Old Testament manuscripts reveal controlled transmission, Masoretic stability, DSS confirmation, and disciplined restoration through evidence.
Why Textual Integrity Matters—Trusting the Old Testament in the Age of Doubt
Concise summary of the chapter’s purpose, emphasizing Old Testament textual integrity, manuscript evidence, and the reliability of the Hebrew Scriptures.
The Interface of Exegetical Tradition and Textual Emendation
The interface between exegetical tradition and textual emendation reveals how interpretation and preservation shaped the enduring accuracy of the Hebrew Scriptures.
Harmonization Phenomena in Parallel Passages of the Pentateuch
Harmonization in Pentateuchal parallels reveals how scribes aligned repeated passages for coherence while preserving textual fidelity across ancient witnesses.
Reading New Testament Books in Early Churches: Scribal and Ecclesiastical Practices
The early Christian church emphasized public reading of Scripture, blending Jewish traditions with apostolic writings for community instruction.

