Introduction
Space limitations do not permit me to present a definitive study
on our topic; I cannot do this topic justice in the space I have
in this paper. Thus, it is beyond my scope to go into great
detail here. Due to the overwhelming amount of pertinent data,
the following is simply a highlight, a mere outline of the
available information. However, I want to demonstrate why one
should trust the Bible and therefore the biblical teaching on a
given concern (e.g., on the occult), and know that it was not
tampered with by the early Church.
Methodology
Theologian, historian, and lawyer, John W. Montgomery rightly
remarks:
The historic Christian claim differs qualitatively from the
claims of all other religions at the epistemological point: on
the issue of testability. Eastern faiths and Islam [witchcraft,
and so forth] ... ask the uncommitted seeker to discover their
truth experientially: the faith-experience will be
self-validating. Unhappily, as analytical philosopher Kai Nielsen
and others have rigorously shown, a subjective faith-experience
is logically incapable of `validating God-talk'.... Christianity,
on the other hand, declares that the truth of its absolute claims
rests squarely on certain historical facts, open to ordinary
investigation.1
In addressing among other questions the issue of whether the New
Testament documents are historically reliable Montgomery
states:
Here, let it be noted, we do not naively assume the "inspiration"
or "infallibility" of the New Testament records, and then by
circular reasoning attempt to prove what we have previously
assumed. We regard the documents...only as documents, and we
treat them as we would any other historical materials. Our
procedure in determining documentary reliability will ... go
directly to the documents themselves and subject them to the
tests of reliability employed in general historiography and
literary criticism."2
Thus, I will not simply assume the authenticity, historical
reliability, or trustworthiness of the biblical text. We will
examine or test it to see whether it is trustworthy or has been
tampered with by the church. By this process, based upon sound
principles of research, I will survey the issue and establish the
biblical text's reliability by testing it in light of the facts.
The point is that we should practice proper research, not merely
make assumptions one way or the other.
Our approach will be to present some basic findings or
information and principles of research relative to the
disciplines of archaeology, history, law, literary criticism,
logic, early manuscripts, and textual criticism to discern
whether the Bible was tampered with by the early Church and
therefore whether it is trustworthy.3
Eight Evidences
First, what does archaeological research have to tell us relevant
to our concern?4 How does the Bible match-up with secular history
and facts? Montgomery writes:
Far from avoiding contact with secular history, the New Testament
is replete with explicit references to secular personages, places
and events. Unlike typical sacred literature, myth, and fairytale
("once upon a time ..."), the gospel story begins when "there
went out a decree from Caesar Augustus that all the world should
be taxed....
Modern archaeological research has confirmed again and again the
reliability of New Testament geography, chronology, and general
history....To take but a single striking example: after the rise
of liberal biblical criticism, doubt was expressed as to the
historicity of Pontius Pilate, since he is mentioned even by
pagan historians only in connection with Jesus' death. Then in
1961 came the discovery at Caesarea of the now famous "Pilate
inscription," definitely showing that, as usual, the New
Testament writers were engaged in accurate historiography.5
The same can be said for the reliability of the Old Testament
based on archaeological evidence; the evidence is overwhelming
for its trustworthiness and reliability as well.6 For example,
Old Testament and language scholar, Gleason Archer says
concerning the Dead Sea Scroll copies of the book of Isaiah (of
course, this is also manuscript evidence):
Even though the two copies of Isaiah discovered in Qumran Cave 1
near the Dead Sea in 1947 were a thousand years earlier than the
oldest dated manuscript previously known [the Masoretic text]
(A.D. 980), they proved to be word for word identical with our
standard Hebrew Bible in more than 95 percent of the text. The 5
percent of variation consisted chiefly of obvious slips of the
pen and variations in spelling.7
The Old Testament scholar Roland Kenneth Harrison commenting on
part of the significance of the Dead Sea Scrolls states, "The
Biblical manuscripts from Qumran have unquestionably confirmed
the general tradition regarding the tremendous care exercised in
the transmission of the Hebrew Scriptures...."8
Norman Geisler and William Nix tie this point together for
us:
With the discovery of the Dead Sea Scrolls, scholars have Hebrew
manuscripts one thousand years earlier than the great Masoretic
Text manuscripts, [ca. 900s A.D.] enabling them to check on the
fidelity of the Hebrew text. The result of comparative studies
reveals that there is a word-for-word identity in more than 95
percent of the cases, and the 5 percent variation consists mostly
of slips of the pen and spelling....
