOD. BIBLICAL WORLDVIEW: The simplest definition of a Biblical Worldview is to have the mind of Christ.

Textual Criticism. Bart D. Ehrman, Misquoting Jesus: The Story Behind Who Changed the Bible and Why (San Francisco: Harper Collins, 2005),

Adoption of the Old Testament Canon. Randy Broberg 2004

We Rely on the New Testament

A QUICK AND HISTORICAL GUIDE TO NAVIGATING THROUGH THE BIBLE REV. LISA MAYE

How We Got the Bible

Praise be to Allah, the Cherisher and Sustainer of the Worlds; By Abdullah Yusuf Ali. Appendix II. On The Tawrah. (see 5:44, n.

Our English Bible Part 1 An Outline of Its Textual History

What it is and Why it Matters

Bible Translations. Which Translation is better? Basic Concepts of Translation

The Bible: The Holy Canon of Scripture

The History and Authenticity of the Bible

Is It True that Some NT Documents Were First Written in Aramaic/Syriac and THEN in Greek?

Introduction to New Testament Interpretation NTS0510.RETI Spring 2015 Dr. Chuck Quarles

Chapter Thirteen. Where Are the Witnesses?

YOU CAN T WRITE THIS BOOK!

End of the Bible Birth of the Bible

RBL 02/2005 Goshen-Gottstein, Moshe, and Shemaryahu Talmon, eds.; Galen Marquis, associate editor

CONTENTS. Preface 13. Introduction 15. Chapter One: The Man and his Works against the Background of his Time 23

THE CANON OF THE OLD TESTAMENT. David C.F. Wright DD

History of the Old Testament Text. OT 5202 Old Testament Text and Interpretation Dr. August Konkel

Our Bible - The Word of God Can We Trust the Bible?

Introduction to Textual Criticism

Discipleship Training Program. First Semester Exam 2

Grace to You :: esp Unleashing God's Truth, One Verse at a Time. Second Samuel Scripture: 2 Samuel Code: MSB10. Title

Is Scripture Reliable?

APOLOGETICS. Know Why You Believe

THE GOSPELS. We will come back to these last two points.

Accelerate Presents - Hot Topics

The canon of scripture that is, the official list

mybible The Transmission of the Bible

The Big Picture. What, s in the Bible? Why read the Bible? Old Testament. New Testament. What is a Testament? BIBLE TIMELINE. (27 books).

Instant Expert: The Bible

Are the Biblical Documents Reliable?

CHAPTER 10 NEW TESTAMENT TEXTUAL CRITICISM

Divine Revelation and Sacred Scripture

Minister Omar J Stewart

167 BCE BCE Maccabean revolt (led by family of non-zadokite priests).

Qumran 10 min presentation by Kan

Séquence II : MESOPOTAMIA

Scriptural Promise The grass withers, the flower fades, but the word of our God stands forever, Isaiah 40:8

What do you know about The Old Testament?

The Foundation of God s Word: Summary

INTRODUCTION TO BIBLICAL STUDIES. IMMERSE CORNERSTONE SEMINAR 7 NOVEMBER 2014 HOWARD G. ANDERSEN, Ph.D. (do not copy or distribute)

Assignment Schedule. Old Testament Survey - Fall 2011 DUE DATE BIBLE READING OTT READING ASSESSMENT ITEM (HARD COPY) pp (esp. 108ff.

THE BIBLE. Biblical Research Library Roger E. Dickson. Dickson Biblical Research Library

Wednesday, February 25, 2015 First Baptist Church Buda Midweek Prayer Meeting & Bible Study

Our Bible Inspiration and Preservation

SPECIAL NOTICE TO ALL WHO DENY TWO SEEDLINE, #15

A simple explanation of Bible texts

INTRODUCTION TO THE BIBLE

Transcription:

BIBLIOLOGY OT TRANSMISSION Maranatha Bible College Spring Semester, 2015 Randy Broberg

PHYSICAL ASPECTS OF MANUAL TRANSMISSION

Always Be Prepared but sanctify Christ as Lord in your hearts, always being ready to make a defense to everyone who asks you to give an account for the hope that is in you, yet with gentleness and reverence. 1 Peter 3:15

Preparing Ourselves for the Fight God Revelation Human Author s Mind of the Writer Inspiration Original Manuscripts of the Bible Modern Greek & Hebrew Bibles Textual Criticism Collection of the 66 books of the Bible Modern English Translations

Transmission Before 400 B.C. Very little is known about the transmission of the O.T. at this time. We have no manuscripts from this period. Prior to 1350 B.C. Palio-Hebrew was used rather than square script.

