04057nam 22004693 450 99659126620331620230815080227.01-4632-4368-510.31826/9781463243685(MiAaPQ)EBC30685120(Au-PeEL)EBL30685120(DE-B1597)651510(DE-B1597)9781463243685(EXLCZ)992797305630004120230815d2022 uy 0engurcnu||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierThat Nothing May Be Lost Papers from the Twelfth Birmingham Colloquium on the Textual Criticism of the New Testament1st ed.Piscataway :Gorgias Press, LLC,2022.©2022.1 online resource (294 pages)Texts and Studies (Third Series) Series ;v.29Print version: Bates, Clark That Nothing May Be Lost: Fragments and the New Testament Text Piscataway : Gorgias Press, LLC,c2022 Intro -- TABLE OF CONTENTS -- List of Contributors -- Abbreviations -- Introduction -- 1. Possible Markers of Inauthenticity in a Greek New Testament Papyrus: Genuinely Bad or a Very Good Fake? -- 2. The Fragmentation and Digital Reconstruction of Lectionary 2434 -- 3. The Arabic Text of Romans 1:1-9a -- 24b-29 in Sinai Greek New Finds Majuscule 2 -- 4. New Readings in GA 1506 and the Use of Digital Tools -- 5. A Stemma of Mark in Family 13 using Probability Structure Analysis -- 6. Philippus Presbyter's Commentary on Job: A Source for the Study of Latin Translations of the New Testament -- 7. A Missing Link in the Chain: A Neglected Fragmentary Manuscript of the Ps. Oecumenian Catena on Romans (Oxford, Bodleian Library, Auct. T.1.7 [Misc. 185]) (GA 2962) -- 8. Exegetical Fragments: Observations on the Catenae on Acts in Vatican, BAV, Reg. gr. 6 (GA 886) -- 9. The Paraclete's Teaching: The Text and Exegesis of John 14:25-26 and John 16:12-15 in the Writings of Eusebius of Caesarea and Cyril of Jerusalem -- Indices -- Index of Biblical Passages -- Index of Manuscripts -- Index of Subjects."Fragmentary material comprises a significant part of the manuscript tradition of the New Testament. Whether it be tattered papyrus documents, the abbreviated citation of biblical texts in early Christian writings, or the scattering of once-whole manuscripts, the story of the New Testament is a gathering of fragments - in all their forms - in the hopes that "nothing may be lost." This volume is a result of the Twelfth Birmingham Colloquium on the Textual Criticism of the New Testament, wherein presenters were invited to approach the theme of "fragments" from any philological or philosophical framework. Chapters discuss the possible forgery of a biblical papyrus, the dismemberment of a sixteenth-century lectionary manuscript, and the Arabic text of Romans preserved in a fragmentary bilingual codex. Elsewhere, software tools are employed to re-assess the readings of manuscripts digitised in decades past and to re-evaluate the stemma of a family of manuscripts. Further contributions consider the fragments of the biblical text contained in patristic commentaries and Byzantine catenae. The wide-ranging scope of the research contained in this volume reflects the need to examine these pieces of the past so that the shape of research in the present accurately illustrates the tapestry that is the history of the New Testament texts"--Provided by publisher.Texts and Studies (Third Series) SeriesRELIGION / Biblical Criticism & Interpretation / New TestamentbisacshRELIGION / Biblical Criticism & Interpretation / New Testament.225.4/86Bates Clark1736123Marcon Jacopo1736124MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK996591266203316That Nothing May Be Lost4155910UNISA