Revisiting The Corruption Of The New Testament by Daniel Wallace
Manuscript, Patristic, and Apocryphal Evidence
A collection of scholarly essays reassessing claims that early Christian scribes significantly altered the New Testament for theological ends. Drawing on manuscript analysis, scribal habits, patristic citations, and apocryphal parallels, the contributors examine notable variants and the transmission history to evaluate how and why changes occurred. They argue that, while some intentional and accidental alterations exist, the breadth and antiquity of the evidence point to a text that is largely stable and recoverable. The volume also showcases updated methods and tools in textual criticism to clarify the limits and strengths of the available data.
- Published
- 2011
- Nationality
- American
- Length
- Medium
- Pages
- 250-350
- Original Language
- English
- Avg User Rating
- No ratings yet
- Alternate Titles
- None
This book is not currently on any lists.