The thousands of Hebrew manuscripts, with their confirmation by
the LXX [the Septuagint, an early Greek translation of the Hebrew
Old Testament] and the Samaritan Pentateuch, and the numerous
other crosschecks from outside and inside the text provide
overwhelming support for the reliability of the Old Testament
text.9
Second, certainly in the case of the New Testament, since most of
it was written and circulating at such an early date (relative to
the events recorded) there was no time for the accrual of myth or
legend or "editing" by the early Church.10
John W. Montgomery points out based on the objective
evidence--manuscript and other evidences--that "the time interval
between the writing of the New Testament documents as we have
them and the events of Jesus' life which they record is too brief
to allow for communal redaction ["editing" or tampering with] by
the Church."11
After a through examination and application of the three standard
historiographical and literary tests for discerning the
authenticity and trustworthiness of an alleged ancient document
Montgomery concludes: "On the basis, then, of powerful
bibliographic, internal, and external evidence, competent
historical scholarship must regard the New Testament documents as
deriving from the first century and as reflecting primary-source
testimony concerning the person and claims of Jesus...."12
The scholar Sir Frederic G. Kenyon, who served as the director
and principal librarian of the British Museum, stated based upon
the existing Greek manuscripts of the New Testament:
he interval then between the dates of original composition and
the earliest extant evidence becomes so small as to be in fact
negligible, and the last foundation for any doubt that the
Scriptures have come down to us substantially as they were
written has now been removed. Both the authenticity and the
general integrity of the books of the New Testament may be
regarded as finally established.13
Third, the biblical writers and their successors had to advance
and defend their claims, both what they orally communicated and
had committed to writing. Thus, logically I must note that their
claims could have been easily disproved if they had distorted or
tampered with the biblical teachings or text (e.g., the teachings
of Jesus in the New Testament). Relative to the life and
teachings of Jesus and the New Testament, for example, F.F. Bruce
says:
And it was not only friendly eyewitnesses that the early
preachers had to reckon with; there were others less well
disposed who were also conversant with the main facts of the
ministry and death of Jesus. The disciples could not afford to
risk inaccuracies (not to speak of willful manipulation of the
facts), which would at once be exposed by those who would be only
too glad to do so. On the contrary, one of the strong points in
the original apostolic preaching is the confident appeal to the
knowledge of the hearers; they not only said "We are witnesses of
these things," but also, "As you yourselves know (Acts 2:22). Had
there been any tendency to depart from the facts in any material
respect, the possible presence of hostile witnesses in the
audience would have served as a further corrective.14
Thus, had the early Church or those in the Old Testament,
tampered with the true teachings of the biblical text, they could
and would have been easily corrected or refuted by contemporaries
who knew better and had both motive and means to do so.
Moreover, in the face of hostile charges and witnesses and
resulting hardships for their teachings the biblical writers and
their successors had every reason to recant if they had tampered
with the biblical text.
Fourth, the biblical writers and their successors are noted for
the virtue of honesty, both in teaching and practice. It is
incongruous that the same individuals are at the same time guilty
of gross misrepresentations and falsehoods--lying.
