Papyrus 75 and Codex Vaticanus form a tightly related Alexandrian line, showing that Luke and John were transmitted with exceptional stability from the second to fourth century.
Papyrus 66 and Its Witness to the Johannine Text
Papyrus 66, an early second-century codex of John, reveals a largely Alexandrian text and proves that the Johannine Gospel was stable and widely used soon after composition.
The Importance of Papyrus 52 for the Gospel of John
Papyrus 52 shows that the Gospel of John circulated in Egypt by the early second century with a text already aligned to the reliable Alexandrian tradition.
Textual Stability of the Greek New Testament Texts from the Second to the Fourth Century
From the earliest papyri to the great fourth-century codices, the New Testament text remains remarkably stable, anchored by disciplined Alexandrian exemplar lines.
The Book of Acts and Textual Criticism: Evaluating the Manuscript Evidence and Restoring the Original Text
The Book of Acts presents unique challenges in textual criticism, but early Alexandrian manuscripts allow us to restore the original text with a high degree of confidence

