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Twelve Points That Show Christianity is True. By: Dr. Norman Geisler. Owning Your Worldview Considers:. Building Foundations. Apologetics Logical Foundation (Points 1 and 2) Supernatural Foundation (Points 3 through 5) Historical Foundation (Points 6 through 12)
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Twelve Points That Show Christianity is True By: Dr. Norman Geisler Owning Your Worldview Considers:
Building Foundations • Apologetics • Logical Foundation (Points 1 and 2) • Supernatural Foundation (Points 3 through 5) • Historical Foundation (Points 6 through 12) • Point 6a: The New Testament Documents are Reliable - The Documents are Copied Correctly
Review: • We established a logical framework for evaluating the exclusivity claims of the Christian worldview. • We reviewed a summary of Apologetic arguments. • We defined what miracles are and are not. • We discussed the concept that miracles are used by God to confirm His messengers and their message.
A Higher Standard • All religions hold that their texts are sacred and true. • Since Christianity claims to be founded in truth and not "just so" stories, we must hold our sacred scriptures to a higher standard. • We have nothing to fear since the truth (the Bible) can withstand the scrutiny. • The tools we use are literary criticism, history, archeology, etc.
A Higher Standard • Traditional Christianity holds that the Bible (the original autograph) is infallible and inerrant. • If an autograph was ever found to be false or in error then Christianity would be in crisis. • Translations can introduce inconsistencies, but those can all be rectified by going back to the original texts.
A Higher Standard • If it can be shown that any of the original authors of the Bible were in error, then the Christian worldview is difficult to salvage. • If it cannot be shown that any of the original authors of the Bible were in error, then we should have great confidence in the biblical foundation of the Christian worldview.
Opposition • In order to undermine the Christian worldview many sources attempt to discredit the Bible and cause confusion. • TV networks run shows cast doubt on the Bible's completeness by introducing writings from the intratestamonial period. Those works are out of context. Yet, it is suggested they are Biblical. • Movies about Biblical events take "artistic liberty" and retell the story in a way that undermines the traditional Christian worldview. • Scholars "atomize" their work and come to faulty conclusions because they fail to consider the full context of the Bible.
Opposition • Opponents of the Bible use literary criticism to critique the Bible. • They hold the Bible to a higher standard than other ancient texts, while claiming it is just an ancient text. • When compared on even terms; the age, volume, and accuracy of NT writings are far superior to any other ancient writing.
The “Telephone” Misconception • Opponents of the Bible will argue that from one translation to the next the Bible picks up ever more errors so it can no longer be trusted. • They relate it to the kids game called “Telephone”. • This is completely false since new translations return to the early source manuscripts and not other modern translations. • It would be like “Telephone” but each child walks over to the first child and ask them what they said. • Individual translations are occasionally in error, but the entire body of Biblical texts are not suspect.
The Accuracy Discussion • Any time we discuss accuracy of the Bible, the opposition will typically distance themselves from arguing against the original autograph’s accuracy. • To the Christian it is a given that the original autographs are inerrant and infallible. • The opposition will typically challenge the accuracy of the modern translations. • Current accuracy is more easily investigated and debated.
Documents are Copied Correctly • NT authorship of autographs is early. • The gap between the autographs and the earliest existing manuscripts is small. • The large volume of existing ancient manuscripts allows for error proofing.
Authorship is Early (per Gary Habbermas) • 30 A.D.: Jesus is crucified. (+0) • 31 A.D.: The early creed originates around this time • 35 A.D.: Paul receives the early creed from Peter, John and James in Jerusalem • 55 A.D.: 1 Corinthians (+25) • 70 A.D. Mark (+40) • 80 A.D. Matthew (+50) • 85 A.D. Luke (+55) • 95 A.D. John (+65)
Authorship is Early • Early authorship is advantageous for several reasons: • The authors were in a position to have first-hand knowledge of the events they were writing about. • Witnesses can discredit any writings they know to be false. Falsified claims typically don't survive long. • There is no time for legendary elements to be integrated into the text.
Autograph to Existing Text • We start seeing existing NT fragments within 100 years of the original autographs. • Next to the New Testament the shortest time from autograph to existing manuscript belong to the works of Homer (The Iliad & The Odyssey) - 400 years. • The average time gap for ancient texts is 1,000 years.
Autograph to Existing Text • The John Ryland Papyri (fragments of John) - 200 A.D. (approx. 105 yr. gap) • The Bodmer Papyri (fragments of John, 1 & 2 Peter, and Jude) - 200 A.D. (approx. 105 yr. gap) • The Chester Beaty Papyri (almost the entire NT) - 250 A.D. (approx. 155 yr. gap) • The Codex Vaticanus (almost the entire Bible) - 350 A.D. (approx. 255 yr. gap)
Autograph to Existing Text • A short span of time from the writing of the original autograph to the time when the existing texts were copied is beneficial because: • Less time for unintentional errors to be introduced. • Less time for intentional reshaping of the stories. • This could include legendary elements or removing undesirable or embarrassing details. • Less actual copying will have occurred. • Less changes in the language that was originally used.
So Many Manuscripts • There are approx. 5,800 NT manuscripts. • This can be a complete work to a scrap of paper. • New manuscripts are being located every year. • The next best ancient example is The Iliad • It has 1,800 manuscripts. • The typical ancient work has 10 - 20 manuscripts.
So Many Manuscripts • Across the 5,800 NT manuscripts there are 400,000 variations. • Critics point to this as a reason that the NT manuscripts are unreliable. • A variation is not as problematic as the critic would lead you to believe. • ANY deviation would be considered a variation, including alternate spellings, misspellings, and grammatical errors.
So Many Manuscripts • Consider the following variations: • YOU HAVE WON TEN MILLION DOLLARS • THOU HAST WON 10 MILLION DOLLARS • Y’ALL HAVE WON $10,000,000 • you have won ten million dollars
So Many Manuscripts • Consider the following variations: • YOU HAVE WON TEN MILLION DOLLARS (0) • THOU HAST WON 10 MILLION DOLLARS (8) • Y’ALL HAVE WON $10,000,000 (16) • you have won ten million dollars (27) • Critics would state that there are 51 variations an therefore you couldn’t possibly know the original meaning.
So Many Manuscripts • Consider the following variations: • HAVE YOU WON TEN MILLION DOLLARS (translation error) • UOY HAVE WUN TEN MILLION DOLLARS (spelling error) • YOU HAVE WON FIFTY MILLION GOLD BARS (legendary) • YOU H E WON TEN MIL ON DOLLARS (damage) • HE GAVE ME A BROWN CAMEL (fabrication) • Could a reasonable person reconstruct (error correct) the original sentence with a high level of accuracy? Would the meaning survive?
Conclusion • The NT has been copied correctly! • The time from the events of the Bible until they were written down were anywhere from 25 to 100 years. • The time from the writing of the original autographs to the copying of existing manuscripts is around 150 years. • There are so many NT manuscripts that we can compare them and be extremely confident that we know what the original autographs said (word for word). • If someone rejects the Bible on these criteria, they have to throw out every other ancient text ever written.