Indeed, they lived exemplary lifestyles. For example, the New
Testament writers (and the same can be said for most of the Old
Testament writers) lives were marked by a dedication to teaching
and standing for honesty and truthfulness. They underwent
incredible hardships and suffering for what they taught, such as
social ostracism, confiscation of their property, beatings,
imprisonment, and other sacrifices to preach their message (e.g.,
the gospel). Many died as martyrs. They had no motive to lie by
misrepresenting the teachings of Christ and the Bible. These
people and their successors were not the type who would
promulgate what they knew to be false or tamper with the biblical
teachings (e.g., of Christ). The virtue of truthfulness is
extolled throughout the entire Bible (e.g., Exod. 20:16; Ps. 5:6;
Prov. 6:17, 19; 12:22 19:22; Zech. 8:16; Acts 5:3; Eph. 4:25;
Col. 3:9; Rev. 22:15). Lying is inconsistent with their
lifestyles and teachings. Note the following quotes from some of
the New Testament writers regarding the nature of their writings
and testimony.
Luke the personal physician and aid of the apostle Paul
writes:
Many have undertaken to draw up an account of the things that
have been fulfilled among us, just as they were handed down to us
by those who from the first were eyewitnesses and servants of the
word. Therefore, since I myself have carefully investigated
everything from the beginning, it seemed good also to me to write
an orderly account for you, most excellent Theophilus, so that
you may now the certainty of the things you have been
taught.
- Luke 1:1-4
The apostle John writes:
The man who saw it has given testimony, and his testimony is
true. He knows that he tells the truth, and he testifies so that
you also may believe.
- John 19:35
The apostle Peter writes:
We did not follow cleverly invented stories when we told you
about the power and coming of our Lord Jesus Christ, but we were
eyewitnesses of his majesty.
- 2 Peter 1:16
The people to whom Jesus' disciples passed the gospel on to and
in turn their disciples were of the same caliber (2 Tim. 2:2) and
communicated the exact same teachings.
For example, consider Papias (ca. A.D. 60-70-ca. 130-140), who
was either a direct disciple of the apostle John or of the direct
students of the apostles. Papias became the bishop of Hierapolis
in Asia Minor and was a contemporary and colleague of Polycarp
(see below). Around A.D. 130 he wrote his five volume work,
Expositions of the Sayings of the Lord of which only fragments
exist today, and at that are only cited in the works of later
writers (e.g., the Church father Irenaeus and the early Church
historian Eusebius [ca. 265-ca. 340], bishop of Caesarea
[315-340]. Eusebius records Papias as stating:
I will not hesitate to set down for you, along with my
interpretations, everything I carefully learned then from the
elders and carefully remembered, guaranteeing their
truth....
And the Elder [either the apostle John or another leader in the
early Church whose name was also John] used to say this: "Mark,
having become Peter's interpreter, wrote down accurately
everything he remembered, though not in order, of the things
either said or done by Christ. For he neither heard the Lord nor
followed him, but afterward, as I said, followed Peter, who
adapted his teachings as needed but had no intention of giving an
ordered account of the Lord's sayings. Consequently Mark did
nothing wrong in writing down some things as he remembered them,
for he made it his one concern not to omit anything which he
heard or to make any false statement in them."...
So Matthew composed the oracles in the Hebrew language....
- Ecclesiastical History, 3.3915
The teachings of the New Testament were also faithfully taught
and handed down by Polycarp (ca. A.D. 70-ca. 155-160), who was a
student of the apostle John. Polycarp became bishop of Smyrna in
Asia Minor and was martyred for his faith. His student Irenaeus
(see below) said of him that "He always taught what he learned
from the apostles, which the Church continues to hand on, and
which are the only truths."16
Irenaeus continued the tradition. Irenaeus (ca. 135-200) as a boy
or young man either saw and knew Polycarp and/or studied under
him, became bishop of Lyon in 177. He wrote The Refutation and
Overthrow of the Knowledge Falsely So Called (more popularly
known as Against Heresies), wherein he stated:17
For we learned the plan of our salvation from no others than from
those through whom the gospel came to us [the apostles]. They
first preached it abroad, and then later by the will of God
handed it down to us in Writings, to be the foundation and pillar
of our faith. ... So Matthew among the Hebrews issued a Writing
of the gospel in their own tongue, while Peter and Paul were
preaching the gospel at Rome and founding the Church. After their
decease Mark, the disciple and interpreter of Peter, also handed
down to us in writing what Peter had preached. Then Luke, the
follower of Paul, recorded in a book the gospel as it was
preached by him. Finally John, the disciple of the Lord...himself
published the Gospel....
