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Lecture 17: Resources for NT Manuscripts
Course: Textual Criticism
Lecture: Resources for NT Manuscripts
A. Resources for New Testament Manuscripts
This is in two different groups: internet resources rather than books which can be cost-prohibitive. Many of which are very expensive. So I will concentrate on four different websites on textual criticism. The four websites include the Institute of Virtual Manuscripts, a German website; the next one is the British Library and the online Codex Sinaiticus and Alexandrinus; the third website is the Evangelical Textual Criticism blog site and then our own Center for the Study of New Testament Manuscripts which will be covered in the following lecture.
1. Institute for New Testament Textual Criticism
The largest resource is the Institute for New Testament Textual Criticism or INTF which is a German web- site. The internet address is
ntvmr.uni-muenster.de as of at the time for this lecture. This is the best resource in the world for New Testament Textual Criticism. It was founded in 1959 by Doctor Kurt Aland and part of the University of Munster in Northwest Germany, a little community very close to Holland. During Christmas, they have huge outdoor festivities with people coming from all over. Doctor Aland’s purpose was to offer a complete investigation and publication of all New Testament manuscripts. He had very lofty goals and has accomplished a lot of these goals. Their Nestle-Aland Novum Greek New Testament Text named after Erwin and Eberhard Nestle. Kurt Aland took over the project in the mid-fifties and then founded the Institute in 1959. There is also the United Bible Societies Greek New Testament which has exactly the same text as the Nestle-Aland Greek New Testament, but it has a different apparatus; it has different textual problems with English sub-titles but the text between the two is now the same. One of these two will be used at ninety-nine percent of the seminaries in the world. Then there is the ECM or Editio Critica Major which is major critical addition of the Greek New Testament produced by the Institute for Neutestamntlich Textforschung or the Institute for New Testament Textual Research. The K-Lista is a shortlist of Greek New Testament manuscripts. It is the Bible for Bible hunters; first published in 1963 and then in 1994 by the German Publisher, Vaulter de Gurder. We have three or four copies of this K-Lista at CSTM and it was the primary tool for us to find out where Greek New Testament manuscripts were in the World. It is somewhat dated now, being nearly twenty years old, but it is still a good reference as to see where these manuscripts are located. Then there is the VMR, the Virtual Manuscript Room; that is an internet site and is in conjunction with the University of Birmingham in England.
The initial work that they did was to make microfilms of Greek New Testament manuscripts throughout the world; started this in 1959, they did it for several years. The quality of these microfilms is of very bad quality. They were able to get ninety percent of all Greek New Testament manuscripts on microfilm. It is of poor quality but it is something. However, if you want to see those manuscripts, you would have had to go to Munster. This is, of course, easier than going to the 253 different sites to view them.
Doctor Kurt Aland lived from 1915 to 1994 and the K-Lista came out in the year he died. He was a professor in Halle in East German after World War II. The University is the largest in Saxony-Anhalt and one of the oldest in Germany. He was conscripted and fought in WWII and got injured while in the army; however, he didn’t care at all for the Nazi Regime or for communist and often wouldn’t keep his opinions to himself. He was imprisoned in 1953 for speaking out in terms of academic freedom when he was in East Germany. This was only for a few months but five years later, he and his family escaped from East Germany and came to West German and founded INTF in Munster in 1959 and started working on the Nestle-Greek New Testament. This was actually first started in the year 1898 and continued on during the years. Eventually, he took the project over and then it became known as the Nestle-Aland Greek New Testament. The latest edition is the Nestle-Aland 28th edition which came out in November 2012. The person who did the microfilming would go to these places and get his college students to go in to do all the microfilming while he would talk to the faculty and smoke his cigars.
In 1989, an American scholar who owned some Greek New Testament manuscripts came to the Institute at Munster. He had purchased a Greek New Testament manuscript from a dealer in New York. He was a systematic theologian but he could read this Greek. All the leaves of the manuscript were separated. He spent a year putting the leaves together. He sent the manuscript to another scholar in the States and after studying the manuscript, they had decided to date it as a 13th Byzantine manuscript. It contained the Gospels. There were two or three manuscripts yearly being discovered at that time and date. To have someone to walk into the institute and tell them about a manuscript that they didn’t know anything about; this was unusual and just didn’t happen every day. In fact, this may have been the only time it ever happened. So there was a flurry of activity about it. Professor Aland comes out of his office to see it while smoking his cigar with signs all over the institute saying no smoking and here was this document that was worth tens of thousands of dollars and while he is smoking the cigar. He indicates that he wants to see the manuscript and Aland immediately said, ‘looks like a 13th century Byzantine to me and hands it back to him.
