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it was added into the text (better safe than sorry).  As a result, later copies of the Bible became “fuller”
               or longer.

               Examples of marginal notes appearing in later manuscripts:
               Mark 16: 9-20 – Conclusion of Mark
               John 7:53 – 8:11 – The woman caught in adultery
               John 5:4 – The angel stirring the water

               Problem of pietism: When the Catholic Church became the majority church of the Middle Ages, monks
               and scribes began inserting more descriptive phrases.  For example, in the place of the name of Jesus,
               “Lord Jesus Christ” was often inserted.  The later Byzantine manuscripts have the “Lord Jesus Christ”
               occurring in 86 places in the New Testament, where the older manuscripts have it occurring 61 times.
               Most of the time, Jesus is replaced by Lord Jesus or Lord Jesus Christ.

               Does this mean that the copy of the Bible we have today is laced with errors and discrepancies?  NO!
               Here is why:

               99.5% of all the manuscripts agree 100%.  That means that the copyists were careful not to change the
               text throughout the ages of time.  Also, there are really only 400 variants that affected the sense of the
               passage, and only 50 of these have doctrinal significance.   We have over 5,600 copies ancient
                                            nd
               manuscripts, some back to the 2  Century.  By comparing the various manuscripts, we can pretty much
               see when a variant was introduced and why.

               Illustration:  If we had 10 people in the room make a copy of our church constitution by hand, then
               compared them all, we would find differences, but we won’t find the same differences in all 10 copies.
               We can use the majority to check the difference.

               As we study the thousands of manuscripts and the differences between them, they fall into families of
               manuscripts or text types.  The manuscripts are catalogued by their age, the region they were copied,
               the style of printing, the paper on which they were printed, and the manuscripts to which they are
               related.  While the lines between manuscripts are sometimes blurred, four text-types are evident and
               named for their region of origination.  They are:

                                                                              th
               The Alexandrian text-type (most papyri) most manuscripts from 2 – 9
               century
               The Western text-type (later Greek and Latin)
               The Byzantine text-type (later uncial and minuscule manuscripts) – 9
                                                                             th
               thru 16th
               The Caesarean text-type (disputed ??)

               Of these four text-types, two are prominent: Alexandrian – named for
               Alexandria, Egypt, where the majority of these texts originated, and
               Byzantine – copied in Constantinople, Turkey (Byzantine Empire)

               The Alexandrian is called the “concise text” and represents most of the oldest manuscripts.

               The Byzantine is called the “fuller text” and represents most of the manuscripts after


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