Toward a Faithful Fragmentology: Synthesis and Recommendations


Introduction

The eight papers preceding this one have moved from foundations to method, from method to specific corpora, and from those corpora to the practical chain by which fragmentary evidence reaches the church. The work has been cumulative. Each paper has built on what went before; each has assumed that the reader had followed the argument to that point and was ready to take the next step. The present paper draws the threads of the whole series together and looks forward.

A concluding paper of this kind has, in the nature of things, a triple obligation. It must show how the governing commitments of the series cohere as a single posture toward the work. It must offer recommendations practical enough to be acted on, both for the discipline of fragmentology and for the church that the discipline serves. And it must be honest about what remains undone — about the questions still open, the refinements still needed, and the areas where humility forbids closure even as biblicism forbids despair.

The aim of this paper is to fulfill that triple obligation in keeping with the disciplines commended throughout the series. Confidence where confidence is warranted; modesty where modesty is owed; gratitude to the God who has spoken and preserved His Word, and who has given to His church both the evidence and the equipment to receive that Word with understanding.


I. Bringing the Two Hermeneutics Together

A. Biblicism without arrogance

The biblicist hermeneutic, as set out in Paper Two, holds that Scripture is the supremely authoritative, sufficient, verbally and plenarily inspired Word of God, providentially preserved across the centuries and to be read in its grammatical and historical sense. This is a confident hermeneutic. It does not apologize for what it confesses; it does not hold the doctrine of Scripture tentatively, awaiting permission from the broader academic culture; it does not soften its claims to make them more palatable to those who do not share them.

Biblicism so understood can, however, be held in two different spirits, and the difference matters. Held in one spirit, it tends toward arrogance — toward the assumption that the biblicist’s understanding of Scripture is simply identical with Scripture itself, that disagreement reflects bad faith or bad scholarship in the disagreer, and that the biblicist’s particular conclusions on matters of textual judgment partake of the same authority as the text whose judgment he is rendering. Held in this spirit, biblicism becomes brittle. It defends its conclusions as vigorously as it defends the doctrine of Scripture, and it collapses, when it collapses, by failing to distinguish between the two.

Held in the other spirit, biblicism is firm without being arrogant. It distinguishes between the text and the interpreter, between the Word God has given and the conclusions the biblicist has reached about that Word, between confidence in inspiration and confidence in any particular reconstruction. It holds the doctrine of Scripture without flinching while holding its own work on Scripture with appropriate modesty. This second spirit is the one this series has commended throughout, and it is the only spirit in which biblicism can do its proper work over the long run.

Biblicism without arrogance is not a watered-down biblicism. It is a more theologically consistent biblicism, because it takes seriously the difference between the Creator who speaks and the creature who hears. To collapse that difference, even in the service of defending the text, is to import into the doctrine of Scripture a confusion that the doctrine itself does not require and does not authorize.

B. Humility without drift

The hermeneutics of humility, as set out in Paper Three, recognizes the finitude of the creaturely interpreter, distinguishes itself sharply from skepticism on one side and indecision on the other, and produces in its practitioner a set of working habits suited to fragmentary evidence. This is a modest hermeneutic. It does not claim more than the evidence supports; it reports its confidence levels honestly; it welcomes correction from the broader believing community across time.

Humility so understood can, however, drift. The drift takes a recognizable shape. Modesty about reconstructions becomes modesty about readings; modesty about readings becomes modesty about wording; modesty about wording becomes modesty about meaning; and modesty about meaning becomes a generalized agnosticism that no longer functions as humility at all but has become, by gradual stages, a different posture entirely. The drift is rarely deliberate. It is the natural consequence of failing to distinguish among the several levels at which modesty is appropriate and of allowing a humility that belongs at one level to spread to levels where it does not belong.

Humility without drift is humility that holds its position. It is modest about what is genuinely uncertain and confident about what is not. It does not allow appropriate caution about a particular reconstruction to become inappropriate doubt about whether God has spoken, or about whether what God has spoken can be known. It distinguishes, with care, between the kinds of questions on which the evidence allows a confident answer and the kinds on which it does not, and it offers each kind of answer in the appropriate register.

This stability requires conscious discipline. The honest worker in the field will find, if he does not guard against it, that his caution about small matters can quietly become his caution about large ones, simply by the accumulating weight of repeated qualification. The remedy is to revisit, periodically and deliberately, the foundational commitments — the doctrine of Scripture, the doctrine of preservation, the convictions about canon and inspiration that ground the work — and to reaffirm them not as conclusions about which the evidence might still cause him to change his mind but as the framework within which the evidence is examined.

C. The believing scholar as servant of the church

The two hermeneutics, held together, produce a particular vocation. The believing scholar working in fragmentology is, at his best, a servant of the church. He is not a free agent producing conclusions for whatever audience will receive them; he is not a guild member whose first allegiance is to the standards and rewards of his profession; he is not an isolated individual whose work has value only in proportion to his own ambition. He is a member of a body, and the body of which he is a member is the church of Jesus Christ.

This vocation has practical implications. The believing scholar publishes work that is intelligible and useful to those outside the specialist’s circle. He prefers honest reporting to professional positioning. He cooperates with pastors and teachers, sharing what he has learned in forms they can use. He receives correction without defensiveness, including correction from those whose technical training is less than his own but whose discernment of the matters that touch the life of the church may, in particular cases, be greater. He recognizes that his own moment of work is one moment in a long stewardship, and he conducts himself accordingly.

This is not a counsel of self-effacement. The work itself is real work, requiring real expertise, and the scholar should bring his full competence to it. But the work has a purpose beyond itself, and the scholar who loses sight of that purpose has, however accomplished in technique, lost the bearing that gives the work its meaning. The believing scholar serves the church; the church reads the Word of God; God, in His providence, has used the labor of many such scholars across many centuries to bring that Word to the church in the form in which it is now read. The vocation is honorable. It is also, in the deepest sense, a vocation of service.


II. Recommendations for the Discipline

The synthesis of the two hermeneutics has implications for how the discipline of fragmentology is conducted. Three recommendations may be offered, each of which extends, in practical form, principles developed across the earlier papers.

A. Standards of reporting and bracketing

The first recommendation concerns standards of reporting. The discipline already has well-developed conventions for marking what is visible, what is reconstructed, and what is conjectured in transcribed material; these conventions were discussed in Paper Six. What the discipline needs, in addition to the conventions themselves, is a more consistent practice in their use across the spectrum of publications, from the most technical editions to the most popular treatments.

Editors of critical editions and specialized publications generally use the conventions well, though variation among houses is not negligible. Where the recommendation has more practical bite is in the broader range of writing in which fragmentary evidence is reported — academic articles aimed at non-specialists, textbooks, reference works, popular treatments by responsible scholars. In all of these settings, the same disciplines apply: triple distinction among visible, reconstructed, and conjectured readings; honest calibration of confidence levels; clear marking of the status of identifications and dates; and willingness to revise published claims when revision is warranted.

This recommendation is not a call for a new bureaucratic apparatus. It is a call for the disciplines that the field already knows to be applied with greater consistency, and for those who write at the more accessible levels to bring the same care to their reporting that the best technical editors bring to theirs. The cost of inconsistency at the more accessible levels is not simply scholarly imprecision; it is, in many cases, the slow propagation of misleading impressions among readers who have no means of evaluating the reports for themselves.

A second aspect of this recommendation is the discipline of conspicuous correction. When a published claim turns out to have been mistaken — an identification revised, a date adjusted, a reconstruction set aside in the light of new evidence — the correction should be published as conspicuously as the original claim was made. This is not how things have always worked. Initial claims, with their dramatic appeal, often receive much wider circulation than the corrections that later qualify or replace them, and the result is a scholarly literature in which superseded claims continue to circulate alongside their successors. The honest worker, and the honest publisher, will resist this pattern.

B. Cooperation between specialists and pastors

The second recommendation concerns the relationship between specialists and pastors. These two callings are different, and the difference should not be obscured. The specialist works at a level of technical detail that the pastor cannot, in the ordinary course of his ministry, sustain. The pastor works at a level of pastoral care for actual congregations that the specialist cannot, in the ordinary course of his research, deliver. Each calling has its own integrity, and neither should attempt to substitute for the other.

What the two callings need is honest cooperation. Specialists have a responsibility to produce work that pastors can use. This includes, but is not limited to, the production of accessible summaries of the state of evidence on questions of pastoral relevance, the answering of questions that pastors actually ask, and a willingness to engage with the practical situations in which textual matters arise in the life of the congregation. Pastors, on their side, have a responsibility to consult the work that specialists produce, to bring real questions to those better equipped to answer them, and to teach their congregations from the substance of what they have learned rather than from impressions.

This cooperation has historically been uneven. Specialists have sometimes written as though pastors did not exist, or as though the pastoral implications of their work were someone else’s problem. Pastors have sometimes treated specialist work with suspicion, or have ignored it altogether, on the assumption that scholarly study of the Bible is intrinsically corrosive of pastoral confidence in it. Both of these patterns are unhelpful, and both can be corrected. The biblicist commitments of this series suggest that they should be.

A practical form this cooperation might take is the inclusion, in pastoral training programs, of substantive instruction in the textual transmission of Scripture, taught by those with technical competence but oriented toward pastoral application. A pastor who has had such instruction is better equipped to read footnotes, to teach his congregation about variants, and to meet popular skeptical claims with accurate fragmentology. The specialists who teach in such programs, in turn, are kept in regular contact with the pastoral situations to which their work eventually applies, and their own work tends to gain in pastoral wisdom as a result.

C. Catalogs, digital tools, and access to primary materials

The third recommendation concerns the broader infrastructure of the discipline. Fragmentology, as observed in Paper One, has been transformed in recent decades by digital tools — high-resolution imaging, multispectral imaging, online publication, collaborative platforms for the comparison and virtual rejoining of dispersed fragments. These tools are an enormous gift, and they have made possible work that could not have been done in earlier generations. They also raise questions that deserve attention.

Catalogs of surviving fragments need to be kept current, comprehensive, and accessible. New finds need to be added in a timely way, and the relationships among fragments that have been dispersed across multiple holding institutions need to be tracked. The catalogs that exist do much of this work well; the recommendation is for continued and expanded support of this kind of infrastructure work, which is often less glamorous than the initial publication of new evidence but is, in the long run, more consequential for the discipline.

Access to primary materials, whether in physical or in digital form, should be as broad as the responsible stewardship of the materials allows. Holding institutions have legitimate concerns about preservation, and these concerns may set real limits on physical access. Digital access, however, can often be much broader than physical access, and the trend toward open publication of high-resolution images of biblical and biblical-related manuscripts is one to be encouraged. The believer who can examine, on his own screen, an image of an early papyrus is in a different and better position than the believer who must rely entirely on the reports of others. This is true of specialists and non-specialists alike.

Digital tools for the comparison, transcription, and analysis of fragmentary material are improving rapidly, and the discipline benefits from their development. The recommendation here is that this development be guided by the disciplines commended in earlier papers — the disciplines of triple distinction, of honest calibration of confidence, of conspicuous marking of the status of claims. A digital tool that allows reconstructions to circulate without their conjectural status being clearly indicated is a tool that will, in practice, contribute to the same patterns of overreach that the discipline has long had to resist. A digital tool that makes the status of every claim visible to every user is a tool that supports the kind of work the discipline ought to be doing.


III. Recommendations for the Church

The discipline of fragmentology serves the church, and the church, in its turn, has a part to play in receiving what the discipline produces. Three recommendations for the church may be offered.

A. Catechesis on the transmission of Scripture

The first recommendation is for substantive catechesis on the transmission of Scripture. By “catechesis” is meant not a single lecture given once but an ongoing discipline of teaching, woven into the regular life of the congregation, by which believers come to understand how the Bible they read has reached them.

Such catechesis need not be technical. It need not require the congregation to learn Greek and Hebrew, to memorize the names of the great codices, or to follow the details of textual debates. It does require the congregation to learn certain things plainly: that the Bible was given over many centuries, in three languages, through human authors superintended by the Holy Spirit; that it has been transmitted by hand for many more centuries through scribes of varying skill but, on the whole, of remarkable care; that the surviving manuscript evidence is abundant, early, and substantially uniform; that the variation among manuscripts is overwhelmingly trivial and, where substantive, does not threaten any doctrine of the faith; that the translations they read are the work of careful committees who have weighed the evidence in good faith; and that the footnotes they encounter are acts of editorial honesty rather than admissions of fundamental uncertainty.

A congregation that has been taught these things, calmly and accurately, over a period of years, is a congregation that holds its Bible with confidence and that meets popular skeptical claims with steadiness rather than alarm. The investment of teaching time required for such catechesis is not large; the return, over the life of a congregation, is considerable.

B. Patience with what is uncertain; firmness with what is not

The second recommendation is for a particular discipline of disposition: patience with what is uncertain and firmness with what is not. These are not two different dispositions but two aspects of a single rightly ordered posture, and a congregation that learns to hold them together is a congregation well equipped for life under the Word.

Patience with what is uncertain means the willingness to live with unresolved questions. Some questions in fragmentology are genuinely open at the present moment. Some passages have textual situations that are not fully settled. Some fragments remain unidentified. Some methodological refinements are still in progress. The believer need not pretend that these matters are settled when they are not; he can acknowledge their open status without thereby concluding that everything is open. Patience, in this sense, is the willingness to accept that not every question has yet been answered and that the Christian life does not require it to have been.

Firmness with what is not uncertain means the corresponding willingness to hold settled matters as settled. The substance of Scripture, the doctrines of the faith, the truths the church has long confessed — these are not on the table because some recent fragment has been published or some popular book has made dramatic claims. The believer who has learned to be patient about the genuinely open questions has not, on that account, learned to be patient about everything. He can be firm about what is firm precisely because he has learned to distinguish what is firm from what is not.

This double discipline is not natural. The natural human tendency is to be firm about everything or patient about everything — to defend even small reconstructions as though the faith depended on them, or to hold even central doctrines tentatively as though new evidence might overturn them. The believer learns, by the practice of his faith and by the patient teaching of the church, to be patient where patience is owed and firm where firmness is owed, and not to confuse the two.

C. The text we have is the Word God has given us, and it is enough

The third recommendation may be stated as a settled conviction. The text the church has received is the Word God has given to the church, and it is enough.

This conviction has been implicit throughout the series, but it deserves to be stated plainly here. The believer does not read a hypothetical reconstruction of an unrecoverable original; he does not read a text whose substance is in serious doubt; he does not read a text that some future discovery might invalidate. He reads the Word of God, transmitted to the present generation by the providence of God across the long centuries of the church’s reception, and rendered in the languages of the modern world by the careful labor of translators who have weighed the surviving evidence in good faith.

That this Word is enough is a claim the doctrine of Scripture itself makes. Scripture is sufficient for salvation, for the knowledge of God, for the ordering of the Christian life and the church. It does not need to be supplemented by additional revelation, nor does it await some final determination of textual scholarship before the believer may rely on it. It is, in the form in which the church has received it, enough — enough for faith, enough for obedience, enough for the long pilgrimage of the believing life.

This is not to say that ongoing work in fragmentology is unnecessary or unimportant. The previous papers have argued at length that the work is necessary and important. It is to say that the believer’s confidence does not wait on the completion of that work and does not depend on its being completed. The work refines, illumines, and confirms; it does not constitute. The text the church has is the Word God has given, and the work of fragmentology is one of the means by which the church grows in understanding of how that Word has been entrusted to it. The Word itself, in its received form, is what the church reads, preaches, and lives by; and it is, by the gift of the God who gave it, enough.


IV. Open Questions and a Research Agenda

Honest synthesis requires honest acknowledgment of what remains undone. Three areas of ongoing work deserve mention as the series concludes.

A. Fragments awaiting publication or identification

The first area concerns the body of fragments that have not yet entered the published record. Holding institutions across the world contain materials that have not been fully cataloged, transcribed, or studied. The pace of publication, while substantial, has not kept up with the volume of recovered evidence, and many fragments remain known only to those with direct access to the holding collections.

In addition, fragments that have been published but not identified continue to invite further work. As noted in Paper Seven, an unidentified fragment is a pending case; its identification may come tomorrow, next year, or in a generation, but the case is not closed. The continued work of identification — patient, careful, properly humble about the provisional status of proposed identifications — is part of the ongoing agenda of the discipline.

Believers who have means may wish to consider the support of this kind of work. It is rarely glamorous; it does not produce the kind of publishable results that attract popular attention; it is, in the main, the steady infrastructure work on which the more visible products of the discipline depend. It is, however, work that genuinely serves the church and the broader scholarly community over the long run.

B. Methodological refinements still needed

The second area concerns method. The disciplines commended in Paper Six are sound, in the judgment of this series, but their consistent application across the field is uneven, and refinements remain possible.

Among the areas where refinement would be welcome are: clearer and more consistently applied conventions for marking the status of claims in non-technical publications; more developed protocols for the publication of paleographic estimates with their proper ranges of uncertainty; more honest practices around the handling of conjectural reconstructions, especially in popular and semi-popular venues; better integration of the evidence of versions and patristic citations into the working judgment of textual decisions; and greater attention to the patterns of accumulation by which tentative claims acquire, over time, the appearance of established knowledge.

None of these is a revolutionary item. All of them are matters on which the field already has good practices in some quarters and in which broader and more consistent application would yield real gains. The discipline does not need a methodological revolution; it needs the steady reinforcement of the good practices it already knows.

C. Areas where humility forbids closure and biblicism forbids despair

The third area is the area of genuinely unresolved questions, where the present evidence does not yet allow a confident verdict and where honest work requires the discipline of saying so. Such questions exist; they have been alluded to throughout the series; they are part of the actual state of the field.

The right posture toward such questions is the double posture commended throughout. Humility forbids closure: the worker who declares such questions settled when they are not is not merely overreaching but misleading the church. Biblicism forbids despair: the worker who treats such questions as evidence that the larger task is hopeless is allowing local uncertainty to become global despair, which the actual state of the evidence does not warrant.

Between premature closure and unwarranted despair lies the patient work of the discipline as it actually proceeds. New evidence is recovered; existing evidence is re-examined; methods are refined; conclusions are tested and, where appropriate, revised. The work goes forward. It will go forward, in some form, until the day when faith gives way to sight and the disciplines suited to the present age give way to the unmediated communion of the believer with his Lord. Until that day, faithful work in fragmentology is one form of the church’s grateful service to the God who has spoken and preserved His Word.


Conclusion to the Series

The nine papers of this series have argued, by stages, that fragmentology is a discipline worth the believing scholar’s attention, that biblicism and humility are the two governing commitments under which it is rightly conducted, that the surviving evidence — Hebrew, Greek, canonical, non-canonical, identified, unidentified — supports rather than undermines the church’s confidence in the Word of God, and that the work of reading, reconstructing, and reporting fragmentary material is part of the church’s stewardship of the Scriptures it has received.

The conclusion of the whole, stated plainly, is that the Word the church reads is the Word God gave; that the surviving evidence by which it has reached the church is, on honest examination, abundant, early, and substantially uniform; that the work of careful study, conducted under the disciplines commended throughout this series, deepens rather than disturbs the believer’s confidence; and that the believing scholar, the faithful pastor, and the ordinary saint together stand in a long tradition of those who have received the Scriptures, lived by them, and passed them on. The text we have is the Word God has given us, and it is enough.

It is fitting to close with the acknowledgment that this confidence rests, finally, not on the labor of any scholar or the conclusions of any series of papers, but on the faithfulness of the One who spoke. He has spoken; He has preserved what He spoke; He continues, by His Spirit and through His Word, to speak to His church. The disciplines of fragmentology, rightly conducted, are one means by which the church receives and understands what He has given. They serve the Word; they do not constitute it. And the Word they serve is, by the grace of the God whose Word it is, more than sufficient for the salvation, sanctification, and final glorification of those who hear and believe.

To Him, the God who speaks and preserves, be glory, both now and forever.


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Fragments, Translation, and the Pew


Introduction

The previous papers have moved from foundations to method, from method to specific corpora of evidence, and from those corpora to the special case of fragments at the canonical edges. The present paper turns to a question that has been implicit throughout but has not yet been addressed directly: how does the work of fragmentology actually reach the pew?

For most believers, fragmentology is invisible. The pastor opens his Bible, reads from it, preaches from it; the congregation listens, follows along in their own copies, marks the passage for further study, and goes home to read again. The chain that connects this familiar Sunday scene to the papyri of the second century, the Hebrew fragments of the Dead Sea caves, and the careful work of editors and translation committees is rarely seen and seldom discussed. Yet the chain is real. Every Bible the congregation reads has come down through it. The faithfulness of every link in the chain matters, and the believer who never thinks about the chain is, in fact, depending on its faithfulness whether he knows it or not.

This paper traces the chain, addresses the pastoral question of how textual matters should be communicated to the congregation, and considers the apologetic implications of an accurate fragmentology in the face of popular skeptical claims. The aim throughout is to show that the believer’s confidence in the Bible he holds is well-founded, and that telling the truth about how it has reached him strengthens rather than weakens that confidence.


I. From the Fragment to the Printed Bible

A. How fragmentary evidence enters critical apparatuses

A critical apparatus is the body of notes, usually printed at the bottom of the page in a scholarly edition of the Greek New Testament or the Hebrew Old Testament, that records variations among the surviving witnesses to the text. Where a manuscript or fragment differs from the wording the editor has placed in the main text, the apparatus indicates the variant and identifies the witnesses that attest it. A reader using a critical edition can, in principle, see at a glance what the major manuscripts say about a given passage and assess the textual evidence for himself.

