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Weighing Textual Variants (Part 4)

Dave Miller

In evaluating textual variants, we have seen how the variants affect very little the doctrinal teachings of the Bible. In this last segment covering textual variants, Dave Miller, Ph.D., addresses the most prominent textual variant in the New Testament from Mark 16:9-20. Follow along as Dr. Miller applies the principles of textual criticism and weighs the important considerations for these verses.

Introduction | Has the Bible Been Corrupted?

Dave Miller

Has the Bible been corrupted? Can we be sure the Bible is God's word? Skeptics, atheists, and other religions have aggressively attacked the Bible for centuries. How do their arguments fair against the historical and documented history? Join Dave Miller, Ph.D., in this first part of a nine-session series, where he provides easy-to-understand answers to these important questions.

Unintentional Errors

Dave Miller

During the first few centuries after Jesus' death, the Bible was transmitted through copies of the original letters. Since persecution was intense against Christianity, any copies would have been produced by individual members. Later centuries saw larger standardized methods for producing copies to distribute. What types of unintentional errors could occur and how widespread or complete would these errors be? Join Dr. Dave Miller as he discusses the historical context and the manuscript evidence

Intentional Errors

Dave Miller

As copies of the Bible were being made, sometimes the scribes or monks who were transcribing the texts introduced intentional changes. These were not a miscreant act to alter the text, but what a scribe may have felt needed to be changed, such as what he thought might have been a misspelled word. In this lesson, Dave Miller, Ph.D., discusses these different types of intentional errors and if they affected the message of the Bible.