The ECM’s objective is to list every variant through the first millennium and so they have been working on this for a long time. There is the shortlist or K-Lista of 1963 and 1994 which gives us the number of the Gregory-Aland Cataloguing system. What happens, it is listed within the Gregory-Aland Catalogue; all of the Papyri, all the Majuscules up to 0322 and the Minuscules and lectionaries; these are the four categories. Where the information is given for each manuscript, it will tell you what city it is in, the name of the library that holds it and what the shelf number that library uses for it. Usually, libraries will assign their own shelf number which will be different to the Gregory-Aland numerical system. But the cataloging system will tell you the number of pages, columns per page and even the number of lines in the manuscript. It will also include the dimensions and the type of manuscript: papyrus, parchment or paper and the actual contents of the manuscript. It is a kind of fingerprint of each manuscript. This can even tell us if we have discovered a numbered manuscript by comparing it to the indexed information. So they are the official catalogers of Greek New Testament manuscripts. Newly discovered Greek New Testament manuscripts are not necessarily acknowledged or rather simply unknown until they are registered in the Gregory-Aland Catalogue.
So these are now online tools at INTF internet website, ntvmr.uni-muenster.de. You can use Google (a web-site search engine) to find INTF. They offer the website both in German and in English. The key pages are the New Testament Virtual Manuscript Room and the sub-section on the left written as Liste.
You can investigate the site and its different sections. They don’t allow you to download VMR manuscripts. If you want to find all the manuscripts that have John 2:6, for example, this can easily be done using the NTVMR of the INTF internet website.
2. The British Library
Codex Sinaiticus: So the next one is the British Library with the Codex Sinaiticus and Alexandrinus; we have already discussed both of these manuscripts. Sinaiticus now exists in four different countries: Egypt, Russia, Germany and the British Library in England. A few years ago, there was a virtual reunification of this manuscript by all four parties, making all the images available online. So you have English, German, Greek, and Russian. So you can read this in the four different languages of the four places that own part of the manuscript. It has been a massive project to do this well and has involved transcriptions and translations of this text. Even if you don’t know any Greek at all, you can see the translation of Codex Sinaiticus. I want to show you the end of Mark’s Gospel where you can zoom in and out and actually see where on the page you are. You can see the transcription giving you the Greek and also a translation. I have picked the English translation where you can see Mark 16:8 and then 1:1 which starts with Luke chapter 1. Even though you can’t download the images, you do have a huge amount of information available.
Codex Alexandrinus: You can’t do nearly as much with Alexandrinus; I don’t think the pictures are nearly as good, but it is still helpful material as you can zoom in on it in any chapter and verse. You will not get a translation or transcription but you can get the photographs and have a look at it. It is still very
helpful. Those are the two main manuscripts at the British Library. The Vatican is working on making their entire collection digitized, but it isn’t done yet. But these two sites are often in competition, the British Library, and the Vatican. After the British Library came out with Codex Sinaiticus; first the Vatican comes out with a great facsimilia of Codex Vaticanus and then the British library develops this online text of the Codex Sinaiticus and so now the Vatican says that they are going to digitize their own collection.
3. Evangelical Textual Criticism
The Evangelical Textual Criticism website has been produced by scholars at Tyndale House, an evangelical think tank, a place to live and study. They have several apartments and a very nice fifty thousand volume library. People who are working on their doctorates at Cambridge and elsewhere can live there to study. At one time there were twenty of us living at Tyndale house from eighteen different countries. So, you find out what interesting things people are working on. They have a blog site called Evangelical Textual Criticism Blog Spot dot com, but they don’t have manuscript images or transcriptions. This is a current events site to critical review a number of things that are going on in textual criticism. It has links to other sites and they call it a forum for the Bible in its original language in order to discuss manuscripts and textual history from the perspective of historical evangelical theology. They are very up to date with current discussions. They have links to many different sites in order to investigate different aspects evangelical theology, manuscripts, and Biblical knowledge.
Summary: Visit these sites and investigate what they have and see how they can be of value to your own studies and research. The INTFVMR is in conjunction with the University of Birmingham. A very helpful site, but it takes a little while to get used to. The British Library is help for famous manuscripts: Codex Sinaiticus and Alexandrinus. The Evangelical Textual Criticism is helpful for current events and links to other sites.