Fragmentary evidence enters these apparatuses through a long process of editorial work. When a fragment is published — typically in a specialized series, with a careful transcription, plates, and commentary — its readings become available to the broader scholarly community. Subsequent editors of critical editions consider whether the fragment’s evidence should be incorporated, how it should be cited, and how its readings compare with those of other witnesses. The fragment may, on the basis of this work, be assigned a designation, included in the apparatus for the passages it preserves, and weighed alongside other witnesses in the editor’s judgments about the wording of the main text.

This process is, on the whole, slow and conservative. New fragments do not typically transform critical editions overnight. The apparatuses in current use reflect the cumulative weight of decades of careful work, and a single new fragment, however interesting, generally enters the apparatus as one more witness among many rather than as a decisive new authority. This conservatism is appropriate. The body of evidence is large, and the proper weighing of any single new piece against the whole takes time.

For the believer, the practical implication is that the printed Bibles in current use rest on a body of textual evidence that has been examined, weighed, and reported by generations of careful workers. The chain from fragment to apparatus is not free of judgment calls; the previous papers have addressed at length the question of how those judgments are made and where they are open to revision. But the chain is real, and the apparatus in a scholarly edition is not the product of a single editor’s preferences. It is the product of a long-running conversation among many workers, conducted in published form, open to examination by anyone who has the languages and the patience to follow it.

B. How critical apparatuses inform translation committees

The next link in the chain runs from critical edition to translation. Translators do not, in general, work directly from the manuscripts. They work from one or more critical editions of the Greek and Hebrew, sometimes consulting manuscript evidence directly at points where the apparatus indicates significant disagreement, but more often relying on the editors’ presentation of the evidence and on their own judgment about which reading best represents the original wording.

A translation committee operating responsibly will have a stated policy about its textual base. Some committees translate from a particular critical edition; others draw eclectically from several editions; still others give particular weight to a particular text-form, such as the Textus Receptus or the Majority Text, in keeping with the convictions briefly summarized in Paper Five. The committee’s policy is, in principle, a public matter, and a reader who wishes to know what text underlies his translation can, in most cases, find out by consulting the translation’s preface or related published documents.

Within the committee’s policy, decisions are made about particular passages. Where the witnesses agree, no decision is required; the wording is simply translated. Where the witnesses disagree, the committee weighs the evidence and chooses a reading. Where the disagreement is significant enough that some readers may wish to know about it, the committee may include a footnote in the translation indicating the alternative reading and identifying, in some general way, the witnesses that support it. The reader of a modern English Bible has, in the footnotes, a small but real window into the textual decisions that have shaped the translation he is reading.

This process is not perfect, and biblicists may legitimately disagree about how a particular committee has weighed evidence in a particular passage. The disagreements among the major positions sketched in Paper Five — Textus Receptus, Majority Text, Critical Text — show themselves at this stage in concrete ways: a reading that one committee prints in the main text another committee prints in a footnote, and the reverse. These disagreements are real and worth careful thought. They are also, in the great majority of cases, disagreements about wording that does not affect the substance of what the passage teaches.

C. The footnotes the average reader sees and what they actually mean

The believer who reads his Bible attentively will, sooner or later, encounter the footnotes. They typically take forms such as: “Some manuscripts read…”; “Other ancient authorities add…”; “The earliest manuscripts do not contain…”; or similar formulations. For many believers, these notes are a source of mild puzzlement and occasional unease, and a brief account of what they actually mean is a service the pastor and teacher can render.

A footnote of this kind is, in the first place, an act of editorial honesty. The translation committee is telling the reader that, at this particular point, the surviving witnesses do not all agree, and that there is more than one possible wording the committee might have placed in the main text. The committee has chosen one wording, on whatever grounds it has weighed, but it has thought it worth telling the reader that the matter is not entirely uncontested.

A footnote of this kind is, in the second place, a form of pastoral candor. It does not assume that the believing reader needs to be shielded from the existence of variants. It treats the reader as a responsible person who can be told that some manuscripts read differently and who can, if he wishes, pursue the matter further.

A footnote of this kind is not, in the third place, an admission that the text is in serious doubt or that the wording of Scripture is fundamentally uncertain. The vast majority of variation among manuscripts is, as Paper Five established, trivial in nature and does not appear in footnotes at all. The variation that does appear in footnotes is, in the main, the relatively small body of substantive variation that is significant enough to be worth a reader’s attention but that does not threaten any doctrine of the faith.

A pastor who wishes to help his congregation read footnotes well can teach them a few simple habits. First, to notice when a footnote appears and to read it. Second, to understand that the footnote indicates an alternative reading, not a fundamental uncertainty. Third, to consult, where possible, more than one trustworthy translation, since the differences among translations often illumine the textual situation more clearly than any single translation can. And fourth, to bring genuinely puzzling cases to those who are equipped to address them — not in the spirit of skepticism, but in the spirit of careful study.


II. Communicating Textual Matters to the Congregation

A. Pastoral honesty about variants without producing skepticism

The pastor who undertakes to teach his congregation about the textual transmission of Scripture stands in a delicate position. On one side, he must avoid the kind of evasion that pretends textual variation does not exist, treats every footnote as an embarrassment, or refuses to discuss the matter for fear of unsettling weak consciences. This kind of evasion does not, in fact, protect the congregation; it leaves them poorly equipped to meet the popular skeptical claims that they will inevitably encounter, and it teaches them that the church cannot be trusted to handle hard questions honestly.

On the other side, he must avoid the kind of indiscriminate disclosure that produces, in his hearers, an impression of textual chaos that the actual evidence does not support. A pastor who lectures his congregation at length on every variant he has encountered, without distinguishing trivial from substantive, without indicating the relative weight of attestation, and without providing a framework for understanding what the variation means, may convey a misleading picture of the state of the text. The congregation comes away thinking that the Bible is full of doubts, when in fact the Bible’s textual transmission is, by any honest comparison, remarkably stable.

The path between these errors is the path of accurate proportion. The pastor tells his congregation what is in fact the case: that the Bible has been transmitted by hand for many centuries through many hands; that scribes occasionally made small errors of the kind that any honest copyist will recognize; that these errors have been studied carefully across generations and are, in the main, easily identified and corrected; that the substance of what God has said has reached the church with a stability that the surviving evidence positively supports; and that the small body of remaining textual questions does not touch any matter on which the faith depends.

This kind of teaching is best done not in occasional crisis sermons in response to popular skeptical claims, but in regular, calm instruction, as part of the broader work of helping the congregation understand the Scriptures they read. A few minutes of plain teaching, integrated into ordinary expository preaching when relevant, will do more good over time than dramatic special presentations after a popular book or documentary has unsettled some of the saints.

B. The distinction between disputed wording and disputed doctrine

A particular distinction belongs at the heart of any pastoral teaching on textual matters: the distinction between disputed wording and disputed doctrine. The two are very different, and conflating them is, in the present moment, the most common source of unnecessary alarm among believers and the most common rhetorical sleight of popular skepticism.

Disputed wording refers to passages where the surviving witnesses do not all agree on the precise wording, and where translation committees, working with the available evidence, have made judgments about which reading to print and which to footnote. The number of such passages is finite and known; the substance of the disputes is, for the most part, well documented in the apparatus of any standard critical edition.

Disputed doctrine refers to teachings of the historic Christian faith that are themselves contested. The deity of Jesus Christ, His incarnation and substitutionary death, His bodily resurrection, salvation by grace through faith, the inspiration and authority of Scripture, the future return of Jesus Christ — each of these teachings has been contested in various forms across the history of the church and continues to be contested in some quarters today.

The crucial point is that disputed wording and disputed doctrine are not the same thing. Every major teaching of the historic Christian faith rests on a broad foundation of biblical texts whose wording is not in any serious doubt. Where individual passages relevant to such teachings have textual variants, the variants do not, on examination, affect the substance of the teachings. The doctrines stand on the broad testimony of Scripture, and the broad testimony of Scripture is not what is in dispute at any of the textually contested points.

This distinction allows the pastor to speak with appropriate calm about the existence of variants. He may freely acknowledge that, at this particular passage, the manuscripts do not all read the same way, that competent workers have weighed the evidence and reached this conclusion or that, and that the matter is in some respects open. He may then go on to show, from the broader testimony of Scripture, that the doctrine in view does not rest on this single passage and is not threatened by the textual question. The congregation learns, in such teaching, that the church’s doctrine is robust precisely because it does not depend on any single contested wording, and that the surviving evidence supports rather than undermines the substance of what they are taught.

C. Building trust by telling the truth

Underneath these specific disciplines is a more general principle. Pastors build trust with their congregations by telling the truth, and they erode trust by hedging, evading, or dramatizing.

A congregation that has heard its pastor speak honestly about textual matters across years of ordinary teaching will not be unsettled when a popular book or documentary makes sensational claims about the Bible. They have, in fact, already heard the substance of the relevant matters from a trusted teacher who explained them in the proper proportion. They may bring questions to the pastor, but the questions will be asked from a posture of confidence rather than alarm.

A congregation that has been shielded from these matters, by contrast, is liable to be shocked when they encounter them outside the church, and the shock can be acute. The pastor who has not prepared his people for what they will read and hear about textual matters is, however well-intentioned, leaving them vulnerable. The remedy is not to manufacture controversies in the pulpit but to weave honest acknowledgment of textual realities into the ordinary work of teaching, so that the congregation knows what to think about footnotes, knows what variants are and are not, and knows where to take their questions when they have them.

This kind of trust-building is slow work, and it does not produce dramatic visible effects. But over time, it forms a congregation that can hold its faith with confidence in the face of popular challenges, because the confidence is grounded in accurate understanding rather than in protective ignorance.


III. Apologetic Considerations

A. Engaging popular-level skeptical claims with accurate fragmentology

Popular skeptical claims about the reliability of the biblical text follow a small number of recurring patterns, and an accurate fragmentology equips the believer to respond to each of them.

A first pattern alleges that the manuscripts of the New Testament are so numerous and so divergent that the original wording cannot be recovered. The response is that the abundance of manuscripts is, in fact, a strength rather than a weakness, that the variation among them is overwhelmingly trivial, and that the substantive variation has been carefully studied and does not threaten the substance of the text. The number of variants in the manuscript tradition is sometimes presented in popular literature as a frightening figure; the figure becomes much less frightening when one understands that it is a count of every difference, however small, across thousands of witnesses, and that the counting method is one that would yield an impressive figure for any extensive ancient text transmitted by hand.

A second pattern alleges that early Christianity contained a much wider diversity of beliefs than the canonical record suggests, and that the canon was constructed to suppress alternative traditions whose existence is now revealed by the recovery of non-canonical writings. The response, set out at length in Paper Seven, is that the recovered non-canonical writings were, in the main, known to the early church and were considered and not received; that they are, in the main, later than the canonical writings rather than independent first-century witnesses; and that the doctrine of canon does not depend on the suppression of inconvenient evidence. The recovery of non-canonical fragments does not destabilize a canon that was never stabilized by their absence in the first place.

A third pattern alleges that the Old Testament text was substantially fluid in the Second Temple period and that the wording received by the church through the Masoretic tradition is one of several competing forms with no claim to special authority. The response, set out in Paper Four, is that the fragmentary evidence shows substantial stability of the proto-Masoretic stream alongside a recognized but more limited pluriformity in some books, and that the proto-Masoretic stream’s predominance reflects the careful preservation of the line of transmission entrusted to the community of the covenant. The biblicist confidence in the Masoretic tradition is well supported by the surviving evidence, even where the evidence also shows real complications.

A fourth pattern alleges that translation differences among modern Bibles indicate fundamental disagreement about what Scripture says. The response is that translation differences arise from many causes, only some of which are textual; that translation differences are, in the great majority of cases, differences of how to render the same wording rather than differences of which wording to render; and that the substance of what is taught is consistently rendered across faithful translations even where the choices of word and phrase vary.

In each of these cases, the believer’s response is best made not by counter-rhetoric but by accurate description of the evidence. The popular skeptical claims rely, in the main, on the audience’s unfamiliarity with the actual state of the surviving record. Accurate fragmentology, plainly explained, is a substantial answer to most of them.

B. Refusing to overclaim in defense of Scripture

The hermeneutics of humility commended in Paper Three applies with particular force to apologetic work. The believer engaged in defense of the reliability of the biblical text is under temptation to overstate the case — to claim more for the surviving evidence than the evidence supports, to assert dates earlier than the paleographic estimates warrant, to dismiss difficulties more sweepingly than honest examination allows, to attribute to the manuscript tradition a uniformity that does not, in every detail, characterize it.

This temptation must be refused, for two reasons. The first is that honesty is owed to the evidence and to the audience. Overclaiming in defense of Scripture is, in the end, dishonest, however well-intentioned, and it does not actually serve the cause of confidence in Scripture in the long run. An audience that detects overclaim, or that learns later that the case as presented was stronger than the evidence supports, will rightly conclude that the defender was unreliable and may extend that conclusion further than the case requires.

The second reason is that the actual state of the evidence does not require overclaim. The case for the substantial reliability of the biblical text, as developed across the previous papers, is strong on the evidence. Honest reporting of what the fragmentary record actually shows is, in fact, a sufficient answer to most popular skeptical claims, and the believer who has accustomed himself to honest reporting will find that he does not need to embellish in order to make the case. The case makes itself, when stated accurately.

This refusal of overclaim is not a concession to the skeptic. It is a discipline of the believer who knows that the truth is on his side and who therefore has no need to misrepresent it.

C. Confidence grounded in evidence and in the character of God who speaks and preserves

The deepest ground of the believer’s confidence in the biblical text is not, finally, the surviving manuscript evidence, however abundant. It is the character of God Himself. The God who has spoken is the God who has promised to preserve what He has spoken, and the doctrine of preservation rests, ultimately, on the trustworthiness of the One who made the promise. The fragmentary evidence is, on this view, not the foundation of the believer’s confidence but its confirmation in history. The foundation is laid before the evidence is examined; the evidence, when examined, shows that the foundation has not been laid in vain.

This way of stating the matter is important for two reasons. The first is that it preserves the proper order of theology and apologetics. The believer does not believe that God has spoken because the manuscript evidence allows it; he believes that God has spoken because God has spoken, and the manuscript evidence shows that what He spoke has been kept. To reverse this order is to subordinate the doctrine of Scripture to the contingencies of historical research, and that subordination is not consistent with the doctrine itself.

The second reason is that this way of stating the matter steadies the believer in the face of the unknown. No examination of evidence is ever finally complete. New fragments are still being published; new analyses are still being undertaken; new questions are still being raised. A confidence that depended exclusively on the present state of evidence would be a confidence subject to constant revision. A confidence grounded in the character of God who speaks and preserves is a confidence that can welcome the next discovery with calm, knowing in advance that whatever the discovery shows will be consistent with what God has said, because God does not lie and does not abandon His Word.

This is not a retreat from evidence. The believer who reasons in this way takes the evidence seriously, examines it carefully, reports it honestly, and learns from it where there is something to learn. He does not, however, place the weight of his confidence on the evidence in such a way that any disturbance in the evidence would topple his faith. His confidence rests, where Scripture itself locates it, in the God whose Word the Scriptures are.


Conclusion

The chain from fragment to pew is real, and its faithfulness matters. Fragmentary evidence reaches the believer through a long process — from publication to critical apparatus, from apparatus to translation, from translation to printed Bible, and from printed Bible to the ordinary reading and preaching of the church. Pastors who understand this chain can teach their congregations to read Bibles attentively, to make sense of footnotes, to distinguish disputed wording from disputed doctrine, and to hold their faith with confidence in the face of popular skeptical claims. The believer’s confidence rests, finally, not on the manuscript record alone but on the character of God who has spoken and preserved, and the manuscript record, when examined honestly, supports rather than undermines that confidence.

The next paper, the last in the series, draws the threads of the foregoing together. It offers a synthesis of biblicism and humility as governing commitments, recommendations for the discipline of fragmentology and for the church that benefits from it, and reflections on the open questions and the research agenda that remain. The principles developed across the series will there be brought to a conclusion that, like the discipline itself, aims to be confident where confidence is warranted and modest where modesty is owed.


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Fragments at the Edges: Apocrypha, Pseudepigrapha, and Unidentified Material

Introduction

The previous papers have concentrated on fragmentary witnesses to the canonical text — Hebrew witnesses to the Old Testament, Greek witnesses to the New, and the methods by which both are read and reported. The present paper turns to a different kind of evidence. Many of the fragments recovered from antiquity, including some of the most discussed in popular literature, do not contain canonical text. They contain non-canonical writings: works composed alongside the canonical books, sometimes in conscious imitation of them, sometimes in deliberate competition with them, sometimes in independent development of related themes. They also include fragments that have not yet been identified with any known work at all — pieces of writing whose place in the broader literary record remains an open question.

This material lies at the edges of the canonical question, and the edges are precisely the places where the temptations described in earlier papers run especially strong. The temptation to overclaim — to treat a non-canonical fragment as though it were a serious challenger to the canonical text, or to treat an unidentified fragment as though its meaning were already known — is real on one side. The temptation to underclaim — to treat the non-canonical material as though it had nothing to teach the careful reader, or to treat the unidentified material as though it could simply be dismissed — is real on the other. Honest fragmentology requires that both temptations be resisted.

The aim of this paper is to survey the principal categories of non-canonical fragmentary evidence, to set out the biblicist’s appropriate discrimination among them, and to commend the disciplines of humility appropriate to fragments that remain unidentified. The argument throughout assumes the doctrine of canon set out in earlier papers and seeks to apply it, with the hermeneutics of humility commended in Paper Three, to a particularly demanding portion of the evidentiary record.


I. The Non-Canonical Fragmentary Record

A. Second Temple Jewish writings

The body of Jewish literature produced between the close of the Old Testament writings and the apostolic age is substantial, and a considerable portion of it survives only in fragmentary form. The Dead Sea materials, surveyed in Paper Four for their biblical witnesses, also include a large body of non-biblical writings: sectarian rules of community life, hymnic and liturgical texts, commentaries on biblical books, apocalyptic visions, retellings and expansions of biblical narrative, calendrical documents, and others. Together with material preserved in other languages and in other forms — Greek translations, later Christian transmission of Jewish works, citations in early Christian writers — this corpus offers a view into the world in which the apostolic writings were produced.

For the present paper, several features of this corpus are worth naming. The first is its diversity. The literature of Second Temple Judaism was not a single body of writing with a uniform theological program; it represented multiple communities, multiple theological tendencies, and multiple genres. The second is its fragmentary character. Many of these writings are known only in part, sometimes only in small part, and the gaps in the surviving evidence are often substantial. The third is its relationship to the canonical books. Some Second Temple writings show extensive engagement with Old Testament Scripture — quotation, allusion, paraphrase, expansion. A few are engaged in turn by New Testament writers, who quote or allude to them in ways that have been the subject of careful study.

The believing reader need not be alarmed by the existence of this literature, nor by the fact that some of it intersects with the canonical record. The Holy Spirit, in inspiring the apostolic writers, did not isolate them from the literary world in which they wrote. That an apostle might allude to a non-canonical Jewish writing in the course of his teaching no more compromises the inspiration of the apostle’s writing than the apostle’s use of common Greek vocabulary does. The fragmentary record of Second Temple Judaism is part of the historical context of the New Testament and is, in that respect, useful background; it is not, on that account, a competitor for canonical authority.

B. Early Christian apocryphal works

A second category of non-canonical fragmentary evidence is the body of early Christian writings that present themselves, in various ways, as accounts of Christ, of the apostles, or of related matters, but that were not received by the church as canonical Scripture. This body includes works commonly known as the Gospel of Thomas, the Gospel of Peter, the Gospel of Mary, the Acts of various apostles in non-canonical forms, several apocalypses, and a number of other writings of various kinds. Some of these are preserved in substantially complete form; many are preserved in fragments, sometimes a single page, sometimes a few lines.

These works have received considerable attention in popular discussion in recent decades, often presented as suppressed or forgotten alternatives to the canonical Gospels. The careful worker is in a position to evaluate these claims more soberly than popular discussion has tended to do, and several observations are worth setting down.

The dating of these works, where it can be assessed, generally places them later than the canonical Gospels — in many cases substantially later. They do not, in the main, represent independent first-century traditions about Christ that the canonical Gospels failed to record. They represent, rather, second-century and later compositions whose relationship to the canonical writings is, in many cases, demonstrably one of dependence. Where they contain material not found in the canonical Gospels, that material frequently reflects theological tendencies — gnostic, encratite, and others — that were not received by the broader church.

The fragmentary state of much of this material has, on occasion, been used to suggest that the works in question were once more substantial and more widely read than the surviving evidence indicates. This is possible in principle but is not strongly supported by the evidence in most cases. The fragmentary character of the surviving copies is, in the main, what one would expect for writings that circulated in narrower communities, were copied less frequently, and were not preserved by the broad transmission that carried the canonical books across the centuries.

The biblicist’s response to this material is not to ignore it. Some of it is genuinely interesting as historical evidence of the diversity of religious thought in the early centuries; some of it has independent value for the study of the period. The biblicist’s response is, rather, to receive this material for what it is — non-canonical writing, generally later than the canonical writings, often theologically divergent from them, of historical interest but not of canonical authority.

C. Quotation, allusion, and intertextual overlap with canonical books

A particular kind of complication arises where non-canonical fragmentary writings quote, allude to, or otherwise overlap with the canonical books. The complication runs in both directions.