- Against Heresies 3.1.1
In Against Heresies Irenaeus is primarily addressing gnostic
teachings. While there were diversity of beliefs, in general
gnostics held that they possessed secret or esoteric teachings or
traditions passed down from the apostles themselves ("apostolic
tradition") or received by a succession from the apostles. To
counter this idea, among his arguments, Irenaeus appealed to the
genuine apostolic tradition, that which was written down in the
New Testament and publically taught by the apostles and
personally entrusted by them to the Church (3.4.1). Irenaeus
referred to the ostensible or public teachings of the apostles in
the Bible that were orally reinforced by them when given to their
students, such as Polycarp. Thus, tradition here means the
correct teaching, the correct interpretation of Scripture or the
teachings of Jesus that he gave to his apostles and they in turn
faithfully transmitted to their students (i.e., genuine apostolic
succession). It is the correct teaching. In essence Irenaeus is
saying this is what Christ taught his disciples and they taught
their students (e.g., Clement of Rome, Ignatius of Antioch,
Papias of Hierapolis, Polycarp of Smyrna), and they taught us.
They told us this is what this passage means; this is how to
interpret or understand this passage or teaching. Furthermore, it
is the only teaching or meaning, or interpretation of what the
apostles orally taught, or wrote in the New Testament. Therefore,
there where no secret interpretations, meanings, or teachings
that were only known by the "truly spiritual" or elite.
Thus, interestingly and appropriate for our discussion, in
refuting gnostic teachings, beginning in the very next paragraph
Irenaeus states:
But when they are refuted from the Writings they turn around and
attack the Writings themselves, saying that they are not correct,
or authoritative, and that the truth cannot be found from them by
those who are not acquainted with the tradition [the secret
gnostic teachings]. For this [they say (in Richardson text.)] was
not handed down in writing, but orally....
- Against Heresies 3.2.1
But when we appeal again to that tradition which has come down
from the apostles and is guarded by the successions of elders in
the churches, they oppose the tradition, saying they are wiser
not only than the elders, but even than the apostles, and have
found the genuine truth.
- Against Heresies 3.2.2
The tradition of the apostles, made clear in all the world, can
be clearly seen in every church by those who wish to behold the
truth. We can enumerate those who were established by the
apostles as bishops in the churches, and their successors down to
our time, none of whom taught or thought of anything like their
mad ideas. Even if the apostles had known of hidden mysteries,
which they taught to the perfect secretly and apart from others,
they would have handed them down especially to those to whom they
were entrusting the churches themselves. For they certainly
wished those whom they were leaving as their successors, handing
over to them their own teaching position, to be perfect and
irreproachable, since their sound conduct would be a great
benefit....
- Against Heresies 3.3.1
Irenaeus then states that "since it would be very long in such a
volume as this to enumerate the successions of all the churches"
(3.3.2), then as an example proceeds to list in order the
successors of the apostles Peter and Paul of the Church at Rome
with a direct linage back to them (3.3.2-4). Then Irenaeus
remarks:
In this very order and succession the apostolic tradition in the
Church and the preaching of the truth has come down even to us.
This is a full demonstration that it is one and the same
life-giving faith which has been preserved in the Church from the
apostles to the present, and is handed on in truth.
