The Causes Of Corruption Of The Text Of The Holy Gospels

Page 309

Appendix IV. St. Mark i. 1.

[280]

St. Mark's Gospel opens as follows:—“The beginning of the Gospel of Jesus Christ, THE SON OF GOD.” The significancy of the announcement is apparent when the opening of St. Matthew's Gospel is considered,—“The book of the generation of Jesus Christ, the Son of David.” Surely if there be a clause in the Gospel which carries on its front the evidence of its genuineness, it is this606 . But in fact the words are found in every known copy but three ( , 28, 255); in all the Versions; in many Fathers. The evidence in its favour is therefore overwhelming. Yet it has of late become the fashion to call in question the clause—¥1¿æ Ä¿æ ˜µ¿æ. Westcott and Hort shut up the words in brackets. Tischendorf ejects them from the text. The Revisers brand them with suspicion. High time is it to ascertain how much of doubt really attaches to the clause which has been thus assailed. Tischendorf relies on the testimony of ten ancient Fathers, whom he quotes in the following order,—Irenaeus, Epiphanius, Origen, Basil, Titus, Serapion, Cyril of Jerusalem, Severianus, Victorinus, Jerome. But the learned critic has to be reminded (1) that pro hac vice, Origen, Serapion, Titus, Basil, Victorinus and Cyril of Jerusalem are not six fathers, but only one. Next (2), that Epiphanius delivers no testimony whatever on the point in dispute. Next (3), that Jerome607 is rather to be reckoned with 606 It is right to state that Tischendorf thought differently. “Videtur illud huic quidem loco parum apte illatum.” He can only bring himself to admit that the text had been “jam Irenaei tempore nobili additamento auctum.” He insists that it is absurd, as well as at variance with the entire history of the sacred text, to suppose that the title “SON OF GOD{FNS” has here been removed by unscrupulous Unbelief, rather than thrust in by officious Piety. 607 v. 10; vii. 17; and in the Vulgate. Twice however (viz. i. 311 and vi. 969) Jerome omits the clause.


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Appendix VIII. New Editions Of The Peshitto-Syriac And The Harkleian-Syriac Versions

2min
pages 338-339

Appendix VII. The Last Twelve Verses Of St. Mark's Gospel

16min
pages 329-337

Appendix VI. The Peshitto And Curetonian

9min
pages 322-328

Appendix IV. St. Mark i. 1

14min
pages 309-316

Appendix III. The Rich Young Man

39min
pages 287-308

Appendix V. The Sceptical Character Of B And

6min
pages 317-321

Appendix II. Læø¬—Vinegar

10min
pages 280-286

Appendix I. Honeycomb— ¿x ºµª wø £wø

24min
pages 266-279

Chapter XII. Conclusion

27min
pages 250-265

Chapter XI. The Later Uncials And The Cursives

45min
pages 223-249

Chapter IX. The Old Uncials. The Influence Of Origen

24min
pages 184-197

Chapter VIII. Alexandria and Caesarea

18min
pages 172-183

Chapter VI. The Antiquity Of The Traditional Text. II. Witness of the Early Syriac Versions

21min
pages 146-157

Chapter IV. The Vatican And Sinaitic Manuscripts

38min
pages 83-104

Chapter VII. The Antiquity Of The Traditional Text. III. Witness of the Western or Syrio-Low-Latin Text

20min
pages 158-171

Chapter II. Principles

34min
pages 35-54

Chapter III. The Seven Notes Of Truth

47min
pages 55-82

Chapter I. Preliminary Grounds

22min
pages 21-34

Preface

12min
pages 8-15

Introduction

7min
pages 16-20
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