Can We Trust the Greek New Testament?
How We Got the New Testament
The New Testament was written
in a small time frame in the first century. The earliest book was only written
at about 44-45 AD and the last book was written around 95 AD. So over a 50-year
period the New Testament was written. It is comprised of 27 books. There are
four Gospels and that number has been set since at least the middle of the
second century. Irenaeus was trained and taught by Polycarp, who in turn was taught and trained by the apostle
John. He wrote that by his time there were only four Gospels and there could
only be four Gospels, and there are statements by other early church fathers
from the middle period of that second century who affirm that by then there
were only four Gospels.
All of the New Testament was
written between 45-95 AD
and it has been typical of liberal theology since the middle of the nineteenth
century to reject these conservative, traditional dates for the New Testament.
They did that because they have various assumptions, one of which was that God
couldn’t really reveal Himself in this manner and so these are just writings
like every other writing. Their controlling presupposition was as they
approached the New Testament. If they had just waited 25 years or so for
various archaeological finds they would not have had any traction for their
views at all. But they got them out there in the nick of time and so we still
run into professors at major universities and community colleges who continue
to state these things as if they are true. One of the liberal views of the Old
Testament canon was that Moses could not have written the Torah because the
Jews did not know how to write at that time in their history, that writing came
along after that. But it has been discovered that there were massive library at
once place at least a thousand years before Moses. So a lot of these ideas that
the liberals had were found to be false. People are committed to rejecting the
Bible, so they are going to grab any view that they want to.
Then after the four Gospels
is Acts, also written by Luke—the historical books—and then we have the
epistles. There are thirteen Pauline epistles, three written by John, two by
Peter, and then there is Hebrews whose author is unknown, James and Jude. The
last book that was revealed in the first century was Revelation around AD 95. James was
one of the first epistles, probably written about 44-47, some have suggested it
may have been written as early as AD 40. The Pauline epistles were written from the late
forties through about 64 or 65 AD, Hebrews in 63, Matthew between 57 and 59, Luke and
Acts probably around 61. These books all had apostolic authority behind them.
Even though Luke was not an apostle, Mark was not an apostle they had apostolic
authority behind them. Mark is believed to have been written by Mark but it is
told from Peter’s viewpoint. Luke was Paul’s traveling companion and when Paul
was in prison in
By the time of the decade of
the sixties several of Paul’s letters were already thought to have been
inspired. Peter refers to that in 2 Peter 3:16. Peter also quotes from Luke as
authoritative as Old Testament passages in 1 Peter, and so we have these
examples that before the New Testament canon is even fully written there is
already a recognition that some of the other New
Testament writings have the same level of authority as the Old Testament.
As the text
was copied and transmitted down through the next two or three centuries they
finally wrote these in several ways.
They were written on papyrus and in especially the dry climate of
So we can have great
confidence that what we have before us in the Greek text that underlies our
English translation is accurate. When we look and compare this to other ancient
writings no other ancient writing have near the documentation that we find for
the Greek New Testament. We have over 5000 MSS related to the Greek New
Testament and when we add to that the fact that there are over 10,000 Latin MSS
plus translations into Syriac and Ethiopic and a
number of other languages that date back to the first five or six centuries
after the completion of the canon, this all gives us a pretty solid
understanding of what the original text would have included.
Homer’s Iliad was written
about 800 BC. The oldest manuscript that we have is 400 BC, and we have
about 645 copies. Plato wrote about 400 BC and the earliest copy that we have dates to 900 AD, a 1300-year
gap, and we have seven copies. When we look at Caesar’s Gaelic Wars, written
about 100-44 BC, the earliest copy that we have is dated AD 900 and that
is a gap of 1000 years; we only have ten copies. Of the New Testament, in
contrast, we have over 5000 copies that date back within four or five centuries
of the original writing. There is no other ancient document that has the kind
of support, the number of copies, that we have of the
New Testament.
The various types of papyri
that are referred to are:
The Oxyrhynchos Papyri—various fragments that were discovered
in the rubbish heaps in
The Chester Beatty
Papyri—purchased in the 1930s by Chester Beatty at the
Then there is the Bodmer collection which includes 300 papyri, including P66
and a number of other papyri that are also dated very early.