In one direction, non-canonical writings often quote or allude to canonical Scripture. A Second Temple commentary on a biblical book quotes the book it comments on; an apocryphal Gospel, in seeking to present itself as a record of Christ, reproduces sayings or narratives that overlap with the canonical Gospels; a sectarian writing builds its theological argument on verses from the prophets. Such quotations and allusions are, in themselves, fragmentary evidence for the wording of the canonical text in the period in which the non-canonical work was composed. They function, for textual purposes, somewhat like patristic citations, with the same limitations: a quotation may have been adjusted to fit the rhetorical purpose of the citing work, may have been drawn from memory rather than from a text, may have been subject to its own transmission history. The careful worker uses such evidence with appropriate caution.

In the other direction, the canonical books occasionally engage non-canonical material. A New Testament writer may quote, allude to, or echo a Jewish writing not received as Scripture, sometimes for the purpose of agreement and sometimes for the purpose of correction. The handling of such cases requires careful interpretation. It is one thing for an apostle to use a phrase or image from a non-canonical writing in the course of his own inspired teaching; it is another thing entirely to claim, on that basis, that the non-canonical writing must therefore be regarded as authoritative. The latter claim does not follow from the former. The apostle’s use of a source does not confer canonical status on the source any more than his use of a Greek poet’s line, in addressing a Greek audience, confers canonical status on Greek poetry.

The biblicist worker, encountering intertextual overlap, examines the cases on their own terms. He notes what is quoted, how it is quoted, and to what end. He weighs the evidence for the wording of canonical and non-canonical texts in the light of the citation. He resists the temptation, present in some quarters of contemporary scholarship, to treat intertextual overlap as evidence for canonical instability or for the equivalence of canonical and non-canonical sources. The overlap is real and is worth study; it does not establish what those who exaggerate it sometimes claim.


II. The Biblicist’s Discrimination

A. Canon as received, not constructed in modernity

A foundational point for any biblicist treatment of non-canonical material is the doctrine of canon presupposed in earlier papers. The canon, on this view, is not a construction of modern scholarship, nor a product of late ecclesiastical politics, nor a fluid category subject to revision in the light of newly discovered fragments. The canon is the body of writings that God breathed out and that the believing community received, under the providence of God, as Scripture.

This doctrine of canon does not require the believer to claim that there was no historical process by which the recognition of the canon took place. There was such a process, and it can be traced to some extent in the historical record. The doctrine claims, rather, that the process was a process of recognition rather than of construction — that the church, under the leading of the Spirit, came to acknowledge as Scripture the writings that God had given as Scripture, and that the eventual settled recognition reflects not the imposition of authority by ecclesiastical fiat but the convergence of the believing community’s reception around the writings that bore the marks of inspiration.

This doctrine has a direct bearing on how the biblicist receives the fragmentary record of non-canonical material. The discovery of a previously unknown apocryphal writing, or the publication of new fragments of a known one, does not pose a threat to the canon, because the canon is not a list assembled by modern scholarship that might have to be revised in the light of new evidence. The canon is the body of writings that the church has received as Scripture, on grounds that do not depend on the comprehensiveness of the modern scholar’s archival knowledge. New evidence may illuminate the history of the period; it does not reopen the question of which writings are Scripture.

B. Why the existence of non-canonical fragments does not destabilize the canon

The point just made can be restated more directly. The existence of non-canonical fragmentary evidence does not destabilize the canon, because the canon is not stabilized by the absence of such evidence. The canon is stabilized by the inspiration of the writings God has given and by the recognition of those writings by the community to which they were entrusted. Non-canonical writings existed in antiquity; they were not received as Scripture; their continued existence in fragmentary form, and their occasional re-emergence through new discoveries, is exactly what one would expect for writings that were known but not canonical.

This is worth stating directly because popular literature has, on occasion, presented the publication of non-canonical fragments as though it were a kind of revelation that overturns settled understandings of Christianity. It is not. The early church knew of these writings. The fathers wrote about them, sometimes at length, sometimes in works that themselves survive only in fragmentary form. The non-reception of these writings as Scripture was not a failure of the early church to consider them but a considered judgment, sustained across the believing community over time. The recovery of physical fragments of these writings in the modern period gives us better access to texts the early church knew of but did not receive; it does not give us access to texts the early church somehow missed.

The biblicist may therefore receive the non-canonical fragmentary record with calm. He may study it, learn from it, and benefit from the historical illumination it provides. He need not regard each new publication as an occasion for anxiety, nor as a challenge to the doctrine of canon. The doctrine of canon was not formulated in ignorance of the existence of such writings, and it does not require ignorance of them in order to be sustained.

C. How fragmentary apocryphal material can illuminate background without competing for authority

Non-canonical fragmentary material can, when handled with appropriate discrimination, illuminate the historical and literary background of the canonical writings in ways that aid careful study.

The vocabulary, idioms, and theological categories of Second Temple Jewish writings often shed light on the language of the New Testament. A New Testament word whose precise sense in apostolic usage is debated may be illumined by parallel uses in roughly contemporary Jewish writing, fragmentary or otherwise. The conceptual world of first-century Judaism — its expectations about the Messiah, its categories for thinking about Scripture, its forms of community life — is, in part, accessible through the surviving Second Temple literature, and this access can refine the modern reader’s understanding of the world in which the apostolic writings were produced.

Similarly, early Christian apocryphal writings, even where their theology is not received, are useful for understanding the ways in which biblical themes and vocabulary were taken up, developed, distorted, or contested in the centuries following the apostolic age. They provide evidence for the spread of Christian discourse in regions where direct historical records are otherwise limited. They illuminate the backgrounds against which orthodox writings of the same period were composed and the controversies in which they were involved.

The discipline here is to receive this illumination without confusing background for authority. The non-canonical material is useful as background; it is not, on that account, on a level with the canonical material. The biblicist does not preach from the Gospel of Thomas as he preaches from Matthew, nor does he treat a Second Temple commentary as he treats Isaiah. He may read the former with profit; he reads the latter as the Word of God. The distinction is not one of mere personal preference but of the doctrine of canon, applied with appropriate consistency.


III. Humility Regarding the Unidentified

A particular category of fragmentary evidence remains to be considered: fragments that have not yet been identified with any known work. This category requires its own discipline of humility.

A. Fragments not yet placed in a known work

Among the fragments recovered from antiquity, a portion remains unidentified at any given time. A small piece of papyrus may contain a few lines of Greek that do not correspond to any known biblical or non-biblical work. A scrap of parchment may preserve a few words of Hebrew or Aramaic that fit no recognized composition. These fragments are not necessarily insignificant; some of them may, on further study, prove to belong to known works whose other portions have not survived in the same hand, or to works lost altogether and now known only from such fragmentary remains.

The unidentified status of such a fragment is, in itself, a fact about the present state of knowledge rather than a fact about the fragment. A fragment unidentified today may be identified tomorrow, when a related portion is recovered or when a careful comparison reveals a connection that earlier study had missed. Honest reporting acknowledges that unidentified fragments are pending cases rather than closed ones.

B. The discipline of provisional identification

When a worker proposes an identification for a previously unidentified fragment, the proposal is properly provisional. It is offered as a hypothesis: that the fragment belongs to such-and-such a work, that it represents such-and-such a portion of that work, that it stands in such-and-such a relationship to other surviving witnesses. The hypothesis may be more or less strongly supported by the evidence. It remains, until adequately tested by other workers and by further evidence, a hypothesis.

The discipline of provisional identification has several practical features. The worker presents his proposal with the evidence on which it rests, in a form that allows other workers to evaluate it. He distinguishes between the features of the fragment that strongly suggest the identification and the features that are merely consistent with it. He notes alternative identifications that the evidence does not exclude. He revises his proposal when subsequent evidence requires.

This discipline is important because identifications, once published, tend to enter the literature and to be repeated. An identification proposed tentatively in one publication may be cited as established in another, and as the basis for further argument in a third. By the time a careful reader examines the chain, the original tentativeness may have been forgotten, and a hypothesis may have acquired the appearance of settled knowledge. The pattern is the same one named in Paper Six in connection with reconstructions, and the remedy is the same: clear marking of the status of claims, and willingness to revise as evidence requires.

C. The danger of forcing fragments into theological agendas

A particular danger besets the handling of unidentified fragments and, indeed, of fragments at the canonical edges generally: the danger of forcing fragments into theological agendas. The danger runs in every direction.

In one direction, a worker hostile to the historic faith may treat an unidentified or non-canonical fragment as though it constituted evidence against the canonical witness — as though its existence, or its content, called the canonical record into question. Such treatments often press the evidence beyond what it can bear. A small fragment, whose content is partial and whose context is unknown, becomes the basis for sweeping claims about early Christian diversity, about suppressed traditions, about the constructedness of the canon. The claims may attract popular attention; they rarely survive the careful examination of specialists who have actually done the work.

In the other direction, a worker friendly to the historic faith may be tempted to dismiss non-canonical and unidentified fragments out of hand, or to read them as straightforward confirmations of his prior commitments. This too is a forcing of the evidence, and it does its own damage. The unidentified fragment is what it is; it is not yet known what it is. Treating it as already known, in the service of any agenda, falsifies the evidence in the same way that overreading does.

The biblicist commitments of this series do not require the suppression of evidence; they require the honest examination of it. A fragment whose contents seem to challenge a comfortable understanding may, on closer examination, prove to fit comfortably enough; or it may prove to be evidence of something the worker had not previously considered, in which case the worker must learn from it. The doctrine of canon does not depend on the suppression of inconvenient evidence, because the doctrine is sound and the evidence, on careful examination, does not actually challenge it.

The right posture is the posture commended throughout this series: confidence in what God has spoken, modesty about what we have figured out, honesty about what we do not yet know. This posture allows the worker to handle unidentified fragments with patience, to examine non-canonical material with discrimination, and to refuse the various pressures, in any direction, to make the evidence say more or less than it actually says.


Conclusion

The fragmentary record at the edges of the canonical question — Second Temple Jewish writings, early Christian apocryphal works, fragments not yet identified with any known composition — is real, substantial, and worth careful study. It does not destabilize the canon, because the canon is not stabilized by the absence of such evidence but by the inspiration of the writings God has given and the believing community’s recognition of them. It can illuminate the historical and literary background of the canonical writings in ways that aid honest interpretation, provided the distinction between background and authority is consistently maintained. It calls for particular humility in the handling of unidentified material, where the discipline of provisional identification and the refusal to force fragments into theological agendas are especially important.

The biblicist need not approach this body of evidence with anxiety, nor with the dismissive confidence that pretends the evidence is not there. He approaches it as he approaches the rest of the fragmentary record: with confidence in the Word of God that has been given and preserved, with modesty about the state of his own knowledge, with the honest disciplines of triple distinction and calibrated reporting commended in the previous papers, and with willingness to receive correction from the believing community across time.

The next paper turns from this consideration of fragments at the edges to the practical chain by which fragmentary evidence reaches the believing reader: the path from fragment to critical apparatus to translation to pulpit and pew. The disciplines and discriminations developed in the present paper, like those of the earlier papers, will inform the pastoral and apologetic considerations that the next paper will address.


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Method: Reading, Reconstructing, and Refusing to Overreach


Introduction

The previous two papers surveyed the principal bodies of fragmentary evidence — the Hebrew witness to the Old Testament and the Greek witness to the New — and assessed what each does and does not establish. Those surveys assumed, but did not closely examine, a set of practical disciplines by which fragmentary evidence is actually read, reconstructed, and reported. The present paper turns to those disciplines.

The work of fragmentology is, at its most practical, the work of moving from a piece of physical material to a published claim about a text. The path from artifact to claim passes through several stages, each of which admits its own characteristic errors and offers its own opportunities for honest service. A method paper is, in a real sense, a paper about temptations — the temptations to see what one wishes to see, to fill silence with one’s own voice, to dress conjecture in the language of certainty, to crown the critic’s judgment in the place of the church’s reception. The aim of the present paper is to set out, in plain terms, the disciplines by which those temptations are resisted.

The structure follows the natural flow of the work itself. First, the move from artifact to reading: how the worker actually arrives at a transcription. Second, the move from reading to reconstruction: how, when, and with what restraint the worker proposes to fill what is missing. Third, the weighing of internal and external evidence: how readings are assessed against one another. Fourth, the reporting of findings to those who are not specialists: how the worker tells the truth to the church without overstating either the certainty or the uncertainty of what he has found.


I. From Artifact to Reading

A. Imaging, transcription, and collation

The work begins with the physical artifact. In earlier generations, this meant traveling to the holding institution, sitting before the manuscript with such tools as a magnifying glass and a careful eye, and producing a transcription by hand. In the present generation, much of the work begins with high-resolution digital images, often produced under several lighting conditions and sometimes by multispectral imaging that recovers ink no longer visible to the unaided eye. The conditions of the work have improved; the underlying discipline has not changed.

A transcription is the worker’s representation, in modern letters and conventions, of what is visible on the artifact. A good transcription is faithful to what is there. It does not silently regularize spellings, complete abbreviations, or supply missing letters; or, if it does any of these things, it marks them clearly so that the reader can distinguish what was on the artifact from what the transcriber has supplied. The discipline of transcription is, at its heart, the discipline of separating one’s own contribution from the artifact’s testimony.

Collation is the comparison of one witness’s reading with the readings of others. A collation may be made against a chosen base text, or among a set of witnesses pairwise; the choice of method depends on the purpose. What matters, for the present paper, is that collation is the procedure by which the agreement and disagreement of witnesses is made visible. Without careful collation, claims about textual relationships rest on impression rather than evidence; with careful collation, those claims rest on an examinable record.

The honest worker keeps his transcriptions and collations in a form that others can check. This is not a procedural nicety; it is a substantive commitment. A transcription that no one can verify is a transcription whose accuracy must be taken on the worker’s authority alone, and the discipline of this series, formed by the hermeneutics of humility set out in Paper Three, does not encourage taking any worker’s authority alone in matters that can in principle be checked.

B. Distinguishing what is visible, what is reconstructed, and what is conjectured

A central discipline in fragmentary work is the discipline of triple distinction — already named in Paper Three but worth restating here in its concrete application to transcription.

What is visible is what the surviving material plainly shows. A letter that is fully formed, present, and unambiguous is visible. A word that can be read without doubt is visible. The category of the visible is the category of direct attestation, and it is the category in which confidence is highest.

What is reconstructed is what the worker proposes for portions of the artifact where the evidence is partial — a damaged letter that retains traces sufficient to identify it, a word at the edge of a tear where part of the letters survive and part do not, a line whose beginning or end is lost but whose middle is preserved. Reconstruction is a reasoned inference from partial evidence to a probable reading. It is not the same as direct attestation, and it must not be presented as such.

What is conjectured is what the worker proposes for portions where the artifact itself does not provide a basis for reconstruction — a missing line whose absence is total, a damaged region where no traces remain to constrain what was there, a word for which the surviving evidence is consistent with multiple possibilities. Conjecture is sometimes appropriate, but it is conjecture, and the line between it and reconstruction must be kept visible.

The honest worker keeps these three categories distinct in his own mind and in his published work. He does not allow visible readings to be eroded by the fashions of reconstruction; he does not allow reconstructions to harden into visible readings by repetition; he does not allow conjectures to be cited later as though they were reconstructions or readings. Each category has its proper place; each must be marked for what it is.

C. Bracket conventions and why they matter for the non-specialist reader

The discipline of triple distinction is supported, in published transcriptions, by a set of conventional markings — chiefly square brackets and related symbols — that indicate to the reader exactly what kind of evidence underlies each portion of the printed text. The specific conventions vary somewhat among editions, but the principle is constant: the printed page makes visible, by typographic means, the difference between what is on the artifact and what the editor has supplied.

For the specialist, these conventions are second nature. For the non-specialist — the pastor, the seminary student, the interested believer — they can be opaque, and worse, they can be invisible. A reader who does not know the conventions may take a printed transcription as a uniform text and miss the indications that part of it is reconstructed and part is conjectured. The same reader may then quote what is, in fact, a conjectural reading as though it were the unambiguous testimony of the manuscript.

The remedy for this is twofold. Editors should explain their conventions plainly, in language that a non-specialist can understand, in introductions that the non-specialist will actually read. And teachers — pastors, professors, and writers of expository works — should educate their hearers to look for the conventions and to weigh transcribed material accordingly. A small effort in this direction would yield large returns in honest understanding of what fragmentary evidence does and does not show.


II. Reconstruction with Restraint

A. The legitimate uses of conjecture

It would misrepresent the discipline to suggest that all conjecture is illegitimate. There are circumstances in which conjecture is appropriate, useful, and even necessary, provided it is named for what it is.

The most common legitimate use of conjecture is in the reconstruction of damaged passages where the surviving evidence constrains the possibilities to a small set, sometimes to one. If the surviving traces of a word are consistent with only one Greek or Hebrew word that fits the context, and if the parallel evidence from related witnesses supports that word, then proposing that word as the reading is reasonable. The conjecture remains a conjecture; it is not yet visible reading; but it is a conjecture with substantial constraint, and reporting it as such serves the larger work.

A second legitimate use of conjecture is in the proposal of explanations for difficult or apparently corrupt readings. A worker who encounters a reading that does not fit the context may propose, as a hypothesis, that an earlier scribe misread or miscopied an underlying word, and may propose what the underlying word was likely to have been. Such proposals are properly conjectural, are properly subject to evaluation against other witnesses and against the larger evidence, and are sometimes vindicated by later discoveries.

A third legitimate use of conjecture, more limited, is in the construction of working hypotheses about the larger documents from which fragments have been separated. A worker assembling several fragments that appear to come from the same original codex may conjecture an arrangement, a number of lines per page, a relationship among the fragments, and so on, in order to test those conjectures against further evidence. Provided the conjectures are named as such and are revised when the evidence requires, this work is part of the legitimate practice of the discipline.

B. The dangers of speculative reconstruction

The dangers of conjecture, however, are real, and they have produced enough bad work in the history of the discipline to warrant sustained attention.

The first danger is the danger of confirmation. A worker who has formed a hypothesis about what a fragment must contain — for theological reasons, or for reasons of professional reputation, or simply because the hypothesis is interesting — may read traces in the artifact as confirming the hypothesis when the traces do not, in fact, do so. This kind of error is rarely deliberate. It is more often the product of expectation: the worker sees what he expects to see, and his expectation has shaped his perception of the surviving marks.

The second danger is the danger of accumulation. A reconstruction proposed tentatively in one publication is repeated in a second, cited in a third, treated as established in a fourth, and built upon in a fifth. By the time a careful reader examines the chain, the original tentativeness has been forgotten, and a chain of inference has acquired the appearance of a chain of evidence. This pattern is not unique to fragmentology, but fragmentology, with its dependence on partial evidence, is particularly susceptible to it.

The third danger is the danger of agenda. A worker with a theological or polemical interest in a particular outcome may, without acknowledging the interest, allow it to shape his reconstructions. This danger runs in every direction of theological commitment. The biblicist is not exempt from it, and the present series would be dishonest if it pretended otherwise. The only safeguard is the discipline of distinguishing between what one wishes the fragment showed and what the fragment actually shows, and of submitting one’s work to readers, including unsympathetic ones, who can check the difference.

C. Test cases of overreach in the history of the discipline

The history of fragmentology contains its share of cautionary cases, and a few patterns are worth naming without identifying particular controversies.

There have been cases in which fragments have been confidently dated, on paleographic grounds, to a particular decade or even a particular year, only for later analysis to demonstrate that the evidence supported only a much wider range. Such cases have sometimes entered popular literature in the form of dramatic claims about how early certain biblical writings can be attested, claims that did not survive careful re-examination. The lesson is not that paleography is useless; the lesson is that paleography, like other methods, has limits, and that publication of results in advance of careful peer review can cause durable harm.

There have been cases in which fragments have been identified, at first glance, with one biblical work, and then later re-identified with another, or with no biblical work at all. This kind of correction is part of the normal life of the discipline, but the corrections sometimes lag well behind the initial reports, and in the interval the initial identification has been treated as established in places it should not have been.

There have been cases in which conjectured reconstructions of damaged passages have been printed without sufficient marking and have entered the citation chain as though they were directly attested. The harm done by such cases is not that the conjectures were offered; conjecture is, as noted, sometimes appropriate. The harm is that the conjectural status was not consistently maintained, and that the line between artifact and reconstruction was allowed to blur.

In each such case, the remedy is the same: the discipline of triple distinction, the conventions of bracket marking, and the willingness to publish corrections as conspicuously as the original claims were made. None of these remedies is glamorous. All of them are necessary.


III. Internal and External Evidence

The reading of fragmentary evidence inevitably leads to the comparison of variant readings, and the comparison of variant readings inevitably involves the weighing of internal and external considerations. A brief account of these categories, and of the biblicist’s appropriate use of them, belongs in any method paper.

A. How biblicists weigh the two

External evidence concerns the manuscripts themselves — their date, their geographical distribution, their textual character, their genealogical relationships. A reading attested by many manuscripts, by early manuscripts, by manuscripts from a wide geographical range, and by manuscripts of demonstrated reliability is, on external grounds, well supported.

Internal evidence concerns the readings themselves — what kind of variant has been produced, how it might have arisen, which reading better explains the others, which reading better fits the author’s known style and the immediate context. A reading that plausibly explains how the other variants in the tradition might have arisen from it is, on internal grounds, well supported.

