The New Testament text rests on Greek manuscripts, ancient versions, lectionaries, and patristic citations—sources that can be weighed and compared.
The Lesser-Known New Testament Manuscripts: An In-Depth Study
Lesser-known New Testament manuscripts, especially early papyri and select minuscules, strengthen textual certainty through documentary evidence and transmission history.
The Sources of the New Testament Text: Greek Manuscripts, Ancient Versions, and Patristic Evidence
Early papyri, major codices, ancient versions, and patristic quotes together secure a reliable, reconstructable New Testament text grounded in documentary evidence.
The Sources of the New Testament Text: An Exhaustive Examination of Manuscripts, Versions, and Patristic Citations
An in-depth exploration of Greek manuscripts, ancient versions, and patristic citations as sources for the accurate text of the New Testament.
The Materials Used for Making a Codex Manuscript: Papyrus, Parchment, and Paper in Early New Testament Transmission
The article explores the physical mediums of New Testament manuscripts—papyrus, parchment, and paper—highlighting their historical significance and impact on textual criticism.
Textual Criticism and the Authenticity of the New Testament—Unveiling the Original Word
This article sheds light on the importance of textual criticism in validating the authenticity of the New Testament. The richness and antiquity of the manuscripts, their internal consistency, and the extra-biblical evidence testify to the unbroken chain of biblical truth. This comprehensive study affirms the New Testament's historical reliability, strengthening our faith in the enduring Word of God.

