The Criticism of the New Testament. Frederick Henry Ambrose Scrivener

The Criticism of the New Testament - Frederick Henry Ambrose Scrivener


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Matins, Luke ii. 25–32. Liturgy, Luke ii. 22–40; Heb. vii. 7–17.

      3. Simeon ὁ θεοδόχος and Anna, Luke ii. 25–38; Heb. ix. 11–14.

      23. Polycarp, John xii. 24–36,

      24. Finding of the Head of John the Baptist. Matins, Luke vii. 18–29 (17–30, B-C. iii. 42). Liturgy, Matt. xi. 5–14; 2 Cor. iv. 6–11.

      March 24. Vigil of Annunciation, Luke i. 39–56 (Gale).

      25. Annunciation, Luke i. 24–38; Heb. ii. 11–18.

      April 23. St. George, Matins, Mark xiii. 9–13. Liturgy, Acts xii. 1–11 (Cod. Bezae)112.

      25. (Oct. 19, B-C. III. 24). Mark the Evangelist, Mark vi. 7–13; Col. iv. 5, 10, 11, 18.

      30. James, son of Zebedee, Matt. x. 1–7, 14, 15.

      May 2. Athanasius, Matt. v. 14–19; Heb. iv. 14.-v. 6.

      8. (Sept. 26, B-C. III. 42). John, ὁ θεόλογος, John xix. 25–27; xxi. 24, 25; 1 John i. 1–7 (iv. 12–19, B-C. III. 42).

      21. Helena, Luke iv. 22, &c., Evst. 298.

      26. Jude the Apostle, John xiv. 21–24.

      June 11. Bartholomew and Barnabas the Apostles, Mark vi. 7–13; Acts xi. 19–30.

      19. Jude, brother of the Lord, Mark vi. 7–13, or εὐαγγέλιον ἀποστολικόν (Matt. x. 1–8? June 30).

      24. Birth of John the Baptist, Luke i. 1–25; 57–80; Rom. xiii. 11-xiv. 4.

      29. Peter and Paul the Apostles, Matins, John xxi. 15–31. Liturgy, Matt. xvi. 13–19; 2 Cor. xi. 21-xii. 9.

      30. The Twelve Apostles, Matt. x. 1–8. July 20. Elijah, Luke iv. 22, &c., Evst. 229.

      22. Mary Magdalene, ἡ μυροφόρος, Mark xvi. 9–20; 2 Tim. ii. 1–10.

      Aug. 1. τῶν ἁγίων μακκαβαίων, Matt. x. 16, &c., Evst. 228 and others.

      Aug. 6. Transfiguration. Matins, Luke ix. 29–36 or Mark ix. 2–9. Liturgy, Matt. xvii. 1–9; 2 Pet. i. 10–19.

      15. Assumption of the Virgin, Luke x. 38–42 (Gale, Codex Bezae).

      20. Thaddaeus the Apostle, Matt. x. 16–22; 1 Cor. iv. 9–16.

      25. Titus, Matt. v. 14–19 (Gale); 2 Tim. ii. 1–10.

      29. Beheading of John the Baptist, Matins, Matt. xiv. 1–13. Liturgy, Mark vi. 14–30; Acts xiii. 25–32 (39, B-C. III. 24).

      Εἰς τὰ ἐγκαίνια, Dedication, John x. 22 (17, Gale)—28 (Gale, Cod. Bezae); 2 Cor. v. 15–21: Heb. ix. 1–7.

      At Cambridge (Univ. Libr. II. 28. 8) is a rare volume containing the Greek Gospel Church-Lessons, Θεῖον καὶ ἱερὸν εὐαγγέλιον, Venice, 1615–24, once belonging to Bishop Hacket: also the Apostolos of a smaller size. Another edition appeared in 1851, also at Venice.

      For a comparison of the Greek with the Coptic Calendar, see p. 77, note 2. For the Menology in the Jerusalem Syriac Lectionary, see Vol. II, Chap. 1.

      Chapter IV. The Larger Uncial Manuscripts Of The Greek Testament.

       Table of Contents

      We proceed to describe in detail the uncial manuscripts of the Greek Testament, arranged separately as copies of the Gospels, of the Acts and Catholic Epistles, of the Pauline Epistles, and of the Apocalypse. They are usually indicated by the capital letters of the English and Greek alphabets, and stand on the list not in the order of their relative value or antiquity, but mainly as they were applied from time to time to the purposes of Textual criticism.