The Process of Manuscript Transmission We do not have any ORIGINAL autographa Ancient Bible was written on papyrus scrolls. The scrolls deteriorate by use and a new copy of the text is made when the scroll is worn All transmissions of the Bible were handwritten until the invention of the printing press in 1450s by Johann Gutenberg.

Stone & Clay: Mesopotamian scribes used clay tablets and pressed designs into the wet clay using a reed stylus. cuneiform, derived from two Latin words: cuneus, which means "wedge," and forma, which means "shape. Very heavy--up to 2.3 pounds per page. Difficult to transport! Melts or weathers away in all climates but arid ones without firing. Breaks if dropped. Once dried or baked, cuneiforms tablets were difficult to alter. They were excellent for records and legal documents. Potential to make rubbings of tablets as copies. Cheap and plentiful mud is the building material. Using reed stylus to imprint clay is speedy--up to 40 ideographs a minute

Parchments & Vellum Cow skin, goat skin, and sheep skin provide a fairly flat but somewhat flexible surface. The skin holds inks, paints, or even melted gold. Properly preserved, such skins could last for long centuries. Animals hides from goats or sheep are generically called parchments. If the skin comes from a calf, lamb, or kid, it is technically called vellum.

The Scroll Later civilizations used scrolls, which one read by unrolling them along a horizontal frame. Scrolls were compact, but unwieldy for rapid transition from one passage to another. Any damage to a scroll would affect large swathes of the text, rather than one page alone. For practical reasons a scroll could not be longer than 7.5 meters This space limitation probably contributed to the determination of length of the Books of Isaiah & Jeremiah and why the twelve are grouped together.

Papyrus The ancient papyrus roll was elegant to look at but cumbersome to use. Size was strictly limited.a thousand or so lines of text was all that a roll could hold, and that would already make a long sheet of papyrus, averaging twenty to thirty feet in length. To shuffle through such a roll looking for a passage was time-consuming and bothersome. James J. O Donnell, Avatars of the Word: From Papyrus to Cyberspace (Harvard UP, 1998) pp. 50-1

Transition to the Codex If you were a very farsighted text of the second century [CE] and you wanted to be read a thousand or more years later, the thing you most wanted was to be copied into a codex format. Books that made that transition successfully had a reasonable chance of surviving and being read in the centuries to come, while books that did not were more likely to be orphaned. James J. O Donnell, Avatars of the Word: From Papyrus to Cyberspace (Harvard UP, 1998) pg. 52

Codex The new structure was the codex. By putting sheets of papyrus on top of each other, with a protective cover on the top and bottom, readers had two major advantages. The hard outer covering protected the internal pages. This covering--usually two pieces of wood or metal with a narrow spine connecting them--was easier to make than carving out a hollow scroll tube from bone, ivory, or wood. It also remained attached to the book while in use, providing further protection. Ancient codices have a much higher rate of survival than ancient scrolls do. : As an additional benefit, it was possible to browse through a codex or book. One could mark pages, compare passages, and flip back and forth. Scrolls required laborious rolling and unrolling. In the case of the Hebrew Torah, it might take a rabbi twenty or thirty minutes to roll back to the opening section of Genesis from the end of Leviticus. It s hard to crossreference scrolls!

No Word, Sentence or Paragraph Breaks ITEINABOOKANDSENDITUNTOTHESEVENCHURCHESWHI CHAREINASIAUNTOEPHESUSANDUNTOSMYRNAANDUNT OPERGAMOSANDUNTOTHYATIRAANDIHEARDAVOICEINT HEMIDSTOFTHEFOURBEASTSSAYAMEASUREOFWHEATFO RAPENNYANDTHREEMEASURESOFBARLEYFORAPENNYA NDSEETHOUHURTNOTTHEOILANDTHEWINE

Manuscripts: Uncials & Miniscules

ANCIENT TRANSLATIONS

The Samaritan Pentateuch an independent Hebrew witness to the text. Some of the Exodus fragments from Qumran demonstrate that it has close affinities with a pre-christian Palestinian text type and testify to the faithfulness with which it has been preserved. It contains about 6,000 variants from the Masoretic text, of which nearly a third agree with the Septuagint. Only a minority, however, are genuine variants, most being dogmatic, exegetical, grammatical, or merely orthographic in character. The Samaritan Pentateuch first became known in the West through a manuscript secured in Damascus in 1616

Septuagint 250 BC The Septuagint is the Greek translation of the Hebrew Bible It is the most ancient translation of the Old Testament The Septuagint Version was accepted first by the Alexandrian Jews, then by all the Greek-speaking countries. In the time of Jesus it was a legitimate text. Quotations of the Old Testament in the New Testament come from the Septuagint.