Similarly Polycarp, who not only was taught by apostles, and
associated with many who had seen Christ, but was installed by
apostles for Asia, as bishop in the church in Smyrna--I saw him
myself in my early youth--survived for a long time, and departed
this life in a ripe old age by a glorious and magnificent
martyrdom. He always taught what he learned from the apostles,
which the Church continues to hand on, and which are the only
truths. The churches in Asia all bear witness to this, as do
those who have succeeded Polycarp down to the present
time....
- Against Heresies 3.3.3-4
Lastly, I note, and particularly fitting for our discussion
Irenaeus' remarks that:
So the apostolic tradition is preserved in the Church and has
come down to us. Let us turn, then, to the demonstration from the
writings of those apostles who recorded the gospel, in which they
recorded their conviction about God, showing that our Lord Jesus
Christ is the Truth, and in him is no lie....The apostles, being
disciples of the truth, are apart from every lie.
- Against Heresies 3.5.1
These individuals were trustworthy witnesses, honest men who
sacrificed much, often their very lives for the beliefs. They had
no reason to lie or suffer or die for what they knew to be
untrue, nothing to gain everything to lose. They had every reason
to rethink or recant their position, particularly because not
only was the early Church marked for persecution, but often
especially the leaders. To say the least, it was costly to be a
disciple of Christ.
Fifth, in light of the character and testimony of the biblical
writers and their successors, a well-established principle of
historical and literary research is relevant to our discussion of
the authenticity and trustworthiness of the biblical text. John
W. Montgomery states: "...historical and literary scholarship
continues to follow Aristotle's eminently just dictum that the
benefit of doubt is to be given to the document itself, not
arrogated by the critic to himself."18 In other words, a document
and its claims are to be accepted at face value unless sufficient
objective evidence is presented to discredit it. Montgomery
continues: "This means that one must listen to the claims of the
document under analysis, and not assume fraud or error unless the
author disqualifies himself by contradictions or known factual
inaccuracies."19
Sixth, there is a similar legal principle to the historical and
literary dictum just discussed that pertains to the issue of the
biblical text's trustworthiness. Attorney Montgomery brings this
principle to bear on our concern:
In a court of law, admissible testimony is considered truthful
unless impeached or otherwise rendered doubtful. This is in
accord with ordinary life, where only the paranoic goes about
with the bias that everyone is lying. ... The burden, then, is on
those who would show that the New Testament testimony to Jesus is
not worthy of belief. Let us place the Gospel testimony to Jesus
under the legal microscope to see if its reliability can be
impeached.20
Montgomery's point is that the New Testament writer's credibility
is impeccable and would stand in any just court of law.
Seventh, we need to consider the legal principle known as the
"ancient documents" rule as it relates to our topic. Simon
Greenleaf (1783-1853) who among his many achievements and
credentials served as Royall and Dane Professor of Law at Harvard
Law School, and became recognized as the foremost North American
authority on common law evidence, and which The Dictionary of
American Biography says produced "the greatest single authority
on evidence in the entire literature of legal procedure," applied
this principle to the gospels (Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John) in
the New Testament. (For an in-depth treatment of the authenticity
and trustworthiness of the four gospels from the legal
perspective see his classic, The Testimony of the Evangelists:
The Gospels Examined by the Rules of Evidence Administered in
Courts of Justice.