Biblicists, like other careful workers, weigh both kinds of evidence. There is no responsible textual judgment that ignores either. The differences among biblicist positions, including the differences sketched in the previous paper, often reduce in part to differences in how the two kinds of evidence are weighted relative to each other.

The biblicist commitments of this series do not dictate a single answer to the question of weighting, but they do impose constraints. A weighting that effectively reduces external evidence to one or two favored manuscripts, treating their readings as decisive in advance of examination, is not a sound use of the evidence. A weighting that effectively reduces internal evidence to the critic’s own sense of what the apostle would have written, treating the critic’s literary intuition as decisive, is also not a sound use of the evidence. Between these errors, a careful balance is possible, and is, in practice, what the best textual work has long sought.

B. Where canons of criticism aid, and where they substitute the critic’s judgment for the church’s reception

Over generations, textual scholarship has developed a body of canons — general principles for the evaluation of variant readings. Some of these canons are sound and useful. Others are more questionable. The biblicist’s task is to use the sound ones and to be cautious about the others.

Among the more reliable canons is the principle that, all else being equal, the reading more likely to have produced the others is more likely to be original. This principle, properly applied, accounts well for the kinds of scribal errors that any worker familiar with hand-copied texts will recognize: eye-skip, dittography, harmonization to parallel passages, expansion of pious phrases, and so on.

Among the more questionable canons is the principle, sometimes invoked in the form lectio difficilior potior — the more difficult reading is to be preferred. The principle has a kernel of truth: scribes did sometimes smooth difficult readings into easier ones, and this tendency must be reckoned with. But the principle is sometimes pressed into a form that effectively requires the critic to prefer whatever reading is harder, on the assumption that any easier reading must be a smoothing. Pressed in this direction, the principle elevates the critic’s own sense of difficulty into a textual decision, and it can be used to override broad and ancient attestation in favor of readings whose support is narrow.

The deeper concern, for a biblicist, is when canons of criticism are used not as aids to judgment but as substitutes for the church’s long reception of the text. The wording that the church has read, preached, and lived by for many centuries has a kind of standing that the canons of criticism, however refined, ought not to be permitted to override casually. This does not mean that the received wording is beyond examination; the present paper is, after all, a paper about how examination is properly conducted. It means that examination should be conducted with appropriate weight given to the historical reception of the text, and that a canon of criticism is not, by itself, a sufficient basis for setting that reception aside.

C. A humble use of critical canons that does not crown them

The right posture toward the canons of criticism is the posture of a careful workman toward his tools. The canons are useful; they are not authoritative. They embody generations of accumulated wisdom about how scribes actually behaved; they are not infallible rules. They aid judgment; they do not replace it.

A humble use of the canons, suited to the commitments of this series, would observe several disciplines. It would apply the canons consistently rather than selectively. It would weigh internal arguments against external attestation rather than allowing one to silence the other. It would acknowledge, where the canons yield no clear verdict, that no clear verdict has been yielded, rather than producing a verdict by adding emphasis to a weak argument. And it would refuse to use the canons as instruments for setting aside readings whose ecclesial reception is broad and whose attestation is substantial, in favor of readings whose appeal is chiefly that they conform to the modern critic’s literary intuition.

These disciplines are not novel. They are the long-standing habits of the best textual workers, biblicist and otherwise. Naming them here is not to claim novelty but to commend the continued practice of habits that have served the discipline well.


IV. Reporting Findings to Non-Specialists

The final stage of the work is the stage at which fragmentological findings reach those who are not specialists in the discipline. This stage is, in some respects, the most consequential, because it is at this stage that the work of the worker meets the life of the church.

A. Plain-language reporting of confidence

The first discipline of reporting is the discipline of plain language about confidence. The taxonomy proposed in Paper Three — certain, probable, possible, conjectural — was offered as a working tool for the calibration of claims. Its application in published and spoken reporting requires that the worker actually use the categories rather than collapsing them into a uniform tone of authority.

A claim that is certain may be reported with confidence, and the church should hear it as such. A claim that is probable may be reported with appropriate qualifying language, and the church should hear it as a strong but not final judgment. A claim that is possible may be reported as one option among several, and the church should hear it accordingly. A claim that is conjectural may be reported as a hypothesis, and the church should hear it as the speculation it is.

The discipline here is, in part, a discipline of vocabulary. Words like demonstrated, suggested, proposed, and speculated carry different weights, and the careful worker uses each for the kind of claim it actually expresses. A worker who reports speculation in the language of demonstration misleads his hearers; a worker who reports demonstration in the language of speculation underclaims what the evidence has actually established. Both errors are forms of inaccurate reporting.

B. Avoiding both alarmism and triumphalism

The second discipline of reporting is the discipline of avoiding two opposed temptations.

Alarmism is the tendency to report fragmentological findings in ways that destabilize the church’s confidence in Scripture without warrant. A new fragment is presented as though it overturns long-settled questions; a variant is presented as though it touches the substance of the faith; an unresolved methodological debate is presented as though the underlying text were itself in doubt. Reporting of this kind sometimes arises from skeptical commitment, sometimes from the pursuit of attention, sometimes from carelessness. Whatever its source, it does real harm to the believing reader who is not in a position to evaluate the claims for himself.

Triumphalism is the opposite tendency, and it is the temptation to which biblicist reporters are perhaps more susceptible. A new fragment is presented as though it settles questions it does not settle; an early date is asserted with more confidence than the paleographic evidence supports; the variants in the tradition are dismissed in language that overstates the case. Reporting of this kind, however well-intentioned, also does harm. It teaches the church to expect that every advance in fragmentology will be a vindication, and it leaves the church poorly prepared when an advance turns out to be more complicated than the triumphalist presentation suggested.

The right path is between these errors. It is the path of accurate reporting: confidence where confidence is warranted, modesty where modesty is owed, and willingness to revise when revision is required. Reporting of this kind serves the church best, because it tells the church the truth, and the truth is in fact good for the church to hear. The substance of the biblical text is well-established; the work of fragmentology supports rather than undermines that establishment; the small body of unresolved questions is genuinely small and does not touch what the faith requires.

A pastor handling these matters in his teaching, a writer handling them in his books, a scholar handling them in his publications — each owes to the church the same accurate reporting. None should be alarmist; none should be triumphalist; all should be honest.


Conclusion

The method of fragmentology, as set out in this paper, is a method of disciplined movement from artifact to claim. It begins with careful imaging, transcription, and collation. It maintains the triple distinction among what is visible, what is reconstructed, and what is conjectured. It uses the conventions of bracket marking to keep that distinction visible to readers. It permits conjecture in its appropriate place while guarding against the dangers of confirmation, accumulation, and agenda. It weighs internal and external evidence in balance, using the canons of criticism as aids rather than authorities. It reports its findings in plain language, with calibrated confidence, avoiding both alarmism and triumphalism.

These disciplines do not glamorize the work, but they protect it. The worker who follows them produces results that the church can use with confidence. The worker who neglects them, however gifted otherwise, produces results that the church cannot rely on, because the church has no means of knowing where in the work the worker has spoken from the evidence and where he has spoken past it.

The next paper turns from method to a particular set of cases that lie at the edges of the canonical question: fragments of apocryphal, pseudepigraphal, and unidentified material, and the questions they raise for biblicist fragmentology. The disciplines set out in this paper will be required there in particularly demanding form, because at the canonical edges the temptations both to overclaim and to underclaim are unusually strong.


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The Kesil: Portrait of a Fool Who Will Not Learn

[Note:  This is the prepared text given to the Dalles congregation of the United Church of God on Sabbath, April 25, 2026.]

Introduction: The Bible Has Something Urgent to Say About Foolishness

There is a peculiar feature of the English language that has impoverished our reading of the Hebrew wisdom literature. When we say someone is a fool, we typically mean one of two things: either they are unintelligent, or they have done something clumsy and regrettable. We say, “I felt like a fool when I tripped on the stairs,” or we dismiss a person as foolish because they failed to pass a test or solve a problem. Foolishness in our common usage is about competence — or the lack of it.

The Hebrew scriptures use an entirely different and far more searching category. In the wisdom literature — Proverbs, Psalms, and Ecclesiastes above all — there are actually several distinct Hebrew words translated as “fool,” each describing a different kind of person in a different stage or type of moral and spiritual failure. There is the peti, the simple one — naive, untested, easily led astray but not yet hardened. There is the evil, the morally defiant one. There is the nabal, the base fool, brutish and contemptible — the word used of the man in 1 Samuel 25 whose very name meant foolishness and who nearly brought destruction on his household. And there is the letz, the scorner or mocker, a more advanced and aggressive form of the disease.

But the word that appears most frequently, the one that receives the most sustained attention from the wisdom writers, is the kesil. With approximately 70 occurrences, concentrated heavily in Proverbs and Ecclesiastes and appearing also in the Psalms, the kesil is the canonical fool of the Hebrew scriptures — the person whose foolishness is not primarily a matter of intelligence but of settled disposition, habitual character, and a chronic inability or unwillingness to receive instruction.

This sermon will work systematically through the major passages that define and describe the kesil, building a composite portrait that is as comprehensive as the biblical text itself, and then turn in conclusion to the urgent practical question the text always presses upon us: what must we do so that this portrait does not describe us?

I. Defining the Kesil: Foolishness as Character, Not Accident

Before we examine the individual passages, we must fix in our minds what kind of creature the kesil is. The most important thing to understand is this: the kesil is not a fool because he lacks information. He may be well-informed. He is a fool because of what he does with information, how he responds to correction, and what he loves. Foolishness of the kesil type is not a cognitive deficiency; it is a characterological one. It is the settled, habitual orientation of a person whose inner life is disordered — who has placed the wrong things at the center, who has organized his life around his own satisfaction and his own opinion, and who has therefore become constitutionally incapable of receiving the kind of instruction that would make him wise.

This is why the Book of Proverbs opens the way it does.

Proverbs 1:7“The fear of the LORD is the beginning of knowledge; fools [kesilim] despise wisdom and instruction.”

This verse is the thesis statement of the entire book. The polar opposite of the fear of the LORD is not ignorance — it is the rejection of wisdom and instruction. The kesil does not simply fail to acquire wisdom; he despises it. The word translated “despise” (bazu) is a word of active contempt. The fool has not failed to find wisdom; he has seen something of it and turned away from it with disdain. This establishes immediately that we are dealing with a moral failure, not an intellectual one. The fear of the LORD is available to all. The kesil has declined it.

II. The Inner Life of the Kesil: Self-Sufficiency and the Closed Mind

The defining interior feature of the kesil is a deep, stubborn satisfaction with his own mind. He does not hunger for correction because he does not believe he needs it. He is, in his own estimation, already sufficient.

Proverbs 12:15“The way of a fool [kesil] is right in his own eyes, but a wise man listens to advice.”

This is one of the central diagnostic verses for the kesil. Note the construction: his way is right “in his own eyes.” The problem is not that he lacks a way, or even that his way is obviously wrong to everyone including himself. The problem is the location of the standard — it is inside him. He has made himself the measure of his own path. The wise man, by contrast, “listens to advice” — he has placed the standard of evaluation outside himself, in the community of the wise, in the wisdom tradition, and above all in the fear of the LORD. The kesil and the wise man are not distinguished by their situation but by where they look for validation of their choices.

Proverbs 18:2“A fool [kesil] takes no pleasure in understanding, but only in expressing his opinion.”

This verse is remarkable for its psychological precision. The fool is not uninterested in conversation — he is, in fact, often very interested in it. But the purpose of his engagement is not to understand; it is to express. He comes to every discussion already in possession of what he wants to say, and the only thing the discussion can do for him is give him an audience. True understanding — which requires the willingness to have one’s current views challenged, modified, or overturned — holds no pleasure for him. This is why conversation with the kesil is so often frustrating: you believe you are engaged in an exchange of minds, and he is engaged in a performance.

Proverbs 28:26“Whoever trusts in his own mind is a fool [kesil], but whoever walks in wisdom will be delivered.”

The trust in his own mind is the spiritual root of all the kesil‘s other characteristics. It is what makes correction feel unnecessary and instruction feel like an insult. A person who genuinely distrusts his own unaided judgment is teachable. A person who trusts it completely is not. And the wisdom of Proverbs consistently locates this self-trust at the root of destruction: those who walk in wisdom — that is, in something larger and more reliable than their own intuitions — will be delivered from the disasters that self-trust produces.

III. The Kesil and Instruction: The Futility of Correction

If the kesil is defined by his closed mind, it follows that the wisdom literature has extensive things to say about what happens when attempts are made to correct or instruct him. The passages here are both sobering and, in their directness, almost darkly comic.

Proverbs 17:10“A rebuke goes deeper into a man of understanding than a hundred blows into a fool [kesil].”

The image is striking. The man of understanding is so internally alive to the force of truth and correction that a single word of rebuke penetrates to his depths and produces change. The kesil, by contrast, can absorb a hundred blows — the most extreme form of correction available in the ancient world — and emerge essentially unchanged. The blows do not go deeper because the fool has no depth in the right direction. His interior has been so thoroughly organized around self-justification that correction has nothing to grab hold of. This verse is not celebrating violence; it is illustrating the radical impermeability of the kesil to any form of instruction.

Proverbs 27:22“Crush a fool [evil, though closely related] in a mortar with a pestle along with crushed grain, yet his folly will not depart from him.”

The image of the mortar and pestle — used to crush grain until it is reduced to powder — is an image of total dissolution. Even if the fool is ground to nothing, his folly will not separate from him. Folly is not a habit he has acquired that could in principle be broken; it has become his substance. What this verse communicates is that the transformation of a settled fool is not a matter of applying more or more intense pressure. Something more fundamental than instruction must occur.

Proverbs 23:9“Do not speak in the hearing of a fool [kesil], for he will despise the good sense of your words.”

This verse is a direct command, and it coheres perfectly with the paradox of Proverbs 26:4–5 that we examined in our introductory white paper. There are situations in which engagement with the kesil is genuinely futile — not because the wise person lacks good arguments but because the fool will process good arguments as attacks to be repelled rather than as truth to be received. “He will despise the good sense of your words” — not the bad sense, not weak arguments, not poorly expressed ideas. The good sense of the words is what he will despise. This is the nature of the kesil: he is organized against wisdom, and wisdom does not overcome that organization by being more eloquent.

Proverbs 26:11“Like a dog that returns to his vomit is a fool [kesil] who repeats his folly.”

This is one of the most vivid and unforgettable images in the entire Proverbs collection, and the New Testament cites it (2 Peter 2:22) as a picture of those who return to moral corruption after a partial deliverance from it. The image captures the compulsive, self-defeating quality of the kesil‘s relationship with his own foolishness. A dog returns to its vomit not because the vomit is good but because the dog lacks the capacity to make the evaluation that would keep it away. The kesil returns to his folly not because it has served him well — he has generally experienced its consequences — but because his commitment to folly is deeper than his capacity to learn from consequences. He is, in this sense, a creature of appetite rather than judgment.

IV. The Kesil and Speech: The Mouth That Brings Destruction

A consistent theme in the portrait of the kesil is the danger his mouth poses — to others and, in a particular irony, to himself. The wisdom literature is deeply attentive to the relationship between inner character and outward speech, and the kesil‘s speech is the clearest external signal of his inner disorder.

Proverbs 10:23“Doing wrong is like a joke to a fool [kesil], but wisdom is pleasure to a man of understanding.”

The kesil treats wickedness as entertainment. The word translated “joke” (sehok) is the same word used for laughter and sport. What the wise person treats with gravity — moral failure and its consequences — the fool finds amusing. This is not the healthy humor that enables human beings to survive difficulty; it is the trivializing of what ought to be taken seriously. The kesil cannot be sobered by the weight of moral reality because he does not feel that weight.

Proverbs 15:2“The tongue of the wise commends knowledge, but the mouths of fools [kesilim] pour out folly.”

The contrast is between “commending” — a careful, measured, appropriate presentation of what is true and good — and “pouring out.” The kesil‘s speech is characterized by excess, by overflow, by the absence of the filter that wisdom provides. He says too much, says it too quickly, says it without calibration to the situation. What pours out of the fool’s mouth is what is inside him — and what is inside him is folly. The speech is diagnostic.

Proverbs 18:6–7“A fool’s [kesil’s] lips walk into a fight, and his mouth invites a beating. A fool’s mouth is his ruin, and his lips are a snare to his soul.”

This pair of verses makes explicit what is implicit throughout: the kesil‘s speech is not just socially abrasive; it is self-destructive. His lips “walk into a fight” — there is a sense in which his mouth has a life of its own, leading him into conflicts he did not strategically choose but that his manner of speaking guarantees. And then verse 7 makes the deeper point: his mouth is his ruin, his lips are a snare to his own soul. The kesil is not merely dangerous to others; he is consistently his own worst enemy. The very instrument he uses — his speech — becomes the trap that catches him.

Proverbs 29:11“A fool [kesil] gives full vent to his spirit, but a wise man quietly holds it back.”

“Full vent” — the Hebrew yotsi kol rucho — literally means “brings out all his spirit.” There is no reservoir, no internal regulator, no pause between feeling and expression. Whatever rises within the kesil comes out. The wise man, by contrast, “holds it back” — he has the capacity to contain what arises, to evaluate it, to decide whether and how it should be expressed. This self-containment is not repression; it is the most basic form of wisdom in social life. The kesil has no such capacity.

Proverbs 15:7“The lips of the wise spread knowledge; not so the hearts of fools [kesilim].”

The movement from “lips” in the first clause to “hearts” in the second is deliberate and telling. The wise spread knowledge through their lips — their speech is the outward form of their inward wisdom. But the fool’s problem is not primarily his lips; it is his heart. The heart — the Hebrew lev, the center of will, desire, thought, and orientation — of the kesil is not right, and no reformation of his speech alone can address that.

V. The Kesil and Wisdom: The Wrong Relationship to the Good

Several passages illuminate not just what the kesil is but his specific relationship to wisdom — how he perceives it, misuses it, and is unable to benefit from it even when it is placed before him.

Proverbs 17:16“Why should a fool [kesil] have money in his hand to buy wisdom when he has no sense?”

This verse carries a sharp edge of irony. Wisdom was available in the ancient world through teachers, through schools, through the cultivation of the wisdom tradition. A person with resources could, in principle, purchase access to the finest instruction available. But the kesil cannot benefit from what he purchases because he lacks the prerequisite: lev — heart, sense, the inner orientation that would allow instruction to take root. Money can buy proximity to wisdom; it cannot buy the receptivity that makes wisdom transformative. The fool sitting in the finest school of wisdom is still a fool, because the problem is not what is in front of him but what is inside him.

Proverbs 26:7“Like a lame man’s legs, which hang useless, is a proverb in the mouth of fools [kesilim].”

Proverbs 26:9“Like a thorn that goes up into the hand of a drunkard is a proverb in the mouth of fools [kesilim].”

These two verses from the same chapter describe the same phenomenon from two angles. When the kesil takes hold of a wise saying — a proverb, a piece of the wisdom tradition — and deploys it, two things happen: the wisdom is rendered useless (like legs that cannot function) and the wisdom becomes actively dangerous (like a thorn wielded by someone who cannot feel what he is doing). The kesil does not simply fail to benefit from wisdom; he can turn it into a weapon of harm. We have all witnessed this: the person who has absorbed enough of the vocabulary of wisdom or truth to weaponize it — who can quote scripture, cite principles, invoke values — but who does so in the service of his own self-justification and the confusion of others. This is one of the most dangerous forms of the kesil‘s influence.

Proverbs 26:8“Like one who binds the stone in the sling is one who gives honor to a fool [kesil].”

Honoring a fool — elevating him, giving him influence, treating his opinions with the respect that wisdom deserves — is like binding the stone in the sling so it cannot be released. It defeats the purpose of the instrument. The point has enormous social and communal implications: communities that honor the kesil, that give him platforms and authority, do not simply tolerate foolishness; they disable the instruments of wisdom and truth that might otherwise function.

VI. The Kesil in Relationship: What He Does to Those Around Him

The kesil is not a hermit. His folly has social consequences, and the wisdom literature is unflinching in describing what it means to be related to a kesil or to bring one into your community.

Proverbs 10:1“A wise son makes a glad father, but a foolish [kesil] son is a sorrow to his mother.”

The first proverb in the collection after the introduction places the kesil immediately in a relational context. Foolishness is not a private matter. It lands with grief weight on those who love the fool, who have invested in him, who had hopes for him. The mother’s sorrow in this verse is not incidental color; it is the point. The kesil carries his folly at the expense of the people who are most committed to his good.

Proverbs 17:21“He who sires a fool [kesil] gets himself sorrow, and the father of a fool [nabal] has no joy.”

Proverbs 17:25“A foolish [kesil] son is a grief to his father and bitterness to her who bore him.”

These verses return to the same theme with intensification. The father who has raised a kesil does not experience occasional disappointment; he has acquired sorrow as a permanent possession. The word translated “grief” in 17:25 (ka’as) is a word of vexation, of the kind of chronic distress that wears a person down. The kesil does not know — because he cannot receive the instruction that would show him — the grief he is causing. His closed interior does not register the suffering of others with sufficient force to change his course.

Proverbs 13:20“Whoever walks with the wise becomes wise, but the companion of fools [kesilim] will suffer harm.”

This verse is a warning, and it is one of the most practically urgent in the entire collection. The word “companion” (ro’eh) refers to a close associate, a friend, one who travels the same road. The warning is not that the kesil is unpleasant to be around — it is that association with him produces harm. The dynamics of human formation are such that we become like those we walk most closely with. This is not a minor cautionary note about bad influence; it is a statement about the mechanics of moral and spiritual formation. You cannot remain unchanged by sustained close association with a kesil. The question is always whether the wise person in the relationship will pull the fool toward wisdom or whether the fool will pull the wise person toward destruction.