Septuagint Psalm 90, Greek Papyrus From 2 nd Century

Sources of the Septuagint A Greek translation of the Old Testament, known as the Septuagint because there allegedly were 70 or 72 translators, six from each of the 12 tribes of Israel, and designated LXX, is a composite of the work of many translators labouring for well over 100 years. It was made directly from Hebrew originals that frequently differed considerably from the present Masoretic text. Apart from other limitations attendant upon the use of a translation for such purposes, the identification of the parent text used by the Greek translators is still an unsettled question. The Pentateuch of the Septuagint manifests a basic coincidence with the Masoretic text. The Qumr(n scrolls have now proven that the Septuagint book of Samuel Kings goes back to an old Palestinian text tradition that must be earlier than the 4th century BCE, and from the same source comes a short Hebrew recension of Jeremiah that probably underlies thegreek.

GREEK OT: The Codex Sinaiticus C. 350 AD COPY OF GREEK SEPTUAGINT OLD TESTEMENT

GREEK OT: Codex Vaticanus, 350 AD COPY OF GREEK SEPTUAGINT OLD TESTEMENT

Syrian OT: Peshitta: 100 AD 400 AD Tanak and NT in Syriac a dialect of Aramaic used in Syria and much of the east Term meaning simple

Aramaic OT: Targums Aramaic (and other) language translations for the people who spoke different languages First Targums were from Bablylon. Later were in Palestine.

Latin OT Vulgate: 400 AD TO 1400 AD Jerome s translation of the Tanakh and NT into Latin Commissioned in 382 or 383 AD to produce an authoritative Latin version Word means common or common translation. Jerome knew Greek, but learned Hebrew, Aramaic, Syriac, and Arabic to translate from as many different manuscripts as possible

OT Quotations 100 AD 500 AD Quotations in Talmud and other Jewish writings Early Church Quotations

Judean Desert Scrolls 73-135 AD practically identical with the MT fragments of Leviticus, Deuteronomy, Ezekiel, and Psalms discovered at Masada (the Jewish fortress destroyed by the Romans in AD 73) fragments of Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, and Isaiah in addition to the substantially preserved Minor Prophets scroll from WadY al-murabbaåat, the latest date of which is AD 135. The same phenomenon characterizes the fragments of Numbers found at NaPal Qever.

Transmission: 300 B.C. 500 A.D. Palestine Samaritan Pentateuch Proto-Masoretic Text Qumran Text Babylon Proto- Masoretic Text Egypt Septuagint (LXX) Proto-Masoretic Text Standardized (First century A.D.)

No Hebrew Manuscripts From 135 to 900 AD

HEBREW MASORATIC TEXT

Masoretes: 500 A.D. 1500 A.D. Preservers of tradition ( masorah ) Group of scribes who carried on the meticulous transmission process of the standardized text

Sopherim: Scribes From the same root as sepher or book; it also can mean counters Worked from approximately the 5 th century BC to the 4 th century AD Updated script, added headings and titles

Key Masoretic Manuscripts Ben Asser Family: (9th & 10th century) a Masoretic family of scribes. Cairo Codex (Codex C) made in 950 A.D. Prophets Only Leningrad Codex (Codex P) written in 916 A.D. Text behind BHS. Alppo manuscript (Codex A)-written before 940 A.D. Leningrad Codex Oldest complete Hebrew Bible ca. 1010 AD

Masorites Rules: No word or letter was to be written from memory. There was to be a space of a hair between each consonant and the space of a consonant between each word. Calculated total numbers of letters, words and verses in biblical books, and middle verses and letters of books and of the three major divisions of the canon.

Masoretes Scrolls and Ink Only parchments from clean animals could be used. Each column of the scroll was to have no fewer than forty-eight and no more than sixty lines whose breadth must consist of thirty letters. The ink was to be black, prepared according to a specific recipe. Goose quills, cut with a knife to a sharp point, were the preferred writing instrument. Every few pages, the scribe would need to take a knife and cut the quill anew in case ink had dried on the tip or the tip had grown dull from friction.

Comparing 900 AD & 70 AD DSS Little difference with the Masoretic Text (MT) Consistency between two copies of Isaiah proved to be word for word identical with our standard Hebrew Bible in more than 95% of the text. The 5% of variation consisted chiefly of obvious slips of the pen and variations in spelling.

