"Casting down imaginations, and every high thing that exalteth itself against the knowledge of God, and bringing into captivity every thought to the obedience of Christ" - 2 Corinthians 10:5 (KJV)

Tuesday, December 2, 2014

Old Testament Reliability

Rembrandt - A Scholar - WGA19200
Rembrandt - A Scholar - WGA19200 (Photo credit: Wikipedia)


Old Testament Reliability
1.     There is uniqueness to the Bible that is unlike any other book in the history of Man. This book has the ability to transcend teaching through time, geography, culture, and language barriers. The Bible was written over a 1500 year span with over forty authors. These authors, who all came to agree completely on many complicated issues, were men from different classes and cultures.
a.      Political Leader – Moses
b.     King – Poet – Shepherd -  David
c.      Herdsman – Amos
d.     Military General – Joshua
e.      Cupbearer – Nehemiah
f.      Prime Minister – Daniel
g.     King – Philosopher – Solomon
h.     Physician – Luke
i.       Fisherman – Peter
j.       Tax Collector – Matthew
k.     Rabbi – Paul
l.       Personal Secretary – Mark
2.     Through the history of man the Bible has proved to be transmitted to men accurately and consistently through the centuries. The Old Testament Text had many classes of scribes that monitored the transmission
a.      Sopherim “scribes” – Jewish scholars and custodians of the text between 5th-3rd B.C.
b.     The Zugoth “pairs” textual scholars 2nd-1st century BC
c.      Tannaim “repeaters or teachers” 1st century BC-AD 200
                                                    i.     Also worked on the Talmud “instruction”
d.     Talmudists (A.D.100-500)
e.      Masoretes: Jewish scholars between A.D 500 – A.D. 950 (preserved the oral tradition (masorah) concerning the correct vowels and accents).  .  Most famous Masoretes where the ben Asher family (Tiberius) who produced the ben Asher text that is considered the standard Hebrew text of today. This text was also bound together with the Textus Receptus
3.     The confirmation of the Old Testament by hard evidence uncovered through archaeology
a.      Famous Manuscripts
                                                    i.     Cairo Codex (A.D. 895) Located in the British Museum.  Produced by the Moses ben Asher family contains all the prophets (but none of the rest of the O.T.)
                                                  ii.     Aleppo Codex (A.D. 900+) Before it’s partial in 1947distruction it was the oldest complete Masoretic manuscript of the entire O.T.
                                                iii.     Codex of the Prophets of Leningrad (A.D. 915) contains Isaiah, Jeremiah, Ezekiel, and the twelve minor profits
                                                iv.     Codex Babylonicus Petropalitanus  (A.D. 1008) –also located in Leningrad.  Earliest complete copy of the Mesoretic text.  It was prepared from a corrected text of Rabbi Aaron ben Moses ben Asher A.D. 1000
                                                  v.     British Museum codex (A.D. 950) contains part of Genesis through Deuteronomy
                                                vi.     Nash Papyrus
                                              vii.     Dead Sea Scrolls- They are dated about 1000 years earlier then the earliest Mesoretic manuscripts.
4.     Old Testament Archaeology.
a.      Sodom and Gomorrah – “The unexcavated town of Feifa appears to be very similar to Bab edh-Dhra. Even surface evidence reflects the fact that the city was destroyed in a fiery disaster. Spongy charcoal can still be scooped from the surface by hand—this is also true at Numeira. Moreover, adjacent to the town is a huge cemetery almost a mile in either direction that also can compete with the Bab edh-Dhra cemetery both in size and usage.” [1]
b.     Jericho – “Finally, one Carbon-14 sample was taken from a piece of charcoal found in the destruction debris of the final Bronze Age city. It was dated to 1410 B.C.E., plus or minus 40 years,lending further support to the view that the destruction of City IV occurred around the end of the Late Bronze I period, about 1400 B.C.E.”[2] 


[1] Have Sodom and Gomorrah Been Found?.” Biblical Archaeology Review, Sep/Oct 1980, 26-36. http://members.bib-arch.org/publication.asp?PubID=BSBA&Volume=6&Issue=5&ArticleID=2
[2] Wood, Bryant G. “Did the Israelites Conquer Jericho? A New Look at the Archaeological Evidence.” Biblical Archaeology Review, Mar/Apr 1990, 44-59. http://members.bib-arch.org/publication.asp?PubID=BSBA&Volume=16&Issue=2&ArticleID=5