One of the more interesting
finds was Codex Sinaiticus. This is one of those
great stories of a brilliant Greek scholar of the 19th century, Tischendorf, discovered this. He was a young man, not even
thirty years of age, who went to St. Catherine’s monastery on the traditional
site of Mount Sinai and noticed in his room where he was staying there was a
pile of papyri that was being used to light the fires in the rooms at night to
keep them warm. He realized when he examined them he had a very ancient copy of
the Greek New Testament. Then he discovered that he had a large segment of the
Septuagint, and they discovered that they had the codex there called the Codex Sinaiticus containing the entire New Testament and also
portions of the Old Testament. It dates back to the middle of the fourth
century.
Codex Vaticanus
has been in the
There were various other codexes found, all of which date around the third to fifth
century. Codex Alexandrinus was a fifth century
manuscript that has nearly all of the New Testament and it is generally thought
to be very reliable in the Gospels and in the Pauline epistles.
So we have this great
collection of documents which gives us great confidence in the text that we
have. But that is only part of the question. The other part of the question is
how did the canon come to be? How did we get these 27 books? We take a look at
the very early period and there are three periods of time. There is the period
of separate circulation from basically AD 70-170, the period of separation from 170-303, and then
a period of completion from 303-397. The period of separate circulation is when
Paul had written letters to the Thessalonians, the Corinthians. Peter had
written his two epistles, John had written his, and they were sent to the
recipient and then passed around. Churches would make copies. When Paul wrote
to the Colossians, for example, they were to make a copy and then send it on to
other churches in the vicinity. Then they would begin to pass them around and
begin to collect them. But basically for about 100 years they were in a separate
circulation. Then there was a period of separation when they were separating
out these particular documents and manuscripts and they began to collect them
together. This is the period from about 170-303 AD. In the first period were a
number of church fathers who made very clear statements about what was in the
canon. Irenaeus, about 160, says it is not possible
that the Gospels can be either more or fewer in number than they are. There had
to be four. Origen who is also late second century or
third century said: “I accept the traditional view of the four Gospels which
alone are undeniably authentic in the
Another thing that we get
from all of these early writings is that pastors and teachers wrote and quoted
many, many verses. Thousands of verses are quoted in their sermons and so that
also attests to the veracity of our early text.
The period of separation from
170-303 is when they began to separate out certain books and reject certain
books and we see that different early church fathers made different statements
about which books they considered to be authoritative. For example, Tertullian did not include Hebrews, James, 2 Peter or 2nd
or 3rd John. That could be understood because Hebrews didn’t have a
stated author and one of the criteria was that it had apostolic authentication,
and since they didn’t know who wrote it they weren’t sure whether it was authoritative.
James was not written to an area where he was, so that would be further away. 2
Peter, 2 & 3 John were written to individuals, so these would have had less
distribution than some of the other books. Origen,
who dates mostly from the early third century, stated that Hebrews,
2 Peter, 2 & 3 John, James, Jude, were questionable. Outside of those
everything else that we have in our 27 New Testament books was accepted. By
about 200 AD there is a canon called the Muritorian
Canon in which about all of our books are included and accepted as the canon. Irenaeus quotes from almost every New Testament boom,
except for Philemon, James, 2 Peter, 2 & 3 John, and Revelation. Those were
the books that were a little bit disputed but by the end of the second century
they are accepted.
In 367 Athanasius,
the Bishop of Hippo, writes an Easter letter where he mentions all 27 books
that are included in our New Testament. The tests for canonicity were that they
recognized that it was authenticated by an apostle, that
it was theologically consistent with the other books that were clearly known to
be authoritative, and that they were used and accepted by the Christian church.
They never really considered any other books as being part of the canon. The
one thing that we see throughout the New Testament as well as the Old
Testament, in terms of these books that are in the canon, is that they all have
the same common themes and are all united in their view of God, of man, the
sinfulness of man, the need for atonement, and that man can only be saved by
God’s grace and God providing the solution to man’s sin problem. The basic four
doctrines that define Christianity are not in dispute and not questioned or
challenged by any of the textual variants that we find or by any of the books
that are in the New Testament. They stand united in their testimony, their
witness to all of the basic doctrines of Christianity, all of which points to
the cross. Everything, whether it is the Old Testament looking forward or the
New Testament looking back, points to the cross either as God’s future plan for
providing salvation for man, or in the case of the New Testament helping us to
understand what took place on the cross and what its implications are for the
spiritual life of the church age.
The conclusion is that we can absolutely trust the Word of God. Satan says: “Has God said?” We can answer with a resounding yes. He has said and we can trust it.