Proverbs 19:13“A foolish [kesil] son is ruin to his father, and a wife’s quarreling is a continual dripping of rain.”

The household dimension of the kesil‘s impact is developed here. He is “ruin” — not an inconvenience, not a disappointment, but havvot (ruin, destruction) — to his father. The word suggests the catastrophic collapse of what was built. Fathers build legacies, households, structures of provision and inheritance. The kesil son does not simply fail to build; he actively dismantles.

Proverbs 14:7“Leave the presence of a fool [kesil], for there you do not meet words of knowledge.”

This is a direct command: leave. Not every relationship can or should be sustained. There are situations in which the wisest course of action with respect to the kesil is departure. Not anger, not condemnation, not an elaborate confrontation — departure. The kesil‘s presence is not a neutral environment; it is an environment in which words of knowledge do not occur. If you are hungry for wisdom, for truth, for the kind of conversation that builds rather than destroys, the presence of the kesil will not give it to you.

VII. The Kesil and His Own Destruction: The Tragic Trajectory

Perhaps the most sobering dimension of the biblical portrait of the kesil is the inevitability — given his character — of his destruction. The wisdom literature does not present foolishness as a stable, sustainable way of life. It presents it as a trajectory with a destination.

Proverbs 13:16“In everything the prudent acts with knowledge, but a fool [kesil] flaunts his folly.”

The word “flaunts” (yifros) means to spread out, to display. The kesil does not hide his folly — he exhibits it. He is not ashamed of what he is, because shame requires the capacity to measure oneself against a standard that one takes seriously. The fool takes no standard seriously except his own comfort and his own opinion, and by those standards he is doing fine. The tragedy is that the very thing he is exhibiting as acceptable is the thing that is destroying him.

Proverbs 14:16“One who is wise is cautious and turns away from evil, but a fool [kesil] is reckless and careless.”

“Reckless and careless” — the Hebrew mitabber (reckless, perhaps “passes over”) and botea (careless, rash, secure in an unfounded sense of safety). The fool has no instinct of self-preservation with respect to moral danger. Where the wise person senses the proximity of evil and turns away, the kesil walks into it without registering that it is dangerous. He does not fear what he should fear. And the absence of appropriate fear, in a morally serious universe, has consequences.

Proverbs 19:29“Condemnation is ready for scoffers, and beating for the backs of fools [kesilim].”*

Proverbs 26:3“A whip for the horse, a bridle for the donkey, and a rod for the back of fools [kesilim].”*

These two verses introduce a grim irony. The horse is controlled by the whip, the donkey by the bridle — and the kesil by the rod. The rod is not offered as the ideal form of instruction; it is offered as the only form that penetrates where words have failed. The kesil has foreclosed the gentler means of correction. He has refused the word, despised the rebuke, resisted the wisdom. What remains, in a morally ordered world, is the rod of consequence. The kesil is not destroyed arbitrarily; he is destroyed by the structure of reality itself, which does not indefinitely accommodate the self-deception that his foolishness requires.

Ecclesiastes 7:9“Be not quick in your spirit to become angry, for anger lodges in the heart of fools [kesilim].”*

The Preacher of Ecclesiastes adds an important dimension to our portrait: the kesil is quick to anger. Anger, rightly ordered, has its place in a wise and morally serious life. But the kesil‘s anger is not ordered; it is a resident — it “lodges” in him, takes up permanent occupancy. This chronic anger is the emotional expression of his self-centeredness: every situation is evaluated by whether it serves or frustrates his own agenda, and when it frustrates, anger is the automatic response.

Ecclesiastes 10:2–3“A wise man’s heart inclines to his right, but a fool’s [kesil’s] heart to his left. Even when the fool walks on the road, he lacks sense, and he says to everyone that he is a fool.”

The Preacher’s observation here is profound in its final line. The kesil is so transparently foolish that he announces himself as he moves through the world. He does not know that he is making this announcement — that is part of the point. He lacks the self-awareness to see himself as others see him, and the result is that his folly is publicly legible to everyone except himself.

Ecclesiastes 5:3“For a dream comes with much business, and a fool’s [kesil’s] voice with many words.”

The kesil‘s verbosity is here connected to the insubstantiality of dreams. Much talking, like much dreaming, produces very little of substance. The association with “much business” — frenetic activity that does not focus — gives us a picture of the kesil as someone who substitutes quantity for quality in both activity and speech, and achieves little of either.

VIII. The Kesil in the Psalms and Ecclesiastes: Confirming the Portrait

The Psalms offer several brief but confirming glimpses of the kesil that are worth noting as they fill out the picture.

Psalm 49:10“For he sees that even the wise die; the fool [kesil] and the stupid together must perish and leave their wealth to others.”

Psalm 49 meditates on the leveling reality of death. What is notable here is that the kesil is grouped with “the stupid” (ba’ar) — the brutish, uncomprehending one — as equally unable to take wisdom from the fact of their own mortality. The wise person knows that death is coming and allows that knowledge to order his life. The kesil knows it intellectually but cannot allow it to penetrate and change him.

Psalm 92:6“The stupid man cannot know; the fool [kesil] cannot understand this.”

The context of this verse is the apparent prosperity of the wicked (vv. 7–9) and the certainty of their ultimate destruction. The kesil cannot understand the pattern — cannot see that the apparent flourishing of foolishness and wickedness is temporary, that the moral structure of the universe is moving toward a resolution he cannot perceive. He looks at the surface of things and makes his judgments from the surface. The deeper current of reality is hidden from him, not because it is hidden from everyone but because his own inner state prevents him from seeing what is there to be seen.

Psalm 94:8“Understand, O dullest of the people! Fools [kesilim], when will you become wise?”

This verse, addressed to those who deny God’s knowledge of human affairs, is a divine summons directed precisely at the kesil. “When will you become wise?” — the question is urgent, almost anguished in its directness. There is not merely an announcement of the fool’s condition here; there is a call. The door has not been closed from outside. The question implies that wisdom is still available, that the kesil could still respond. The call is genuine.

IX. Proverbs 26: The Most Comprehensive Portrait

No passage in the Hebrew scriptures concentrates the portrait of the kesil as intensively as Proverbs 26:1–12, which forms a sustained meditation — a gallery of images — of the fool in all his dimensions. Several key verses beyond those already quoted deserve attention.

Proverbs 26:1“Like snow in summer or rain in harvest, so honor is not fitting for a fool [kesil].”*

Snow in summer is not merely unusual — it is destructive to the crops that summer exists to ripen. Rain at harvest ruins what has been grown. Honor for the kesil is not merely misplaced sentiment; it is actively harmful to the community that bestows it, because it inverts the proper relationship between character and reward.

Proverbs 26:6“Whoever sends a message by the hand of a fool [kesil] cuts off his own feet and drinks violence.”

Entrusting important communication — or by extension, any responsibility requiring reliability and good judgment — to the kesil is an act of self-harm. The one who sends the message suffers the consequences of the fool’s mishandling of it. “Cuts off his own feet” is a graphic image of self-disabling. This is why the community’s response to the kesil has consequences not just for him but for everyone who gives him responsibility.

Proverbs 26:12“Do you see a man who is wise in his own eyes? There is more hope for a fool [kesil] than for him.”

This is perhaps the most startling verse in the entire kesil gallery. After twelve verses documenting the hopelessness and futility of the kesil, the chapter climaxes by identifying someone worse: the person who is wise in his own eyes. This person — the letz, the scorner — has moved beyond the kesil‘s simple closed-mindedness into an active contempt for wisdom. He is not merely unreachable; he has turned his unreachability into a posture of superiority. The kesil is a fool who does not know wisdom. The one who is wise in his own eyes is a fool who thinks he has already arrived. And there is more hope for the former than for the latter.

X. Putting the Portrait Together: What the Kesil Looks Like in Full

Let us now synthesize what the Hebrew scriptures have shown us about the kesil. The complete portrait contains the following defining features, all of which interconnect:

1. He has no fear of God. Proverbs 1:7 establishes that the fear of the LORD is the beginning of knowledge, and the kesil despises it. This is the root of everything else. A person who does not hold himself accountable to a reality greater than himself has no external reference point by which to evaluate his own ways.

2. He is satisfied with himself. The way of the kesil is right in his own eyes (12:15). He trusts his own mind (28:26). He takes pleasure not in understanding but in expressing his opinion (18:2). His inner world is a closed loop of self-referential approval.

3. He cannot receive correction. A hundred blows go no deeper into him than a rebuke goes into the wise (17:10). He returns to his folly as a dog to its vomit (26:11). The transformation that wisdom requires — a genuine change of inner orientation — is not happening.

4. His speech is disordered and dangerous. His mouth pours out folly (15:2). His lips walk into a fight (18:6). His mouth is his ruin (18:7). He gives full vent to his spirit (29:11). He trivializes wickedness (10:23).

5. He cannot profit from wisdom even when it is available. He has no heart for the wisdom he might purchase (17:16). A proverb in his mouth is useless or dangerous (26:7, 9). He cannot understand the deep patterns of moral reality (Psalm 92:6).

6. He damages everyone around him. He is grief to his parents (10:1; 17:21, 25; 17:25). He is ruin to his father (19:13). The companion of fools suffers harm (13:20). He is honored at the community’s peril (26:8).

7. He is on a trajectory toward destruction. Condemnation is ready for him (19:29). The rod reaches him when words have failed (26:3). The moral structure of reality does not sustain his self-deception indefinitely.

8. He does not know he is what he is. He walks down the road announcing his folly without knowing it (Ecclesiastes 10:3). He is wise in his own eyes (Proverbs 26:12’s point of contrast). The kesil is not a person who has decided to be a fool and is content with the label. He is a person who genuinely believes he is doing well and cannot understand why wisdom keeps eluding him.

XI. The Urgent Question: How Do We Avoid Becoming the Kesil?

We have spent the bulk of this sermon describing someone else. That is always the comfortable posture of the sermon listener — to observe the portrait and think of others who fit it. But that is precisely the posture of the kesil himself: he looks out, not in; he evaluates others, not himself. So let us turn the portrait around and press it into service as a mirror.

The question is not academic. The kesil was not a rare type known only to ancient Israel. He is ubiquitous, perennial, and — this is the sobering truth — no one begins as a kesil. Everyone begins as the peti, the simple one, the unformed person who has not yet chosen which way to go. The kesil is what the peti becomes when the invitations to wisdom are consistently declined.

First: Cultivate the fear of the LORD as the non-negotiable foundation of your inner life. Proverbs 1:7 is not the beginning of a list of virtues; it is the condition without which no virtue can take root. The fear of the LORD is the acknowledgment that you are not the measure of your own life — that you stand before a reality greater than yourself, that your ways are evaluated by a standard you did not invent, and that accountability runs in one direction: upward. A person who genuinely fears the LORD cannot become the kesil, because the kesil‘s defining feature — the closure of his inner life to anything greater than himself — is incompatible with genuine fear of God.

Second: Develop a positive appetite for correction. The kesil despises instruction (1:7). The wise person learns to treasure it. This is not natural — no one enjoys being told that they are wrong, that their judgment has failed, that their behavior has caused harm. But the willingness to receive correction is the hinge on which wisdom turns. Proverbs 12:1 says, “Whoever loves discipline loves knowledge, but he who hates reproof is stupid.” The love of discipline is not the love of pain; it is the love of the truth that pain sometimes delivers. Ask yourself regularly: when was the last time someone corrected me, and what was my first interior response? If it was defensiveness, anger, or the immediate construction of a counter-argument — pay attention to that. That is the kesil‘s response taking shape inside you.

Third: Regularly place yourself in the company of the wise. Proverbs 13:20 is a law: “Whoever walks with the wise becomes wise.” This is not a suggestion or a probability; it is a principle of formation. You will become like those you walk most closely with. Choose your companions with this in mind, not only for their personal pleasantness or their professional usefulness, but for their wisdom. Seek out people who fear God, who receive correction gracefully, who speak with care and restraint, who have earned the right to be heard. Sit under teaching that demands something of you rather than merely comforting you where you are.

Fourth: Guard your speech as a spiritual discipline. The kesil‘s mouth is the outward expression of his inner disorder. Conversely, disciplining the mouth is one of the most powerful means of shaping the inner life. The person who commits to speaking with care — to restraint, to asking more than asserting, to listening more than performing — is engaging in a practice that forms wisdom. “A fool gives full vent to his spirit” (Proverbs 29:11). The opposite of this is not a grim silence but the patient self-containment of the person who has learned that not every thought needs to be expressed, not every dispute needs to be entered, not every silence is a concession.

Fifth: Take seriously the pattern of your own life over time. The kesil returns to his folly as a dog to its vomit (26:11). One of the diagnostic questions for our own spiritual condition is: what patterns in my life keep repeating? What consequences have I experienced more than once from the same source of foolishness? The wise person reads his own patterns and draws conclusions. The kesil experiences the consequences, explains them away, and makes no connection to his own behavior. Honest self-examination — the kind that identifies recurring patterns without immediately excusing them — is a mark of wisdom and a guard against the kesil‘s obliviousness.

Sixth: Remember that the direction is a choice, not a destiny. Psalm 94:8 asks the kesil, “When will you become wise?” — and the question is genuine. The biblical portrait of the kesil is not fatalistic. It describes what a person becomes when wisdom is consistently refused, but it does not declare that the fool has passed beyond the reach of the God who made him. The Psalms call to him. The wisdom tradition calls to him. The Book of Proverbs itself was written as an appeal, as an invitation to leave the way of the kesil and enter the way of wisdom. The call is not canceled by the description of the condition. As long as the call can be heard, it can be answered.

XII. Conclusion: Wisdom Is Available, and the Door Is Not Yet Closed

We close with this: the Hebrew scriptures do not give us the portrait of the kesil in order to make us comfortable about our own wisdom. They give it to us as an invitation to honest self-examination and as a warning about what we can become when we consistently refuse the fear of the LORD.

The kesil is not born; he is formed — formed by thousands of small decisions to trust his own mind, to reject correction, to speak before he listens, to prioritize his own opinion over the truth, to walk with those who confirm him rather than those who challenge him. And somewhere along that road, what began as a series of choices became a character. What began as an occasional resistance to instruction became a settled impermeability. What began as a minor tendency to trust himself became a worldview in which no one else’s wisdom could reach him.

The mercy of the biblical text is that it does not simply pronounce judgment on the kesil and move on. It calls. It warns. It pleads. Proverbs opens not with a description of the wise but with an extended, passionate invitation to wisdom — an invitation addressed to the simple, the young, the unformed, the not-yet-determined. The call of Wisdom herself in Proverbs 8 and 9 is not addressed to those who have already arrived; it is addressed to those who are still on the road.

And the fear of the LORD — which is the beginning, the foundation, the root of everything the kesil lacks — is not a possession to be inherited or a status to be achieved. It is a posture to be chosen, today, in response to the God who made you and who calls you to walk in wisdom rather than to wander in folly.  Let us all do so today and for the rest of our lives.

[Note:All Scripture quotations are from the English Standard Version unless otherwise noted.]

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New Testament Fragmentology: The Greek Witness

Introduction

The previous paper examined the Hebrew witness to the Old Testament and found, in the fragmentary evidence of the Dead Sea materials, the Cairo Genizah, and related corpora, substantial confirmation of the stability with which the Hebrew text has been transmitted. The present paper takes up the Greek witness to the New Testament. The shape of the inquiry is parallel, but the body of evidence is different in important ways.

Three differences are worth naming at the outset. First, the chronological gap between the autographs and the earliest surviving fragments is considerably narrower for the New Testament than for the Old. Where the earliest substantial Hebrew witnesses to most Old Testament books stand centuries removed from their composition, the earliest Greek witnesses to portions of the New Testament stand within a hundred years or so of their writing, and in some cases possibly less. Second, the volume of surviving Greek evidence is enormous — many thousands of manuscripts and fragments, supplemented by an even larger body of patristic citations and an extensive set of early translations into other languages. Third, the pastoral and apologetic stakes are, if anything, sharper for the New Testament than for the Old, because popular skepticism in our own moment tends to focus its attacks on the reliability of the Gospels and the apostolic writings.

This paper surveys the Greek witness in its principal categories, sketches the major positions in the contemporary biblicist conversation about the Greek text, and offers a humble synthesis in which the abundance of the evidence and the modesty of the interpreter are held together. As before, the aim is neither to overclaim what the fragments establish nor to understate what they actually show.


I. The Papyri

A. Earliest witnesses and what they show

The Greek papyri are the earliest surviving witnesses to the New Testament text. They are written, for the most part, on sheets or scraps of papyrus — the writing material made from the pith of the papyrus reed — and they have survived chiefly because of the dry climate of Egypt, which preserves organic material remarkably well. Several of these papyri have become widely known, both within scholarship and among the believing public, for what they contribute to our knowledge of the early text.

A small fragment commonly designated P52, containing a few verses from the Gospel of John, is often discussed as among the earliest surviving witnesses to any portion of the New Testament. Conventional paleographic estimates have placed it in the first half of the second century, though, as will be discussed below, such estimates carry their own limits. Whatever the precise date, P52 testifies to a Greek wording of John substantially identical with the wording known from later witnesses, in a place (Egypt) far removed from the place of the Gospel’s likely composition. Even a fragment so small carries weight on this account.

Larger and later, but still very early, are the so-called Bodmer papyri, including the manuscripts designated P66 and P75. P66 preserves much of the Gospel of John, and P75 preserves substantial portions of Luke and John. Both are commonly dated to the late second or early third century. Their importance lies not only in their antiquity but in the kind of text they preserve. P75 in particular is widely recognized as a careful and conservative witness whose readings frequently agree with the great fourth-century codex Vaticanus, suggesting that the text-form represented by both is older than either witness alone. This is the kind of evidence that should make the believing reader grateful: a stable text-form attested across centuries and in widely separated witnesses.

The Chester Beatty papyri, including P46, preserve substantial portions of the Pauline corpus. P46 is generally dated to roughly the late second or early third century and preserves much of Romans, Hebrews, and most of the other Pauline epistles, though with damage and lacunae throughout. Its importance lies in the early date at which it attests a recognizable Pauline collection circulating as a unit, and in the substantial agreement between its wording and the wording of the same epistles in later witnesses.

These named papyri are well known, but they are not alone. The total number of Greek New Testament papyri now catalogued exceeds one hundred and forty, with new discoveries and identifications still occurring. Many are small. Many preserve only a verse or two. Cumulatively, however, they push the surviving Greek witness back into a period close to the apostolic age and provide a body of early evidence that is, by any reasonable comparison with other ancient texts, abundant.

What the papyri show, taken as a body, is a New Testament text that is recognizably the New Testament we know. There are variants, some of them interesting, a small number of them substantive. But the substance of the text — the sayings of Christ, the narrative of His life, death, and resurrection, the apostolic preaching, the ethical and theological instruction of the epistles — is present in the early papyri in a form fully continuous with what later witnesses preserve and what faithful translations communicate today.

B. Limitations of physical preservation in dating and provenance claims

A note of methodological caution belongs here, in keeping with the hermeneutics of humility set out in the third paper. The dating of papyrus fragments rests, in most cases, on paleographic comparison — that is, on the appearance of the script as compared with other manuscripts whose dates are known on independent grounds. Paleographic dating is a real and useful discipline, but it is not a precise instrument. A fragment dated by a careful paleographer “to the second century” might in fact belong to the late first century or to the early third; the range of legitimate uncertainty is often a matter of decades rather than years.

Recent scholarship has emphasized this limitation, sometimes to good effect and sometimes in ways that overstate the implications. The honest worker neither hardens paleographic estimates into fixed points nor uses their imprecision as a reason to abandon them altogether. He reports them as what they are: reasoned estimates with appropriate ranges, useful for placing a witness in a broad chronological neighborhood but not for fixing it to a particular decade.

Provenance — the question of where a fragment was originally produced or used — is similarly limited by the conditions of physical preservation. The papyri have survived chiefly in Egypt because Egypt is dry. This does not mean that the text-forms represented by the Egyptian papyri were peculiarly Egyptian; it means only that Egypt is where the surviving physical evidence happens to have been preserved. Drawing strong conclusions about the geographic distribution of text-forms in the early centuries from evidence preserved disproportionately in one region is a step that deserves caution.

These limitations do not undermine the value of the papyri. They simply require that the papyri be reported responsibly. A fragment is what it is; what it is, however, often falls short of what enthusiastic claims about it sometimes suggest.


II. Uncials, Minuscules, Lectionaries, and Citations

The papyri, for all their importance, are not the whole of the Greek witness. They are not even the largest part of it. The cumulative body of Greek manuscript evidence includes several other categories that, taken together, constitute a record of unusual abundance for an ancient text.

A. The cumulative weight of the Greek manuscript tradition

After the papyri come the uncials — manuscripts written in a formal, capital-style Greek script, generally on parchment, dating from roughly the fourth century onward. The great fourth-century codices, including those commonly designated by the names Sinaiticus and Vaticanus, belong to this category. They preserve substantial portions of the New Testament and, in some cases, the entirety of it. Many other uncials, often fragmentary, supplement these great witnesses.

Following the uncials in chronological development are the minuscules — manuscripts written in a smaller, cursive Greek script that came into common use from roughly the ninth century onward. The minuscules are far more numerous than the uncials and represent the Greek text as it was copied and used in the medieval Greek-speaking church. Most of the surviving Greek New Testament manuscripts belong to this category.