Comparing 900 AD to 1500 AD The earliest printed editions of the Hebrew Bible derive from the last quarter of the 15th century and the first quarter of the 16th century. The oldest Masoretic codices stem from the end of the 9th century and the beginning of the 10th. A comparison of the two shows that no textual developments took place during the intervening 600 years. A single standardized recension enjoyed an absolute monopoly and was transmitted by the scribes with amazing fidelity. Not one of the medieval Hebrew manuscripts and none of the thousands of fragments preserved in the Cairo Geniza (synagogue storeroom) contains departures of any real significance from the received text. Ency. Britannica

Key Masoretic Manuscripts Ben Asser Family: (9th & 10th century) a Masoretic family of scribes. Cairo Codex (Codex C) made in 950 A.D. Prophets Only Leningrad Codex (Codex P) written in 916 A.D. Text behind BHS. Alppo manuscript (Codex A)-written before 940 A.D. Leningrad Codex Oldest complete Hebrew Bible ca. 1010 AD

Unintentional Errors 1.Mistaken Letter Similar-looking letters were sometimes interchanged. d r Q O. 2. Homophony Substitution of similar-sounding words. Rom. 5:1 ecomen We have. Or ecwmen Let us have. 3. Dittography A letter or word that was written twice rather than once. 4. Fusion Incorrect division of words. GODISNOWHERE 5. Homoioteleuton An omission caused by two words that have similar endings. 6. Metathesis Reversal of order of two words. Christ Jesus, Jesus Christ.

Masoretic Variants This is an enlargement of the apparatus. It contains all the variant readings of the biblical verses on the main page. These variant readings come from other OT manuscript traditions.

Masoretic Corrections The Hebrew for "what is written", kethib refers to the consonants found in the Hebrew text and preserved by scribal tradition. In the margin they wrote the consonants of suggested corrections (the qere, "what is to be read"), putting the vowels of the correction around the consonants in the text indicating the need for correction.

Masoretes Add Notations Added notes to the text for things like crossreferencing, clarity; noted anomalies

Masoretes Add Vowel Points added vowels to the consonantal text Added marks for singing, accentuation; The basic method was to specify vowels by placing dots and strokes above or below the consonants. The process was called pointing the text and the symbols were called vowel points. The vowel points were accompanied by accents that served as punctuation and as a guide for chanting the texts.

Hebrew Bible Critical Edition Masoretic Text This is a page from the Masoretic Text It s symbol is M At the bottom is the apparatus indicated by the arrow On the side is the qerekethib indicated by the arrow

Masoretic Vowels On the left is Hebrew without vowels On the right is Hebrew with the vowels

Verses Added, 13 th Century AD The MT had spaces left to mark paragraphs Verses were marked but not numbered Stephen Langton added verses to the Latin Vulgate in 1205 AD and a rabbi entered them into the Hebrew Bible in 1330 AD

Printed editions of Hebrew Bible The PRINTED Hebrew Bible 1488 with punctuation and accents, but without any commentary. The first Christian production was a magnificent Complutensian Polyglot in six volumes, four of which contained the Hebrew Bible and Greek and Latin translations together with the Aramaic rendering (Targum) of the Pentateuch that has been ascribed to Onkelos. Printed at Alcala (1514 17). The first rabbinic Bible i.e., the Hebrew text furnished with full vowel points and accents, accompanied by the Aramaic Targums and the major medieval Jewish commentaries Venice, 1516/17).

MASORETIC ACCURACY

Nahash 4QSam a NIV 1 Samuel 10:27 But some troublemakers said, "How can this fellow save us?" They despised him and brought him no gifts. But Saul kept silent. NRS 1 Samuel 10:27 But some worthless fellows said, "How can this man save us?" They despised him and brought him no present. But he held his peace. Now Nahash, king of the Ammonites, had been grievously oppressing the Gadites and the Reubenites. He would gouge out the right eye of each of them and would not grant Israel a deliverer. No one was left of the Israelites across the Jordan whose right eye Nahash, king of the Ammonites, had not gouged out. But there were seven thousand men who had escaped from the Ammonites and had entered Jabeshgilead.

DSS, LXX, MT Exodus 1:5 The descendants of Jacob numbered seventy in all; Joseph was already in Egypt. Acts 7:14 After this, Joseph sent for his father Jacob and his whole family, seventy-five in all. MT = 70 descendants LXX = 75 descendants 4QExoa = 75 descendants Acts 7:14 = 75 descendants

DSS Organization of the OT Luke 24:44 Law Prophets Psalms 4QMMT Law Prophets David Copper Scroll from Qumran Cave III

Masoretic Accuracy Masoretic Text 150 Psalms Arranged in 5 Books 11QSam a 150 Psalms + 9 additional Arranged in different order Mostly in Books IV-V