Simon Greenleaf notes in The Testimony of the Evangelists the
accepted rule of evidence relative to ancient documents, the
"ancient documents" rule: "Every document, apparently ancient,
coming from the proper repository or custody, and bearing on its
face no evident marks of forgery, the law presumes to be genuine,
and devolves on the opposing party the burden of proving it to be
otherwise."21 Greenleaf also states:
The burden of showing them to be false and unworthy of credit, is
devolved on the party who makes that objection. The presumption
of the law is the judgment of charity. It presumes that every man
is innocent until he is proved guilty; that everything has been
done fairly and legally, until it is proved to have been
otherwise; and that every document, found in its proper
repository, and not bearing marks of forgery, is genuine. Now
this is precisely the case with the Sacred Writings.22
Thus, based on legal reasoning and evidence Greenleaf (and
Montgomery) conclude that the New Testament documents are
authentic and trustworthy.(23)
Eighth, the discipline of textual criticism has some light to
shed on the question of whether the biblical text was tampered
with by the early Church. For example, in discussing the issue of
variant readings the scholar John Wenham has some thoughts that
have important implications for our topic--in this case the New
Testament. Based on variant readings of the texts,24 instances of
differences of readings or wording of Greek manuscripts (the vast
majority are insignificant, e.g., the spelling of a name, use of
different pronouns, different word order or transposing words),
Wenham writes:
The interesting and important thing about the late-second-century
text is this: at that early date there was already a wide
diversity of variants. These variants were of course mostly quite
minor in character, but they show that there had been no recent
systematic editing of the documents to make them conform to some
standard version.25
Furthermore, Wenham believes that many of these variants go back
to the first century and reasons, "Thus the very existence of
variants is itself powerful evidence against a systematic,
tendentious alteration of the manuscripts in the very early
stages of the history of the text."26 He then proceeds to quote
the textual critic G. D. Kilpatricks' comments relative to his
point: "Kilpatrick also declares that, in spite of our detailed
knowledge of first- and second-century Greek, `no one has so far
shown that the New Testament is contaminated with the grammar or
orthography [spelling] of a later period.'"27
Thus, from the minutely detailed study of the grammar and
vocabulary of the early Greek texts of the New Testament there is
no evidence to support the claims that the biblical text was
tampered with by the early Church. The objectively verifiable
evidence says just the opposite.
Conclusion
There is no objective evidence that the biblical text has been
tampered with by the Jews or the early Church. There is no
manuscript evidence, no archaeological evidence, no
eyewitness--or otherwise--testimony, no support from the writings
of the early Church, nor any evidence from the study of textual
criticism to substantiate witches' or other occultist's or
critics subjectively based claims of a tampered Bible.
On the other hand, there is overwhelming objective evidence to
support the conclusion that the biblical text was not tampered
with by the early Church, but has been faithfully transmitted
down through the centuries to us today and is indeed a reliable
historical document of the first order.
The problem here is not a tampered with or corrupted biblical
text or teachings of the Old or New Testaments, but with those
who will not accept the clear teaching(s) of the Bible.
The only reason people have for believing that the Bible has been
tampered with by the early Church (or anyone else) it that it
clearly does not teach what they believe and practice. The Bible
does not concur with their views or feelings. Therefore, they
conjecture that it must have been tampered with by the early
Church. This is a textbook case of circular reasoning--assuming
the very thing you are suppose to or are trying to prove.
Just about anyone can assert just about anything, but this does
not constitute proof of the claim. Proving it is another matter.
For instance, just about anyone can file a lawsuit, but proving
their case is a different issue. So it is with this charge.
Therefore, in light of the evidence, in light of accepted
scholarly archaeological, historical, legal, literary, logical,
and textual facts and principles, I affirm the authenticity and
trustworthiness of the biblical text and acceptance of all that
it teaches. Indeed, the Bible contains the definitive counsel
concerning the meaning and purpose of life.
Endnotes
1. Montgomery, Human Rights and Human Dignity
(Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1986), 133.
2. Montgomery, Where is History Going? (Minneapolis: Bethany
Fellowship, 1972), 44.
3. For further study on the three primary tests to determine the
authenticity, trustworthiness, and historical reliability of a
document (the bibliographical, internal, and external tests) as
applied to the Bible specifically see Paul Barnett, Is the New
Testament Reliable?, 10-15, 33-173; F.F. Bruce, The New Testament
Documents: Are They Reliable?, 7-120; Josh McDowell, Evidence
that Demands a Verdict, Volume 1: Historical Evidences for the
Christian Faith, rev. ed. (San Bernardino: Here's Life
Publishers, 1979), 39-78; John W. Montgomery, History and
Christianity, 25-40; John W. Montgomery, Where is History Going?,
37-52; John W. Montgomery, Human Rights and Human Dignity,
131-160.