Alongside both uncials and minuscules stand the lectionaries — manuscripts arranged not in canonical order but in the order of liturgical readings for the church year. Lectionaries are themselves manuscript witnesses to the Greek text, often quite numerous, and their evidence supplements that of the continuous-text manuscripts.

The cumulative weight of this tradition is genuinely impressive. The surviving Greek manuscripts of the New Testament number, by current counts, in the thousands. By comparison with any other ancient writing, the New Testament is preserved in a body of evidence that is, in volume, of a different order of magnitude. The believing reader does not need to lean on this comparison to ground his confidence in Scripture — that confidence rests on other foundations — but he may receive the comparison as a kindness from providence and as a useful response to popular skeptical claims about the alleged unreliability of the text.

B. Patristic citations as fragmentary evidence in their own right

A second category of Greek evidence, sometimes underemphasized in popular treatments, is the body of citations from the New Testament preserved in the writings of the church fathers. Patristic citations are, in a real sense, fragmentary evidence in their own right. A father quoting a verse of Paul in a treatise of the third century preserves, in that quotation, a fragmentary witness to the Greek text of that verse as it stood in the manuscript he was using.

The patristic citations have certain limitations. Fathers sometimes quoted from memory rather than from a manuscript before them, with the small inaccuracies that memory introduces. They sometimes paraphrased rather than quoted exactly. They sometimes adjusted wording for the rhetorical purpose of their argument. The transmission history of the patristic writings themselves introduces its own variations, since the same scribal processes that affected biblical manuscripts also affected the manuscripts of the fathers.

For all these limitations, however, the patristic citations are extensive enough that, were every Greek manuscript of the New Testament to be lost, the great majority of the New Testament could be reconstructed from patristic citations alone. This is a striking fact. It means that the Greek wording of the New Testament is attested not only by manuscripts that contain the New Testament directly but also by an enormous secondary literature that quotes it. The cumulative effect is to make the early Greek text recoverable along multiple, partially independent lines of evidence.

C. Versional witnesses and their fragmentary transmission

A third category, also significant, is the body of early translations of the New Testament into other ancient languages — the versions. The most important of these for textual purposes are the Latin, Syriac, and Coptic versions, each of which was translated from Greek in the early centuries of the church and each of which has its own manuscript history.

The versional evidence is fragmentary in two senses. The surviving manuscripts of these versions are themselves often partial. And each version, as a translation, gives indirect rather than direct testimony to the underlying Greek; one must reason from the translated wording back to what the underlying Greek must have been, and this reasoning is more secure for some kinds of variants than for others.

Despite these limits, the versional witnesses make a real contribution. They attest to the Greek text in the regions where they were produced — the Latin in the Western Mediterranean, the Syriac in the eastern frontier of the empire and beyond, the Coptic in Egypt — and their evidence is independent, in important respects, of the Greek manuscript tradition that has come down through the Greek-speaking East. Where versional evidence converges with Greek manuscript evidence, the convergence is significant; where it diverges, the divergence often illumines something about the history of transmission.

Taken together with the papyri, uncials, minuscules, lectionaries, and patristic citations, the versional witnesses complete a picture of the Greek New Testament’s transmission that is, on any honest reckoning, abundant. The believing reader has, in the surviving evidence, a remarkably full record of the text’s history. The work of fragmentology is to read that record carefully, with appropriate humility, and to report what it shows.


III. The Biblicist Conversation

Within the believing community, the abundance of Greek evidence has given rise to a long-standing conversation about which portions of that evidence ought to be given greatest weight in establishing the text from which translations are made. This conversation is sometimes conducted with more heat than light, and the present paper does not aim to resolve it. The aim, rather, is to summarize the principal positions briefly, to indicate how fragmentological evidence speaks into them, and to suggest a path that maintains the doctrine of preservation without ignoring the evidence.

A. Textus Receptus, Majority Text, and Critical Text positions briefly summarized

The Textus Receptus position, broadly speaking, holds that the Greek text underlying the great Reformation-era and early modern translations — the editions of Erasmus, Stephanus, Beza, and the Elzevirs, with their close successors — represents the providentially preserved text of the New Testament. Defenders of this position often cite the providential timing of these editions during the Reformation, the broad agreement of the Greek-speaking church across centuries with the text-form they reflect, and the doctrinal soundness of the translations made from them. Critics observe that the Textus Receptus itself rests on a relatively small number of late manuscripts available to its early editors and that it includes some readings whose attestation in the broader Greek tradition is thin.

The Majority Text position holds that the wording attested by the majority of surviving Greek manuscripts — overwhelmingly the medieval minuscules and the broader Byzantine tradition — represents the providentially preserved text. Defenders argue that the doctrine of preservation entails a broadly preserved text, that a text known and used by the Greek-speaking church across many centuries is more likely to represent the original than a text reconstructed from a small number of early witnesses, and that the sheer numerical preponderance of the Byzantine manuscripts is itself significant. Critics observe that numerical majority is not the same as antiquity, that the Byzantine tradition’s predominance in the surviving record may reflect later historical factors as much as early prevalence, and that early papyri sometimes attest readings that the Byzantine tradition does not preserve.

The Critical Text position, in its various forms, holds that the original text is to be reconstructed by weighing all the surviving evidence — papyri, uncials, minuscules, lectionaries, versions, and patristic citations — according to canons of evaluation developed over generations of textual scholarship. The earliest and best witnesses are typically given particular weight, though not in isolation from broader patterns of attestation. Defenders argue that this approach takes seriously the full body of evidence that providence has preserved and that it has produced a text materially equivalent to that of the historic Christian Bible. Critics observe that the canons of evaluation involve subjective judgments, that giving great weight to a small number of early witnesses risks reconstructing an idiosyncratic local form rather than the broadly received text, and that some published critical editions have included readings that are not attested in any large body of Greek manuscript evidence.

These summaries are necessarily brief and do not represent the full nuance of any of the positions. Within each position, careful and honest believers do good work and reach somewhat different conclusions on particular questions. The biblicist conversation about which of these positions is to be preferred is, on the whole, a conversation among brothers, even when it is sometimes vigorous.

B. How fragmentology speaks into these discussions without resolving them

Fragmentology speaks into this conversation, but it does not by itself resolve it. The evidence of the papyri, considered alongside the rest of the Greek tradition, has implications for the conversation but does not deliver a verdict.

On the one hand, the papyri attest, at an early date, readings that align in many places with what later became the dominant Byzantine tradition, in many places with what later became the basis for the great Alexandrian uncials, and occasionally with neither. This means that the simple narrative — that the early text is uniformly Alexandrian, or that the Byzantine text is a late development, or that the Textus Receptus preserves an early stream against later corruption — does not match the fragmentary evidence in any of its simple forms. The actual situation is more textured.

On the other hand, the papyri do narrow the field of plausible accounts. Any account of the Greek text that requires the early manuscripts to attest something they do not attest must be revised; any account that ignores the early evidence cannot be sustained simply by appealing to later witnesses. Fragmentology, in this respect, functions as a constraint on theorizing — not as a verdict but as a check on accounts that overreach.

The hermeneutics of humility set out earlier in this series applies here with particular force. A worker who already holds a firm position on the larger debate may be tempted to read each newly published or newly examined fragment as confirmation of his prior view. The honest discipline is to ask, of each fragment, what it actually shows, what it merely implies, and what it does not address — and to allow the answers to inform, rather than be dictated by, prior commitments.

C. A path that maintains preservation without ignoring evidence

A path through this conversation, suited to the biblicist commitments of this series, may be sketched in three principles.

First, the doctrine of preservation does not require the believer to identify the preserved text exclusively with any single manuscript family or printed edition. Preservation, as defined in Paper Two, operates across the totality of the surviving witnesses; the wording of the autographs has come down to the church through the broad transmission, not through any single physical lineage. This understanding of preservation allows the biblicist to receive the Greek evidence in its fullness without committing in advance to a position that the evidence may not support.

Second, the doctrine of preservation does require the believer to expect that the wording of the autographs is, in fact, recoverable from the surviving witnesses, and that the recovered wording is materially equivalent to what the church has long received. This expectation is well met by the actual state of the evidence. The differences among the major positions in the conversation, while not negligible, are far smaller than the agreement among them. The English translations made from the Textus Receptus, from the Majority Text, and from the Critical Text are, in the great majority of their wording, identical or nearly so, and in their substance fully continuous with one another.

Third, the believer can hold a settled view on the conversation while continuing to learn from the evidence and to receive correction from brothers who hold different views. Vigorous disagreement among believers about the best form of the Greek text is compatible with deep agreement about the inspiration, preservation, sufficiency, and authority of Scripture. Where disagreement exists, charity and careful argument are owed to those on the other side; where agreement exists, it should be acknowledged and rejoiced in rather than obscured by the heat of the disagreement.


IV. A Humble Synthesis

A. The integrity of the New Testament text as established beyond reasonable doubt

Setting all the foregoing together, what emerges is an account of the New Testament text whose integrity is, by any honest measure, established beyond reasonable doubt. The Greek wording of the New Testament is attested by an early, abundant, multilingual, and geographically distributed body of evidence. The wording attested across that evidence is substantially uniform. The variation that exists is, in the main, the kind of variation that hand-copying any extensive text inevitably produces, and it is concentrated in matters of spelling, word order, and small additions or omissions whose effect on meaning is minimal.

This is a remarkable historical situation, and the believer may receive it with thanksgiving. The God who breathed out the New Testament has, in His providence, caused it to be preserved in a body of evidence that is unmatched among ancient writings and that supports, rather than undermines, the church’s continued reliance on the text it has long received.

B. The remaining variants that affect no doctrine of the faith

It is sometimes claimed that the variants in the New Testament manuscripts are so numerous and so significant as to render the original wording effectively unknowable. This claim, when examined, turns out to depend on counting methods that conflate trivial with substantive variation and to overlook the fact that the great majority of variants are differences of spelling, word order, or other features that do not affect meaning.

When the substantive variants are isolated and examined, two facts stand out. The first is that they are far less numerous than popular skeptical claims suggest. The second is that they affect no doctrine of the faith. Every major teaching of the historic Christian confession — the deity of Jesus Christ, His incarnation and substitutionary death, His bodily resurrection, salvation by grace through faith, the inspiration of Scripture, the future return of Jesus Christ — rests on a broad foundation of texts whose wording is not in serious doubt, and the disputed readings in the textual tradition do not touch the foundation of any of these teachings.

The honest worker may freely acknowledge that there are variants. He may freely acknowledge that some of them are interesting and worth study. He need never concede, because the evidence does not support the concession, that the variants threaten the substance of what God has said.

C. The discipline of saying “we do not know” where we genuinely do not

At the same time, the discipline commended in earlier papers requires that the worker be willing to say “we do not know” where he genuinely does not know. There are passages in the New Testament where the textual evidence does not yield a single clearly preferable reading. There are dating questions about particular fragments that paleography alone cannot settle. There are points of detail at which the available evidence simply runs out, and any account beyond that point is conjecture.

In all such cases, honest reporting is owed both to the church and to the truth. Speculation may be offered as speculation. Probability may be reported as probability. Certainty may be claimed only where the evidence supports it. This discipline is not a concession to unbelief; it is the natural form of a faith that knows the difference between what God has said and what we have figured out.

A pastor handling these matters from the pulpit, or a teacher addressing them in the classroom, can speak with great confidence about the substance of the text and with appropriate modesty about the small handful of details where modesty is warranted. The two registers are not in tension. They are the two registers in which honest work in this discipline must always speak.


Conclusion

The Greek witness to the New Testament — papyri, uncials, minuscules, lectionaries, patristic citations, and versional traditions — constitutes a body of evidence whose abundance, antiquity, and substantial uniformity establish the integrity of the New Testament text beyond reasonable doubt. Within that body of evidence, real questions remain about the best way to identify and present the wording of the autographs, and biblicist believers continue to hold differing views on those questions. Fragmentology contributes to that conversation by clarifying what the early evidence does and does not show, without by itself resolving every question.

The next paper turns from the surveys of evidence to the methodology by which fragments are read, reconstructed, and reported. The principles of confident-yet-humble fragmentology developed across the first three papers, and applied to specific corpora in this paper and the previous one, will there be brought to bear on the practical work of the discipline itself — the habits, conventions, and disciplines by which honest fragmentology is actually conducted.


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Old Testament Fragmentology: The Hebrew Witness


Introduction

The first three papers of this series have laid foundations. The first defined fragmentology and argued that the believer who confesses Scripture as the Word of God has reason to attend to the partial witnesses by which that Word has reached us. The second set out the biblicist hermeneutic that governs the entire project. The third developed a hermeneutics of humility appropriate to fragmentary evidence, distinguishing it from skepticism on one side and indecision on the other.

The present paper turns from foundations to evidence. It takes up the first of the two great bodies of fragmentary biblical material that the series will examine in detail: the Hebrew witness to the Old Testament. The Hebrew witness is, in some respects, the more remarkable of the two. The Old Testament was completed centuries before the New, copied across longer stretches of time and through more upheavals of history, and yet the surviving evidence — much of it fragmentary — testifies to a transmission of striking stability. At the same time, that same evidence raises questions the careful reader must face honestly: about pluriformity in some streams of the tradition, about orthographic variation, about the relationship between the Hebrew text the church has received and the various other forms in which the Old Testament circulated in antiquity.

The aim of this paper is to walk through the major fragmentary corpora, to identify what the fragments confirm, to identify what they complicate, and to offer a humble synthesis in which the biblicist commitments of the earlier papers are neither abandoned in the face of the evidence nor used to suppress it.


I. Major Fragmentary Corpora

A. The Dead Sea Scrolls

The single most significant fragmentary corpus for Old Testament textual studies is the body of materials recovered from the caves near the northwestern shore of the Dead Sea, beginning in 1947 and continuing across roughly a decade of discoveries. The materials include both biblical manuscripts and a large body of parabiblical and sectarian writings; the present paper concerns chiefly the biblical materials, with attention to the parabiblical only as it illuminates the transmission of the biblical text.

The biblical scrolls and fragments from these caves include witnesses to every book of the Hebrew Old Testament except, by the usual reckoning, Esther. Some of these witnesses are substantial — the great Isaiah scroll of Cave One, for example, preserves the entire book. Most are fragmentary in the strict sense: a few columns, a few lines, sometimes only a few legible letters. The fragments range in date, by the usual paleographic estimates, from the third century before Christ to roughly the first century of the Christian era. This means that for many books of the Old Testament, the Dead Sea materials push the surviving Hebrew evidence back by approximately a thousand years compared with the earlier complete witnesses available before the discoveries.

Two features of the Dead Sea biblical evidence deserve emphasis at the outset. The first is its overall conservatism. A very large proportion of the biblical fragments stand in close agreement with the text that has come down to the church through the Masoretic tradition. The second is its diversity in some books. A smaller but real proportion of the biblical fragments stand closer to other ancient traditions — the Samaritan Pentateuch, the underlying Hebrew that lies behind the Greek translation known as the Septuagint, or, in a few cases, witnesses that match no surviving tradition exactly. These two features, conservatism on the whole and diversity in a portion, must be held together. To suppress either is to misrepresent the evidence.

B. The Cairo Genizah

The second great fragmentary corpus for the Hebrew Old Testament comes from the storeroom — the genizah — of the Ben Ezra Synagogue in Old Cairo. By long-standing Jewish practice, written materials bearing the divine name or otherwise judged sacred could not be discarded but were laid up in such storerooms until they could be reverently buried. The Cairo Genizah, by accident of climate and circumstance, was not emptied for many centuries. When its contents were exploited by scholars in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, they yielded an enormous quantity of material, much of it fragmentary, from a span of roughly a thousand years of medieval Jewish life.

The Genizah materials are, on the whole, much later than the Dead Sea materials. Their chief importance for Old Testament fragmentology lies in three areas. They preserve a great many biblical fragments, often with vocalization and accentuation, that document the transmission of the consonantal and vocalized text in the centuries leading up to and surrounding the work of the Tiberian Masoretes. They preserve fragments of the Hebrew of Sirach and other works whose Hebrew originals had previously been lost or known only in translation. And they preserve fragments of biblical translations and commentaries that bear on how the Hebrew text was understood and used in medieval Jewish communities.

For the present series, the Genizah evidence is significant chiefly because it fills the gap between the Dead Sea evidence at one end and the standard medieval Masoretic codices at the other. Together with the Masoretic codices themselves, the Genizah fragments allow the careful worker to trace the transmission of the consonantal text across the long centuries between, and to assess how stable that transmission was.

C. Pre-Masoretic and proto-Masoretic witnesses

A third category of Hebrew witness deserves separate mention, even though it overlaps in part with the first two. The term Masoretic Text properly refers to the Hebrew text of the Old Testament as it was stabilized and transmitted by the Masoretes — the schools of Jewish scribes, chiefly active in Tiberias, who developed the elaborate systems of vocalization, accentuation, and marginal notation that distinguish the medieval Hebrew Bible. The standard codices of the Masoretic tradition — Aleppo, Leningrad, and others — date from roughly the tenth and eleventh centuries of the Christian era.

A proto-Masoretic witness is one that, while earlier than the work of the Masoretes proper, stands in clear continuity with the consonantal text the Masoretes later vocalized and annotated. Many of the biblical fragments from the Dead Sea caves, particularly those associated with sites other than Qumran itself, are proto-Masoretic in this sense. Their consonantal text matches the consonantal text of the medieval codices to a degree that is, on any honest accounting, remarkable given the centuries that separate them.

A pre-Masoretic witness, in the broader sense, is any Hebrew witness from before the Masoretic period, whether or not it stands in the proto-Masoretic line. Some pre-Masoretic witnesses align closely with the proto-Masoretic stream; others align with the Samaritan stream or with the Hebrew underlying the Septuagint; still others stand somewhat apart. Recognizing this layered situation is essential for any responsible account of the Hebrew witness.


II. What the Fragments Confirm

The fragmentary evidence surveyed above bears on the doctrine of preservation in concrete and important ways. Three points of confirmation stand out.

A. Substantial stability of the consonantal text across centuries

The first and most important confirmation is the substantial stability of the consonantal text across the long centuries separating the earliest fragmentary witnesses from the medieval codices. When a proto-Masoretic fragment from the first century before Christ is set beside the corresponding passage in a Masoretic codex from the eleventh century of the Christian era — a span of some twelve hundred years — the agreement is, in many cases, near-total at the level of the consonants. There are scribal slips, orthographic differences (more or fewer vowel letters, for example), and the occasional more substantive variation, but the underlying text is recognizably the same text.

This is not what one would expect on a thoroughly skeptical account of biblical transmission. A text copied by hand for over a thousand years through every kind of historical disruption ought, on a purely naturalistic estimate, to have drifted considerably more than the Hebrew Old Testament demonstrably has. The fragmentary evidence suggests that something other than ordinary scribal entropy has been at work — namely, the deliberate, careful, reverent practices of communities that understood what they were copying and the providence of God who superintended the result.

B. The reasonableness of the biblicist’s confidence in the Masoretic tradition

The second confirmation follows from the first. The biblicist who reads his Old Testament in a translation made from the Masoretic Text, or who studies the Hebrew Bible in a critical edition based on a Masoretic codex, is reading a text whose claim to represent the wording of the Old Testament Scriptures is well supported by the surviving fragmentary evidence. The Masoretic tradition is not the only ancient stream — that point will be addressed below — but it is the stream that has been most consistently and most carefully transmitted, and the fragmentary evidence indicates that its consonantal substance reaches back into the centuries before Christ.

This is a matter of pastoral significance. The believer who hears that “the Hebrew text has been transmitted for thousands of years” need not regard the claim with skepticism. The fragmentary evidence supports it. The pastor who preaches from the Old Testament in a faithful translation is not preaching from a text whose wording is conjectural at every turn; he is preaching from a text whose substance has reached him by a transmission whose stability is, on the available evidence, striking.

C. Areas where readings illuminate rather than overturn

The third confirmation is more modest but worth noting. In a number of passages where the Masoretic Text has long been read in a particular way, fragmentary evidence from the Dead Sea materials and elsewhere has helped to illuminate or clarify the reading without overturning it. A previously obscure word may be clarified by a fragmentary parallel. A scribal correction visible in one witness may explain a feature of another. A reading long preserved in the Masoretic tradition may be confirmed by an early fragmentary witness against later doubts. These cases do not transform the Old Testament; they refine the church’s understanding of particular passages within an already-stable text.

It is appropriate, in this light, to receive the fragmentary evidence with a measure of gratitude. It has, on the whole, served to confirm what the church has long received and to clarify points at which clarification was useful. That is exactly what one would hope to see if the doctrines of inspiration and preservation are true.


III. What the Fragments Complicate

Honesty requires that the evidence which confirms also be allowed to complicate. The same fragmentary corpora that establish the substantial stability of the Hebrew text also raise questions that the biblicist must face directly rather than evade.

A. Pluriformity in some textual traditions

The first complication is the pluriformity visible in some streams of the ancient evidence. The Hebrew witness of the late Second Temple period, as the Dead Sea materials make clear, was not uniform. Alongside the proto-Masoretic stream stood other streams: a stream closely related to what would later become the Samaritan Pentateuch, particularly visible in some of the Pentateuchal fragments; a stream closely related to the Hebrew that must have lain behind the Greek translation known as the Septuagint, particularly visible in some of the prophetic and historical fragments; and a smaller body of fragments that align with no surviving tradition exactly.

