Friday, October 27, 2023

Abidan Paul Shah: 94% (not 99%+) of the New Testament is Reliable

 

 

“WE HAVE ONLY ERROR-RIDDEN COPIES.”

 

Ehrman is correct again. The scribes did make mistakes in their copying. A simple attempt at copying a single page by hand will easily convince anyone of how easy it is to make scribal mistakes. Basically, they made two kinds of mistakes

 

·       Unintentional (faulty eyesight, faulty hearing, errors of the mind, errors of judgment)

·       Intentional (spelling and grammar, harmonizing, explain history and geography, doctrinal—very few)

 

However, it is totally misleading to claim that the copies are “error-ridden.” Ehrman even tries to give a count of these mistakes with his often-repeated statement—“with only 138,000 words in the NT, there are as many as 400,000 or more variants in the MT manuscript tradition.” (Ehrman, Misquoting Jesus, 89) Such claims and counts are misleading at best and only serve to shock those who are unaware. In realty, most of such numbers are just estimations. Also, most of the mistakes in the NT manuscripts are unintentional and insignificant. Overall, approximately 94 percent of the text is totally reliable. It is only the remaining 5-6 percent that is in question. (Abidan Paul Shah, “The Current Debate Over the Original Text of the New Testament,” in Can We Recover the Original Text of the New Testament? ed. Abidan Paul Shah and David Alan Black [Eugene, Oreg.: Wipf and Stock, 2023], 9-10, emphasis in bold added)

 

Further Reading:


Refuting Christina Darlington's Claim the Bible has Been Preserved with 99.5% Accuracy


Refuting the Myth that all but 11 verses of the New Testament Can be Reconstructed from the Church Fathers


Modern (Evangelical Protestant) New Testament Scholarship vs. Christina Darlington