4. For in-depth treatments of the archaeological evidence for the
reliability of the New Testament see John McRay, Archaeology and
the New Testament (Grand Rapids: Baker Book House, 1991); J. A.
Thompson, The Bible and Archaeology, 3d ed., fully rev. (Grand
Rapids: Eerdmans, 1982), 308-438; Edwin Yamauchi, The Stones and
the Scriptures: An Introduction to Biblical Archaeology (Grand
Rapids: Baker Book House, 1972), 92-166.
5. Montgomery, Human Rights and Human Dignity, 143-44.
6. For a detailed analysis on this data see Gleason L. Archer,
Jr., A Survey of Old Testament Introduction, 37-80; Geisler and
Nix, A General Introduction to the Bible, 343-382; R.K. Harrison,
Introduction to the Old Testament, 85-143, 199-288; McDowell,
Evidence that Demands a Verdict, Volume 1, 52-60; J. A. Thompson,
The Bible and Archaeology, 3-306; Edwin Yamauchi, The Stones and
the Scriptures, 17-91.
7. Archer, A Survey of Old Testament Introduction, 25.
8. R.K. Harrison, Introduction to the Old Testament, 217.
9. Geisler and Nix, A General Introduction to the Bible,
382.
10. For the evidence for an early date for the writing of most of
the New Testament see Barnett, Is the New Testament Reliable?,
33-42; Geisler and Nix, A General Introduction to the Bible,
419-431; Douglas Groothuis, Revealing the New Age Jesus:
Challenges to Orthodox Views of Christ (Downers Grove:
InterVarsity Press, 1990), 124-134; McDowell, Evidence that
Demands a Verdict, Vol. 1, 50-52; Montgomery, Where is History
Going?, 47-52.
11. Montgomery, Where is History Going?, italics in original,
50.
12. Montgomery, Where is History Going?, 49.
13. Sir Frederic G. Kenyon, as quoted in Montgomery, Where is
History Going?, italics in original, 45.
14. Bruce, The New Testament Documents, 46.
15. The Apostolic Fathers: Greek Texts and English Translations
of Their Writings, ed. and trans. by J. B. Lightfoot and J. R.
Harmer, ed. and rev. by Michael W. Holmes, 2d ed. (Grand Rapids:
Baker Book House, 1992), 569.
16. Against Heresies 3.3.4.
17. The following quotes from Irenaeus' work Against Heresies,
are from Early Christian Fathers, gen. eds., John Baillie, John
T. McNeill, and Henry P. Van Dusen, ed. and trans. by Cyril C.
Richardson in collaboration with Eugene R. Fairweather, Edward
Rochie Hardy, and Massey Hamilton Shepherd (New York: Macmillan,
1970), 370-76.
18. Montgomery, Where is History Going?, 46.
19. Ibid.
20. Montgomery, Human Rights and Human Dignity, 140. See also
141-50.
21. Simon Greenleaf, The Testimony of the Evangelists: The
Gospels Examined by the Rules of Evidence Administered in Courts
of Justice (Grand Rapids: Kregel, 1995), italics in original, 16.
See also Montgomery, Human Rights and Human Dignity, 137.
22. Ibid.
23. See Montgomery, Human Rights and Human Dignity, 137-50.
24. For a discussion on the subject of variant readings see
Archer, A Survey of Old Testament Introduction, 24-25, 54-65;
Geisler and Nix, A General Introduction to the Bible, 467-489;
McDowell, Evidence that Demands a Verdict, Vol. 1, 43-46; John W.
Wenham, Christ and the Bible (Downers Grove, Ill.: InterVarsity
Press, 1973), 180-183.
25. Wenham, Christ and the Bible, 178.
26. Ibid., 179.
27. Ibid.