This pluriformity raises legitimate questions. If multiple Hebrew text-forms circulated in the late Second Temple period, what is the relationship among them? Which, if any, represents the wording of the original autographs most faithfully? How did the proto-Masoretic stream come to predominate, and what does its predominance imply for the church’s confidence in it?

The biblicist need not pretend that these questions do not exist. He can acknowledge them and offer reasoned answers. The proto-Masoretic stream’s predominance is not arbitrary; it represents the line of transmission carefully preserved by the community charged with the oracles of God, and it is the line that has, in providence, reached the church. The other streams, where they differ, sometimes preserve genuinely ancient readings worth weighing, and sometimes reflect expansions, harmonizations, or interpretive paraphrases that move away from the autographic wording. Distinguishing among these cases is the work of careful study, conducted with the humility commended in the previous paper.

B. Orthographic and scribal variation

The second complication is more pervasive but generally less consequential. Across the whole body of Hebrew witnesses, there is a great deal of orthographic and scribal variation. Hebrew makes use of certain consonants — the so-called matres lectionis — to mark vowels, and the use of these letters varies considerably across periods and scribal traditions. A word may be spelled with a yod or waw in one witness and without it in another, with no difference in meaning. Word divisions, paragraph markers, and the like also vary.

In addition to these orthographic differences, ordinary scribal variation is visible across the witnesses. Letters are occasionally confused. Words are occasionally transposed. Lines are, very rarely, omitted by the eye-skip that any honest copyist will recognize as a constant occupational hazard. None of this is surprising; all of it is what the historical transmission of any extensive text by hand must produce.

What matters, for the biblicist, is the ratio between such variation and the underlying stability. The fragmentary evidence suggests that the ratio strongly favors stability. The variation is real, in some cases interesting, and worth careful study; but it is variation around a substantially stable text, not chaotic drift across an uncertain one.

C. The biblicist’s response: distinguishing variant from corruption, and trivial from substantive

The biblicist’s response to these complications is not to deny them but to think carefully about them. Two distinctions help.

The first is the distinction between variant and corruption. A variant is any difference in wording among witnesses. A corruption is a variant that represents a departure from the original. Not all variants are corruptions; some are simply alternative spellings, alternative arrangements of the same words, or other differences that do not affect the wording in any meaningful sense. Treating every variant as though it were a corruption inflates the apparent instability of the text. Treating no variants as corruptions denies the obvious fact that scribal error, however carefully guarded against, does occur. The honest worker distinguishes the two.

The second is the distinction between trivial and substantive. A trivial variant is one that does not affect the meaning of the text in any appreciable way — a difference of spelling, a difference of word order that the original language allows without semantic consequence, a difference in the use of a mater lectionis. A substantive variant is one that does affect the meaning, however slightly. The vast majority of variation in the Hebrew witness is trivial in this sense. Of the variation that is substantive, very little touches matters of doctrine, and none touches matters on which the faith depends.

These distinctions are not a way of explaining the evidence away. They are a way of describing it accurately. A pastor who tells his congregation that “the Hebrew Bible has variants” speaks the truth, but he speaks a partial truth that is liable to mislead unless he goes on to specify what kind of variants and at what level of significance. A more accurate statement is that the Hebrew Bible has been transmitted with remarkable stability across the centuries, that the variation present in the surviving witnesses is overwhelmingly orthographic and trivial, and that the small body of substantive variation has been studied carefully and does not call into question the message the text has always delivered.


IV. A Humble Synthesis

A. The Hebrew Bible’s transmission as remarkably faithful

Setting confirmation and complication side by side, what emerges is an account of the Hebrew Bible’s transmission that is, by any honest measure, remarkable. A text of considerable length, given over many centuries, copied through every kind of historical disruption, has reached the present generation with a degree of stability that was scarcely imaginable before the fragmentary evidence of the past hundred and fifty years became available. The biblicist has reason to be grateful for this evidence, not anxious about it.

It is worth being precise about the form this gratitude should take. The evidence does not prove the doctrine of inspiration; that doctrine rests on grounds prior to and independent of the manuscript record. The evidence does, however, confirm that the doctrine of providential preservation — long held by the church on the basis of Scripture’s own teaching about itself — corresponds to what is actually visible in the historical transmission. God said He would preserve His Word. The fragmentary record indicates that He has done so. The faithful reader receives this correspondence as the kindness it is.

B. Recognizing what fragments cannot answer and refusing to invent answers

At the same time, the humility commended in the previous paper applies with full force here. The fragmentary evidence answers many questions, but it does not answer all questions, and the worker who pretends otherwise misuses his evidence.

The fragments do not, for example, settle every question about the origin and date of the variant streams. They do not tell us with full clarity how, when, or under what circumstances the proto-Masoretic stream came to predominate. They do not always make clear, for a given variant, whether the proto-Masoretic reading or another represents the older wording. They do not give us access, except in the rarest cases, to anything like an autograph. They give us instead a substantial and instructive body of partial evidence about a transmission that was, by the time we can see it, already long under way.

The temptation, in the face of these limits, is to fill the silence with reconstructions. Some scholars have done so confidently, building elaborate theories about the development of the Old Testament text on the basis of evidence that, on closer examination, will not bear the weight. The biblicist, mindful of the cautions of the previous paper, declines to play that game. He is willing to say “we do not know” where he does not know. He is willing to weigh competing accounts of the evidence on their merits without committing to any one of them prematurely. He receives the evidence for what it is — substantial confirmation of the stability of transmission, modest complication at points where complication is real — and he refuses to invent the rest.

This refusal is not a failure of nerve. It is the proper habit of a reader who knows the difference between the text and the witnesses, between confidence in the Word and modesty about reconstruction, between humility and skepticism. The Hebrew Bible has reached the church. The evidence by which it has reached the church is, in its broad outlines, well-attested and remarkably stable. The questions that remain — and there are real ones — are matters for ongoing patient work, not occasions for either anxiety or overclaim.


Conclusion

The Hebrew witness to the Old Testament, including its great fragmentary corpora, supports the biblicist’s confidence in the text he has received. The Dead Sea materials, the Cairo Genizah, and the broader pre-Masoretic and proto-Masoretic record together establish that the consonantal text has been transmitted with substantial stability across more than a millennium of visible history, and they justify the church’s continued reliance on the Masoretic tradition as the principal Hebrew witness. At the same time, the evidence reveals real complications — pluriformity in some streams, orthographic and scribal variation throughout — which the biblicist faces honestly without allowing them to undermine the larger picture.

The next paper turns from the Hebrew witness of the Old Testament to the Greek witness of the New, where the fragmentary evidence is more abundant, the chronological proximity to the autographs is closer, and the pastoral and apologetic stakes are, if anything, higher. The principles of confident-yet-humble fragmentology developed across the first three papers, and applied to the Hebrew evidence in this one, will there meet a corpus with its own distinctive opportunities and its own characteristic temptations.


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A Hermeneutics of Humility for the Fragmentary Witness


Introduction

The previous paper set out a biblicist hermeneutic and argued that a high view of Scripture, far from discouraging careful work with the manuscript witnesses, actually requires it. Yet a high view of Scripture left to itself can produce, in the interpreter, a particular kind of overreach. The reader who knows that he is handling the very Word of God can begin to imagine that his reading of that Word, his reconstruction of that fragment, his reckoning of that variant, partakes of the same authority as the Word itself. It does not. The text is the Word of God. The interpreter is not.

This paper develops the second of the two governing commitments named in Paper One. A hermeneutics of humility is not a counterweight to biblicism, as though confidence in Scripture and modesty in interpretation were two forces pulling in opposite directions and needing to be balanced. They are, rather, two aspects of a single rightly ordered posture before the Word of God. The biblicist who is not humble has misunderstood biblicism; the humble interpreter who is not a biblicist has misplaced his humility. The work of this paper is to set out what humility means in interpretation generally, to show why fragmentology demands it with particular force, to describe its marks in practice, and to clarify how it relates to the biblicist commitments already stated.


I. Defining Humility in Interpretation

A. Creaturely finitude and noetic limits

The first ground of interpretive humility is the simple fact of creaturehood. The reader of Scripture is a finite being attempting to receive communication from an infinite One. This asymmetry is not a defect to be apologized for; it is the condition under which all human knowledge of God takes place. God knows Himself exhaustively. The creature does not know God exhaustively, will not in this life, and would not even in glory, since the finite cannot contain the infinite. What the creature can know of God is what God has condescended to reveal, and even that revelation is received by minds that are not only finite but also fallen.

The Fall has noetic consequences. The mind of the unregenerate man, Scripture says, is darkened. The mind of the regenerate man is being renewed but is not yet renewed entirely. Indwelling sin affects the intellect as well as the affections and the will. This means that even the believing reader, working with the best available evidence and the best available tools, brings to the text a mind that is liable to error in ways he himself cannot fully see. Some of these errors are intellectual — the limits of his information, his languages, his historical knowledge. Some are dispositional — pride, laziness, the desire to find in the text what he already wants to find. A hermeneutics of humility takes both seriously.

It is worth being precise about what this does not mean. It does not mean that the believer cannot know the truth from Scripture; he can, and the perspicuity of Scripture in matters necessary for salvation is a settled doctrine. It does not mean that all interpretations are equally valid; they are not. It means, rather, that the interpreter walks with a steady awareness that his readings, his reconstructions, and his judgments are the readings, reconstructions, and judgments of a creature, and that the gap between his interpretation and the text itself is real and ought not to be denied.

B. The difference between humility and skepticism

Humility is not skepticism, and the two must be carefully distinguished. Skepticism, as a stance toward Scripture, holds that we cannot know what the text says, or what it means, or whether it is reliable. It treats the difficulty of interpretation as a reason to suspend judgment about the message. Humility holds none of these things. Humility says, instead, that we can know what the text says, often with great confidence; that we can know what it means, often plainly and clearly; and that where we do not know, the failure is in us, not in the text.

The difference shows itself most sharply in how each disposition handles the difficult passage. The skeptic, encountering a difficulty, finds in it confirmation of his prior conviction that nothing here is certain. The humble interpreter, encountering the same difficulty, treats it as an occasion for further work, for consultation with other passages and other readers across the centuries, and for honest acknowledgment that on this particular point his understanding is provisional. The skeptic uses difficulty as a solvent. The humble interpreter uses it as a teacher.

This distinction matters in fragmentology with special force. A fragment that admits more than one reconstruction, or a variant that admits more than one explanation, will be received very differently by these two dispositions. The skeptic will treat the indeterminacy as a reason to doubt the text. The humble interpreter will treat it as a reason to be careful in his claims about the witness while remaining settled in his confidence about the Word.

C. The difference between humility and indecision

If humility is not skepticism, neither is it indecision. The interpreter who refuses to commit himself, who hedges every conclusion with so many qualifications that no conclusion is actually offered, who treats the fear of being wrong as a sufficient reason to avoid being clear, is not exhibiting humility. He is, in many cases, exhibiting cowardice or sloth. Genuine humility is willing to say what it sees, to commit to what the evidence supports, and to be corrected if the commitment turns out to have been mistaken. False humility hides behind perpetual qualification because qualification cannot be falsified.

The teacher of Scripture has a particular obligation here. The congregation needs to be told what the text says. A pulpit ministry that traffics in endless “perhaps” and “it may be” and “some scholars think” is not, by virtue of its tentativeness, more reverent than a ministry that speaks plainly. It is, in many cases, less faithful, because it withholds from the people of God what God has actually said. The humble interpreter is willing to be wrong in public. The merely indecisive interpreter is unwilling to be anything in public, lest he be embarrassed.

In fragmentological work, the same distinction applies. There is a real difference between saying “the fragment shows X” when the fragment shows X, and saying “the fragment may possibly perhaps show X” when in fact the fragment shows X plainly. The first is honest reporting. The second is a kind of dishonest hedging that uses the appearance of caution to avoid the work of judgment.


II. Why Fragmentology Requires Humility Uniquely

Every interpretive discipline calls for some measure of humility. Fragmentology calls for it with particular intensity, for reasons rooted in the nature of the evidence itself.

A. Partial evidence forces measured claims

A fragment is, by definition, a part of something larger. Its edges are torn or cut or worn. Its surrounding context — the rest of the page, the rest of the quire, the rest of the codex — is in many cases lost. What can be known from the fragment is, therefore, bounded in a way that does not bind the reader of a complete book. The complete book speaks for itself across its full extent. The fragment speaks only across its surviving extent, and any inference beyond that extent is an inference, not a reading.

This distinction sounds obvious when stated abstractly, but in practice it is often blurred. A fragment that contains, say, ten lines of text from a known biblical book may be presented as evidence for the wording of those ten lines. That is appropriate. It may also be presented as evidence for the wording of the lines that originally surrounded those ten lines on the same page, on the assumption that the rest of the page must have followed the standard text. That, too, may be appropriate, but it is now an inference, not a direct attestation, and it ought to be marked as such.

Fragmentology requires humility because the discipline lives at the boundary between what the artifact actually shows and what its larger context probably contained. Honest work keeps the boundary visible. Dishonest work erases it.

B. The temptation to fill in the silence with the interpreter’s voice

The fragmentary state of the evidence creates a particular and well-documented temptation: to fill the silence of the missing portion with the voice of the interpreter, and then to present the result as though the fragment had said it. This can happen at the level of the text itself, where a reconstruction of damaged or missing letters is offered with more confidence than the surviving traces support. It can happen at the level of date, where a paleographic estimate is hardened into a fixed point and then used to date everything around it. It can happen at the level of provenance, where a guess about origin is repeated until it acquires the authority of fact. It can happen at the level of significance, where a fragment whose contribution is modest is presented as transformative because the interpreter has invested so much in it.

In each of these cases, the underlying mechanism is the same: the interpreter has a story he wants to tell, the fragment is silent in just the places where his story most needs evidence, and he supplies the missing evidence from his own resources without saying so. A hermeneutics of humility is, in part, a discipline of distinguishing between what the artifact has told us and what we have told ourselves about the artifact.

C. The temptation, in the opposite direction, to overstate uncertainty for rhetorical effect

The opposite temptation is real and must also be named. There is a certain rhetorical advantage, in some quarters, to making fragmentary evidence seem more uncertain than it is. The scholar who emphasizes uncertainty appears appropriately cautious, properly trained, suitably non-dogmatic. The scholar who reports plainly that the fragment shows what it shows can be made to look unsophisticated. As a result, fragmentary evidence is sometimes draped in qualifications that do not actually reflect the state of the evidence but reflect, instead, the speaker’s calculation about how he wants to be perceived.

This tendency does real harm. It misleads non-specialists into believing that the surviving witness to the biblical text is more obscure and more contested than it actually is. It feeds the popular impression — wrong, but durable — that we no longer know what the original Bible said. And it tends, over time, to entrench a culture of professional caution that drifts into an effective skepticism about whether the text can be known at all.

A genuine humility refuses both temptations. It refuses to fill silence with the interpreter’s voice, and it refuses to manufacture silence where the fragment is in fact speaking clearly. It tells the truth about what the evidence shows, in both directions.


III. Marks of a Humble Fragmentologist

If humility is neither skepticism nor indecision, and if fragmentology requires it uniquely, what does it look like in practice? Three marks may be named.

A. Distinguishing what the fragment shows, what it implies, and what it does not address

The first mark is a habit of triple distinction. Whenever a claim is made on the basis of a fragment, the humble worker asks: Is this what the fragment shows directly, what it implies indirectly, or what it does not address at all? The three categories require different language and warrant different levels of confidence.

What the fragment shows is what is actually visible on the surviving material — the letters that can be read, the words that can be transcribed, the lines that can be measured. This is the strongest category. Claims at this level rest on direct attestation.

What the fragment implies is what can reasonably be inferred from what it shows, given knowledge of the larger work, of the scribe’s habits, of the conventions of the period, and of comparable witnesses. Claims at this level are not direct attestation but reasoned inference. They are often well-grounded, sometimes nearly as strong as direct attestation, but they remain inferences and ought to be marked as such.

What the fragment does not address is everything else. A small fragment of, say, the middle of a chapter does not address the wording of the rest of the chapter, the date of the book’s composition, the identity of its first audience, or the theology of its later interpreters. Honest reporting refuses to make the fragment carry weight it cannot bear.

B. Reporting confidence levels honestly

The second mark is honest calibration of confidence. A useful taxonomy distinguishes four levels: certain, probable, possible, and conjectural.

A certain reading is one where the surviving evidence is clear, unambiguous, and not seriously contested. The letters are visible, the word is unmistakable, and competent readers agree.

A probable reading is one where the surviving evidence supports a particular conclusion strongly enough that a reasonable worker would commit to it, but where some doubt remains — a partially damaged letter, a faint trace, a parallel that admits more than one explanation.

A possible reading is one consistent with the surviving evidence but not the only reading consistent with it. Multiple readings remain on the table, and the available evidence does not yet decide among them.

A conjectural reading is one that goes beyond what the surviving evidence directly supports, offered as a hypothesis that would account for what is visible but is not itself visible.

The discipline of using these categories honestly, and of using them consistently in published work, is itself an exercise in humility. It allows the reader to know exactly what kind of claim is being made and to weigh it accordingly. It prevents the slow conversion of conjecture into probability, and of probability into certainty, by sheer repetition over time.

C. Welcoming correction from the broader believing community across time

The third mark is a willingness to be corrected. The believing community of which the fragmentologist is a part is not only his contemporaries. It includes those who have read these same texts in earlier centuries, those who copied them, those who preached from them, those who suffered for them. It includes also those who will come after, whose access to evidence and tools the present worker cannot foresee. Humility recognizes that one’s own moment in the long conversation is not the moment in which all questions are settled.

Practically, this means several things. It means consulting earlier generations of careful readers, including those whose conclusions are now unfashionable, and weighing their reasons rather than dismissing them. It means publishing in such a way that one’s evidence is available to others, who may reach different conclusions on the same data. It means receiving correction from peers without defensiveness when the correction is warranted, and without surrender when it is not. And it means recognizing that some questions one has worked on for years may be settled, after one’s own lifetime, by evidence not yet recovered or by readers not yet born.

This last point is worth lingering on. The humble fragmentologist works as part of a centuries-long stewardship. He is not the first to read these witnesses, and he will not be the last. His task is faithfulness in his own moment, not finality across the whole of history.


IV. Humility and Biblicism Together

The two governing commitments of this series — biblicism and humility — are sometimes set against each other, as though confidence in Scripture and modesty in interpretation were inversely proportional. They are not. Properly understood, they reinforce one another, and the work of this final section is to show how.

A. Humility about our reconstructions does not entail humility about God’s having spoken

A confusion that recurs in popular discussion, and sometimes in academic writing, is the confusion between humility regarding our reconstructions and humility regarding God’s having spoken. These are not the same. The first is appropriate. The second, if it amounts to genuine doubt about whether God has spoken at all, is not humility but unbelief dressed in humility’s clothing.

The believing fragmentologist may say, with no compromise to his faith, that he is not certain whether a particular fragment dates to the second century or the early third, that a particular reconstruction is probable rather than certain, that a particular variant has not yet been satisfactorily explained. None of these admissions touches the question whether God has spoken. They touch only the question of what a particular surviving artifact happens to show.

Conversely, the believing fragmentologist may say, with full confidence, that the Word of God has been given, that it has been preserved, that it is sufficient and clear in what it intends to communicate, and that the surviving body of evidence as a whole confirms rather than undermines that confidence. None of this requires him to overclaim about any individual fragment. The two registers — confidence in the Word, modesty about the witness — operate at different levels and do not compete.

What must be refused is the move that treats appropriate modesty about the witness as evidence for inappropriate doubt about the Word. That move is a category error. It infers from “I am not certain about this fragment” to “we are not certain about Scripture,” and the inference does not hold. The biblicist’s confidence does not rest on the inviolability of any one fragment. It rests on the character and faithfulness of the God who has spoken and who has preserved what He spoke across the totality of the witnesses.

B. Confidence in the preserved Word; modesty about our reconstructive work

The closing posture of this paper, and the working posture of the rest of the series, can be stated in a single line: confidence in the preserved Word, modesty about our reconstructive work.

Confidence in the preserved Word means that the fragmentologist approaches his materials as a steward, not as an inquisitor. He is not trying to determine, on the basis of his fragments, whether God has spoken. That question has been settled, on other grounds, before he picks up the first artifact. He is trying, rather, to serve the church’s reception of a Word he already knows has been given. His confidence frees him from the anxiety that would otherwise attend every newly published fragment and every newly noticed variant. He does not need the next fragment to confirm Scripture. Scripture is confirmed.

Modesty about our reconstructive work means that the fragmentologist does not allow that confidence to license sloppy claims. He does not press the evidence beyond what it bears. He does not paper over uncertainties with pious language. He does not treat his reconstructions as though they shared in the authority of the text being reconstructed. He works carefully, reports honestly, and welcomes correction. The very confidence that frees him from anxiety also frees him from the temptation to overclaim, because he does not need any particular fragment to do more than it can do.

This double posture is not a compromise. It is the natural shape of a believer’s work in a discipline where the evidence is partial, where the stakes are high, and where the temptations to error run in opposite directions. Hold one without the other and the result is distorted. Hold confidence without modesty and the work becomes triumphalist; hold modesty without confidence and the work drifts into the very skepticism modesty is supposed to guard against. Hold both, and the work becomes what it ought to be: faithful service to the Word of God and the church that lives by it.


