Bill Mounce

For an Informed Love of God

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Monday, June 18, 2018

When you read the Greek, are you reading the original?

This question can be answered several ways, but this morning I am not interested in the issue of the faithfulness of the manuscript tradition to the original autographs. I am interested in the faithfulness of our modern Greek texts to the ancient Greek manuscripts we have.

I was proofreading a statement I made in my textbook, Basics of Biblical Greek. In 8.13 I say, "The ν in the third singular ἐστίν is a movable nu, but ἐστί occurs only once in the New Testament (Acts 18:10)."

This statement is true for NA27 (the 27th edition of the Nestle-Aland text) and UBS4, but in NA28/UBS5 it isn't true because the modern editors have standardized spellings. There are other examples of this, but ἐστί illustrates my point.

Why do this? Have the manuscripts changed? Is this an issue of textual criticism? I don't think so, since there are standardizations of spellings elsewhere as well. This appears to be an overall decision of the editors of the Nestle/Aland.

This is one reason why I am thankful for the new Tyndale House Greek New Testament. The vast majority of scholars agree that the earliest texts such as Sinaiticus and Vaticanus are the most reliable, so shouldn't our modern critical text follow them more closely, not just in what words are actually used but in things like spelling? See the Introduction to the Tyndale House text for a detailed discussion of their approach, pp. 508-12).

Disclaimer: I have no connection with the Tyndale House text. But it is a fresh look at an old problem, and I for one appreciate its honesty with the text. If we believe that Luke originally wrote ἐστί in Acts 18:10, shouldn't our Greek texts do the same?

If you use Accordance as I do, you can get read a discussion of it here, and get a tagged version here. If you are old school, Crossway has done a typically marvelous binding with both hardback and a beautiful leather edition.

I really encourage you to pick up the text in one version or another and use it, along with the NA28, in your studies. I look forward to the many gems I will be learning.

For more information, read Crossway's Introduction and also Daniel Wallace's quick review.

By the way, ἐστί also occurs in Matt 6:25.