      א (Aleph). Codex Sinaiticus, now at St. Petersburg, the justly celebrated copy which sometime ago for a quarter of a century attracted general attention in the learned world. Tischendorf (Notitia Ed. Cod. Sinaitici, pp. 5, 6) when travelling in 1844 under the patronage of his own sovereign, King Frederick Augustus of Saxony, picked out of a basket full of papers destined to light the oven of the Convent of St. Catherine on Mount Sinai, the forty-three leaves of the Septuagint which he published in 1846 as the Codex Friderico-Augustanus (see p. 32). These, of course, he easily got for the asking, but finding that further portions of the same codex (e.g. the whole of Isaiah and 1, 4 Maccabees) were extant, he rescued them from their probable fate, by enlightening the brotherhood as to their value. He was permitted to copy one page of what yet remained, containing the end of Isaiah and the beginning of Jeremiah, which he afterwards published in the first volume of his “Monumenta Sacra Inedita” (1855), pp. xxx. and 213–16; and he departed in the full hope that he should be allowed to purchase the whole. But he had taught the monks a sharp lesson, and neither then, nor on his subsequent visit in 1853, could he gain any tidings of the leaves he had left behind;—he even seems to have concluded that they had been carried into Europe by some richer or more fortunate collector. At the beginning of 1859, after the care of the seventh edition of his N. T. was happily over, he went for a third time into the East, under the well-deserved patronage of the Emperor of Russia, the great protector of the Oriental Church; and the treasure which had been twice withdrawn from him as a private traveller, was now, on the occasion of some chance conversation, spontaneously put into the hands of one sent from the champion and benefactor of the oppressed Church. Tischendorf touchingly describes his surprise, his joy, his midnight studies over the priceless volume (“quippe dormire nefas videbatur”) on that memorable 4th of February, 1859. The rest was easy; he was allowed to copy his prize at Cairo, and ultimately to bring it to Europe, as a tribute of duty and gratitude to the Emperor Alexander II. To that monarch's wise munificence both the larger edition (1862), and the smaller of the New Testament only (1863), are mainly due.

      The Codex Sinaiticus is 13-½ inches in length by 14–⅞ inches high, and consists of 346-½ leaves of the same beautiful vellum as the Cod. Friderico-Augustanus which is really a part of it whereof 199 contain portions of the Septuagint version, 147-½ the whole New Testament, Barnabas' Epistle, and a considerable fragment of Hermas' Shepherd. It has subsequently appeared that the Russian Archimandrite (afterwards Bishop) Porphyry had brought with him from Sinai in 1845 some pieces of Genesis xxiii, xxiv, and of Numbers v, vi, and vii, which had been applied long before to the binding of other books113. Each page comprises four columns (see p. 27), with forty-eight lines in each column, of those continuous, noble, simple uncials (compare Plate iv. 11 a with 11 b). The poetical books of the Old Testament, however, being written in στίχοι, admit of only two columns on a page (above, p. 52). “In the Catholic Epistles the scribe has frequently contented himself with a column of forty-seven lines114.” The order of the sacred books is remarkable, though by no means unprecedented. St. Paul's Epistles precede the Acts, and amongst them, that to the Hebrews follows 2 Thess., standing on the same page with it (p. 74). Although this manuscript has hitherto been inspected by few Englishmen (Tregelles, however, and Dean Stanley were among the number), yet its general aspect has grown familiar to us by the means of photographs of its most important pages taken for the use of private scholars115, as well as from the facsimiles contained in Tischendorf's several editions. Breathings and accents there are none except in Tobit vi. 9, and Gal. v. 21, as has been already mentioned: the apostrophus and the single point for punctuation are entirely absent for pages together, yet occasionally are rather thickly studded, not only in places where a later hand has been unusually busy (e.g. Isaiah i. 1-iii. 2, two pages), but in some others (e.g. in 2 Cor. xii. 20 there are eight stops). Even words very usually abridged (except θσ, κσ, ισ, χσ, πνα which are constant) are here written in full though the practice varies, πατηρ, υιος, ουρανος, ανθρωπος, δαυειδ: we find ϊσραηλ´, ισλ or ιηλ: ϊερουσαλημ´, ιημ, ιλμ, ιηλμ´. Tischendorf considers the two points over iota and upsilon (which are sometimes wanting) as seldom from the


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