Conclusion

A hermeneutics of humility, suited to the fragmentary witness, recognizes the finitude of the creaturely interpreter, distinguishes itself sharply from skepticism on one side and indecision on the other, and produces in its practitioner a set of working habits — careful triple distinction among what is shown, implied, and unaddressed; honest calibration of confidence; willingness to be corrected by the believing community across time. It joins with the biblicist commitments of the previous paper rather than competing with them, yielding a posture that is at once confident in what God has spoken and modest about what any one of us has yet figured out.

The next paper turns from these foundational matters to the first of the two great corpora of fragmentary biblical evidence: the Hebrew witness, including the Dead Sea Scrolls, the Cairo Genizah, and related materials. There the principles of this paper will meet specific cases, and the practice of confident-yet-humble fragmentology will begin to take concrete shape.


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A Biblicist Hermeneutic Stated and Defended

Introduction

The first paper in this series defined fragmentology and argued that the believer who holds the highest view of Scripture has every reason to care about the fragmentary witnesses to the biblical text. That argument depended at every turn on a particular doctrine of Scripture — a doctrine assumed but not yet stated. The present paper states it and defends it.

The aim is not to produce an exhaustive bibliology. Many fine works of systematic theology have done that. The aim, rather, is to set out the specific hermeneutical commitments that will govern the remainder of the series, to distinguish them from common caricatures, and to show how they bear on the physical witnesses to the biblical text. A biblicist hermeneutic, properly understood, is neither naïve nor anti-evidential. It is, instead, the natural posture of a reader who confesses that God has spoken, that what He has spoken has been written down, and that what was written has been kept for the church across the centuries.


I. Core Commitments

A biblicist hermeneutic rests on a small set of related convictions. They can be stated briefly, but each carries weight that shapes everything that follows.

A. The supreme authority and sufficiency of Scripture

Scripture is the supreme authority for faith and practice. It is not the only source of true statements in the world; the world itself, rightly read, also testifies to its Maker. But Scripture is the only source whose authority is not subject to correction by another source. Tradition, reason, and experience are all real and all useful in their proper places, but each of them is, in principle, correctable. Scripture is not. When Scripture and any other claimed authority appear to conflict, the biblicist takes Scripture as the rule and the other claimed authority as the candidate for revision.

Scripture is also sufficient. It contains all that is needed for salvation, for the knowledge of God, and for the ordering of the church and the Christian life. This does not mean Scripture answers every question a curious person might ask — it does not tell us how to repair a carburetor or how to balance a checkbook — but it does mean that for the matters Scripture addresses, no further revelation is needed and none is to be expected.

B. Verbal-plenary inspiration of the original autographs

The Bible’s own testimony about itself is that all of it is breathed out by God, and that this breathing-out extends not merely to general ideas but to the actual words. Verbal-plenary inspiration affirms two things at once: that inspiration reaches to the words (“verbal”) and that it reaches to all of them (“plenary”). The biblical writers were not stenographers, and the personality, vocabulary, and circumstance of each human author are visible on every page. But the result of their writing, by the superintendence of the Holy Spirit, is the very Word of God.

This commitment attaches in the first instance to the autographs — the original documents as they came from the hands of the prophets and apostles. We do not possess those autographs. What we possess are copies, and copies of copies, in many languages and many states of preservation. The next commitment addresses how this matters.

C. Providential preservation across the transmission history

The same God who breathed out His Word has not abandoned that Word to the accidents of history. The biblicist confesses that God has providentially preserved the Scriptures across the centuries, so that what the church has received and continues to receive is, in substance, the Word that was originally given. This preservation has not been miraculous in the sense of bypassing ordinary historical processes; ink fades, parchment crumbles, scribes nod, and yet, by the providence of God, the message is not lost. Across the totality of the surviving witnesses, what God said is what God’s people have continued to hear.

It is important to be precise about what this commitment does and does not entail. It does not entail that any one surviving copy is free of scribal error — none is. It does not entail that there are no variants — there are many. It does entail that the variants do not, in the aggregate, obscure the message; that no doctrine of the faith depends on a disputed reading; and that the believing reader, opening a faithful translation today, is reading the Word of God.

D. The grammatical-historical method as the default mode of reading

If Scripture has been given in words, then the words must be read as words. The grammatical-historical method takes the text in its grammatical sense, in its historical setting, and according to the conventions of the literary form in which it was written. It assumes that the human authors meant something by what they wrote, that their original audiences could have grasped what they meant, and that the meaning they intended is the meaning the modern reader is to seek.

This method is not a denial of the Spirit’s role in interpretation. It is, on the contrary, the form that respect for the Spirit’s work takes. The Spirit who inspired the words of Scripture does not now suggest meanings the words cannot bear. Reading grammatically and historically is the way of submitting to the meaning the Spirit has already placed in the text.

E. Scripture interpreting Scripture

Because all of Scripture is breathed out by the same God, all of Scripture coheres. The biblicist therefore reads any passage in the light of the whole. Obscure passages are interpreted by clear ones. Brief passages are interpreted by fuller ones. Apparent tensions are first examined to see whether the reader has misunderstood, before they are accepted as real. This principle — sometimes called the analogia Scripturae, the analogy of Scripture — is not a way of imposing a system on the text. It is a way of taking seriously that the text is, in the end, one Author’s work.


II. What Biblicism Is Not

A doctrine is best clarified, sometimes, by saying what it is not. Three caricatures need to be set aside before we go further.

A. Not bibliolatry

Biblicism does not worship the Bible. It worships the God who speaks in the Bible. The reverence the biblicist shows for Scripture is reverence for the One whose Word it is. This distinction is more than a verbal nicety. It is what allows the biblicist to handle a worn-out Bible without superstition, to mark up the margins of his study Bible with notes, to compare manuscripts and translations without anxiety, and to recognize that no physical copy is itself the object of worship. The Word of God is not the paper. The Word of God is what God has said. The paper is a faithful and necessary vehicle, but it is not the thing itself.

This matters for fragmentology in a way that will become clearer in later papers. If the biblicist were a bibliolater, every torn margin and every variant reading would feel like a wound. He would be tempted to deny the evidence, or to spiritualize it away, or to insist on a single physical lineage as uniquely sacred. The biblicist, free of bibliolatry, can let the evidence be what it is, because his confidence does not rest on the inviolability of any single artifact but on the faithfulness of the God who has spoken and kept on speaking.

B. Not anti-tradition

Biblicism does not despise tradition. The believing church has been reading Scripture for two thousand years, and the cumulative wisdom of that reading is not nothing. Creeds, confessions, commentaries, and the testimony of faithful teachers across the centuries are all useful and often correctives to the modern reader’s blind spots. The biblicist consults them, profits from them, and gives thanks for them.

What the biblicist refuses is to treat tradition as itself authoritative in the way Scripture is. Tradition serves the reader of Scripture; it does not rule him. When tradition and Scripture appear to conflict, Scripture rules. When tradition and Scripture agree — and they very often do — the biblicist is glad of the company.

C. Not naïve

Biblicism is not the claim that the Bible fell from heaven in English in a leather binding with gilded edges. The biblicist knows that Scripture was given over many centuries, in three languages, through human authors, on perishable materials, and that it has reached the present generation through a long history of copying, collecting, translating, and printing. He knows that the manuscripts vary among themselves. He knows that translation is a difficult art. He knows that the surviving evidence is sometimes fragmentary. He knows all of this, and his confidence in Scripture is not weakened by knowing it, because his confidence does not depend on pretending otherwise. It depends on the character of the God whose Word it is.


III. The Biblicist’s Posture Toward Physical Witnesses

The commitments above are not abstractions. They have practical consequences for how a biblicist approaches the manuscripts and fragments that will occupy the rest of this series.

A. Manuscripts as means by which preservation has occurred

If God has providentially preserved His Word, He has done so through the ordinary historical process by which texts are transmitted: scribes copying, copies being collected, collections being preserved by communities that valued them, valued copies being passed down across generations. Manuscripts are not a problem for the doctrine of preservation. They are the form preservation has taken. Each surviving witness is a small piece of evidence that the message did, in fact, reach the next generation. Fragments are part of that evidence too.

This means that the biblicist meets a newly published fragment not with anxiety but with interest. What does it show? What does it confirm? What, if anything, does it correct? The questions are not threatening. They are part of the ongoing stewardship of the church’s reception of Scripture.

B. The text and the witnesses

A distinction often overlooked, but essential, is the distinction between the text and the witnesses. The text is what God said — the wording of Scripture as it was given. The witnesses are the surviving copies. The text is one; the witnesses are many. The text is, by faith, preserved across the totality of the witnesses; no single witness is identical with the text in every detail.

This distinction relieves a great deal of unnecessary tension. A biblicist does not need to claim that any one manuscript is perfect in order to claim that the text is preserved. He does not need to choose, in advance and without evidence, which manuscript family is the only legitimate one. He can let the witnesses testify, attend to what they say, and trust that across them — and in some cases across very many of them — the Word God gave is the Word he reads.

C. Why a high view of Scripture expects careful work with fragments

It is sometimes suggested, usually by those who do not hold a high view of Scripture, that careful textual work is somehow at odds with confidence in the Bible. The opposite is the case. Precisely because Scripture is the very Word of God, every word matters; precisely because every word matters, careful attention to the surviving witnesses is owed to the text. A casual handling of the evidence would be appropriate only for a casual view of the text. The biblicist, holding the highest possible view, owes the text the most careful possible work.

This is the deep reason why fragmentology, as defined in the previous paper, belongs not at the margins of the believing scholar’s concerns but near the center. The fragments are not a threat to the doctrine of Scripture. They are evidence to be received with the seriousness the doctrine of Scripture demands.


IV. Anticipating Objections

Three objections recur whenever a biblicist hermeneutic is set out, and each deserves a brief answer here.

The first objection holds that the existence of variant readings undermines the doctrine of inspiration, since inspiration must attach to a particular wording and the wording is not uniformly attested. The answer is that inspiration attaches to the autographs, that providential preservation operates across the totality of the witnesses rather than through any one of them, and that the variants which have actually come down to us do not, in the aggregate, obscure the message. The doctrine of inspiration as classically held already accounts for the situation as it actually is.

The second objection holds that grammatical-historical reading is too “flat” for so rich a book, and that Scripture demands more imaginative or more allegorical methods. The answer is that grammatical-historical reading is the floor, not the ceiling. It establishes what the text says before the reader asks what the text means more deeply. Without that floor, more imaginative readings have nothing to stand on, and tend in practice to collapse into whatever the interpreter brought to the text in the first place.

The third objection holds that biblicism is fideistic — that it asks the reader to begin with conclusions rather than evidence. The answer is that every interpretive method begins with prior commitments of some kind. The question is not whether the reader has commitments but whether they are the right ones. The biblicist’s prior commitments — that God exists, that He has spoken, that what He has said has been written down and preserved — are not arbitrary. They are the convictions that make the practice of biblical reading coherent in the first place. Defending those convictions is the work of apologetics; assuming them is the work of exegesis. Biblicism does not confuse the two.


V. Conclusion

A biblicist hermeneutic is the posture of a reader who takes Scripture to be the supremely authoritative, sufficient, verbally and plenarily inspired Word of God, providentially preserved across the centuries, to be read in its grammatical and historical sense and in the light of its own whole counsel. It is not bibliolatry, not anti-tradition, and not naïve. It expects rather than fears careful work with the surviving witnesses, including fragmentary ones, because it holds the text in the highest possible regard and therefore owes the witnesses the most careful possible attention.

The next paper will turn from the doctrine of Scripture to the disposition of the interpreter. A high view of Scripture, rightly held, produces in the interpreter a particular kind of humility — humility that is neither skepticism nor indecision but the honest recognition of creaturely finitude before the Word of an infinite God. That humility is especially necessary in fragmentology, where the evidence is by definition partial and the temptations to overreach are especially strong.


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Defining the Field: Fragmentology and the Biblical Text


Introduction

Every Bible a believer holds in hand stands at the end of a long chain of hands. Quills, reed pens, scrapers, ink, parchment, papyrus, and eventually movable type and digital files have all served to bring the words of God from their original moments of inscription to the moment a reader opens the page this morning. Most of the physical evidence for that chain — the actual surviving witnesses to the biblical text — does not come down to us as whole books. It comes down to us in fragments: a torn corner here, a few verses there, a single leaf preserved when the rest of the codex is lost, a scrap of papyrus pulled from the dry sands of Egypt or the caves above the Dead Sea. The study of these fragments, as fragments, is what this series will call fragmentology.

This first paper has a modest aim. It defines the field, locates it among related disciplines, sketches its history, and argues that the believer who confesses Scripture as the very Word of God has every reason — not merely permission, but reason — to care about it. The papers that follow will set out a biblicist hermeneutic for handling fragmentary evidence and a hermeneutics of humility appropriate to working with what is, by definition, partial. The present paper clears the ground on which those arguments will be built.


I. Working Definition: What Is Fragmentology?

A. From manuscript studies broadly to biblical fragments specifically

The wider world of manuscript studies includes a number of overlapping disciplines. Paleography studies the development of scripts and hands. Codicology studies the construction of the book — its quires, bindings, rulings, and materials. Textual criticism evaluates variants among witnesses to determine, so far as evidence allows, the wording of the text being transmitted. Each of these disciplines may attend to fragments, but none of them is fragmentology in the sense intended here.

Fragmentology, as the term has come to be used in recent decades, is the study of fragmentary manuscripts as fragments — that is, attention to what can and cannot be known from a partial witness, attention to the relationship between a fragment and the larger whole from which it was once part, and attention to the practical work of identifying, joining, dating, and contextualizing pieces that have been physically separated from their original setting. Where textual criticism asks, “What did the original say?”, fragmentology asks first, “What is this piece, where did it come from, and what part of a whole does it represent?” The two disciplines are mutually dependent. Textual criticism cannot proceed responsibly without an accurate accounting of what the surviving witnesses actually contain, and fragmentology, applied to biblical materials, finally serves the recovery and confirmation of the biblical text itself.

B. Distinguishing fragmentology from neighboring disciplines

It will help to be precise about what fragmentology adds. A textual critic comparing readings across manuscripts may treat each witness as a “data point” in an apparatus, abstracting from its physical condition. A fragmentologist insists that the physical condition matters: a reading attested only on a torn margin, in a hand that breaks off mid-word, in a piece whose other side cannot be read because of mounting glue, is a different kind of evidence than a reading found in a complete and well-preserved codex. Confidence levels differ. Inferences about the missing portions differ. The honest reporting of those differences is part of what fragmentology contributes.

Likewise, a paleographer dating a fragment by script does not, by that act alone, identify what biblical book the fragment belongs to, how many lines per page the original had, how the fragment fits with other fragments from the same find, or whether two scraps now in different museums were once part of one leaf. These are properly fragmentological questions.

C. The fragment as object: artifact, witness, dislocated whole

A fragment is, all at once, three things. It is an artifact: a physical object with a material history, a place of discovery, a chain of custody, a present location. It is a witness: a partial testimony to the wording of a text. And it is a dislocated whole: it implies, by its very edges, the larger document from which it has been separated. Each of these three aspects calls for different methods, and each calls for different kinds of restraint. The remainder of this paper, and indeed the remainder of the series, will return often to all three.


II. A Brief History of the Discipline

A. Early modern collation and the rise of critical editions

The systematic comparison of biblical manuscripts is older than the printing press, but the printing press accelerated it dramatically. Once the text could be fixed in print, the differences among handwritten witnesses became newly visible, and editors began to gather, compare, and annotate readings in ways that had not been practical before. The early printed Greek New Testaments of the sixteenth century, the Polyglot Bibles that followed, and the steady refinement of critical editions across the seventeenth, eighteenth, and nineteenth centuries built up a body of evidence and a set of habits of mind that we now take for granted. Through most of this period, however, the manuscripts in view were largely complete or near-complete books. Fragments were known but were not the center of the work.

B. Twentieth-century discoveries

The twentieth century changed the picture. A series of remarkable discoveries pulled fragmentary evidence into the foreground of biblical studies and made fragmentology, in something like its present sense, unavoidable.

The Oxyrhynchus papyri, recovered from the rubbish heaps of an ancient Egyptian town beginning in the late 1890s and published in volumes that continue to appear, gave scholars thousands of scraps of Greek writing, including biblical fragments of considerable antiquity. The Chester Beatty papyri, acquired in the 1930s, included substantial early portions of the Greek Old and New Testaments. The Bodmer papyri, surfacing mid-century, added more. And the Dead Sea Scrolls, found in the caves near Qumran beginning in 1947, transformed Old Testament textual studies by pushing the surviving Hebrew evidence back by roughly a millennium in some cases. The Cairo Genizah, exploited by scholars from the late nineteenth century onward, yielded an enormous quantity of medieval Hebrew fragments that still rewards study.

These finds were not, for the most part, complete books. They were fragments — sometimes substantial, often small. Working with them required and continues to require fragmentological habits of mind: cautious identification, careful reconstruction, honest reporting of what is and is not visible.

C. Digital fragmentology and present-day reconstruction projects

Recent decades have added a new layer. High-resolution digital imaging, multispectral imaging that recovers ink no longer visible to the eye, and the publication of manuscript images on the open web have made it possible to examine fragments without traveling to the holding institution. Digital tools allow fragments held in different libraries to be compared side by side, and in some cases to be virtually rejoined. International collaborations have brought together pieces of the same original codex that have been separated for centuries. The practical work of fragmentology is now, in part, a digital practice, with all the opportunities and all the temptations that any digital practice entails.


III. Why a Biblicist Should Care

It is worth pausing here to address a question that may form in the mind of the careful reader. If Scripture is the supreme authority, and if the believing reader confesses with the historic church that God has spoken and has preserved His Word, why should the believer take any particular interest in scraps of papyrus and parchment? Is fragmentology a discipline for specialists, of no real concern to the pastor, the teacher, or the ordinary saint?

The answer this series will defend is that fragmentology is precisely a discipline for those who hold the highest view of Scripture, for at least three reasons.

A. Fragments as primary witnesses to the very words of God

If the words of Scripture are God-breathed — and they are — then the physical witnesses to those words are not religiously neutral artifacts. They are the means by which the message has reached us. The believer who reverences the Word reverences, by extension, the careful study of the means by which the Word has been preserved. This is not bibliolatry; it is consistency. We do not worship the manuscripts, but neither do we treat them with indifference. Every fragment that confirms a reading already received, and every fragment that helps us see more clearly what was originally written, is a small kindness from the Lord of providence to His church.

B. The pastoral stakes: confidence in the text we preach

Pastors preach from Bibles. Bibles are translations. Translations rest on critical decisions about the underlying text. Critical decisions rest, in part, on fragmentary evidence. The pastor who has never thought about that chain may still preach faithfully; the chain holds whether or not he has examined every link. But the pastor who has thought about it preaches with a different kind of confidence, and is better equipped to answer the honest questions of believers and the dishonest taunts of skeptics. A working acquaintance with the fragmentary evidence behind the Hebrew and Greek text is part of the equipment of a teacher of the Word in our generation.

C. Setting the stage for the rest of the series

Finally, fragmentology is the right starting point for this series because it is the place where two commitments meet that will run through every paper to follow. The first commitment is biblicism — the conviction that Scripture is the Word of God, supremely authoritative, sufficient, clear in what it intends to communicate, and providentially preserved. The second is humility — the conviction that the interpreter is finite, that evidence is sometimes partial, that strong claims should rest on strong grounds, and that the discipline of saying “we do not know” is part of the discipline of telling the truth. Fragmentary evidence demands both. It requires the biblicist’s confidence that there is a Word to be heard; it requires the humble worker’s care to report only what the fragment actually shows.


IV. The Shape of What Follows

The remaining papers in this series will build on the ground laid here. Paper Two will state and defend a biblicist hermeneutic in detail, distinguishing it from caricatures and showing how it relates to the physical witnesses. Paper Three will develop a hermeneutics of humility appropriate to fragmentary evidence, distinguishing humility from skepticism on the one side and from indecision on the other. Papers Four and Five will turn to specific corpora — the Hebrew witness and the Greek witness respectively — and will examine what the fragmentary evidence does and does not establish. Paper Six will address method: how fragments are read, reconstructed, and reported, and how the discipline guards against overreach. Paper Seven will consider fragments at the edges of the canonical question, including non-canonical and unidentified material. Paper Eight will trace the path from fragment to translation to pulpit to pew, with attention to pastoral and apologetic implications. Paper Nine will offer synthesis and practical recommendations both for the discipline and for the church.

Throughout, two refusals will govern the work. We will refuse to allow the existence of variants and the fragmentary state of the evidence to undermine confidence in the Word God has given. And we will refuse to use confidence in the Word God has given as an excuse for sloppy work, overstatement, or unwillingness to admit what we do not know. These refusals are, at bottom, the same refusal: the refusal to substitute the interpreter’s voice for God’s.


Conclusion

Fragmentology is the study of partial manuscript witnesses as the partial witnesses they are, attentive to their material reality, their textual contribution, and their relationship to wholes now lost or dispersed. As a discipline, it has roots in centuries of careful collation but has come into its present form largely through the discoveries of the past hundred and thirty years and the digital tools of the past thirty. For the believer who confesses Scripture as the Word of God, fragmentology is not a distraction but a stewardship. It serves the church by helping to confirm, to clarify, and on rare occasions to refine our understanding of what the surviving witnesses to that Word actually say. It calls for confidence in the God who has spoken and humility before the limits of what any fragment can show us on its own. The papers that follow will attempt, in their measure, to model both.


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