Hasn’t the Bible been rewritten so many times that we can’t trust it anymore?

This is a common misconception. Some people think that the Bible was written in one language, translated to another language, then translated into yet another and so on until it was finally translated into the English. The complaint is that since it was rewritten so many times in different languages throughout history, it must have become corrupted . The “telephone” analogy is often used as an illustration. It goes like this. One person tells another person a sentence who then tells another person, who tells yet another, and so on and so on until the last person hears a sentence that has little or nothing to do with the original one. The only problem with this analogy is that it doesn’t fit the Bible at all.

The fact is that the Bible has not been rewritten. Take the New Testament, for example. The disciples of Jesus wrote the New Testament in Greek and though we do not have the original documents, we do have around 6,000 copies of the Greek manuscripts that were made very close to the time of the originals. These various manuscripts, or copies, agree with each other to almost 100 percent accuracy. Statistically, the New Testament is 99.5% textually pure. That means that there is only 1/2 of 1% of of all the copies that do not agree with each other perfectly. But, if you take that 1/2 of 1% and examine it, you find that the majority of the “problems” are nothing more than spelling errors and very minor word alterations. For example, instead of saying Jesus, a variation might be “Jesus Christ.” So the actual amount of textual variation of any concern is extremely low. Therefore, we can say that we have a remarkably accurate compilation of the original documents.

So when that we translate the Bible, we do not translate from a translation of a translation of a translation. We translate from the original language into our language. It is a one step process and not a series of steps that can lead to corruption. It is one translation step from the original to the English or to whatever language a person needs to read it in. So we translate into Spanish from the same Greek and Hebrew manuscripts. Likewise we translate into the German from those same Greek and Hebrew manuscripts as well. This is how it is done for each and every language we translate the Bible into. We do not translate from the original languages to the English, to the Spanish, and then to the German. It is from the original languages to the English, or into the Spanish, or into the German. Therefore, the translations are very accurate and trustworthy in regards to what the Bible originally said.

Comparison Chart

The following chart represents a compilation of various ancient manuscripts, their original date of writing, the earliest copy, the number of copies in existent, and the time span between the originals and the copies. If the Bible is singled out to be criticized as unreliable then all the other writings listed below must also be discarded.1

Author Date
Written
Earliest Copy Approximate Time Span between original & copy Number of Copies Accuracy of Copies
Lucretius died 55 or 53 B.C. 1100 yrs 2 —-
Pliny 61-113 A.D. 850 A.D. 750 yrs 7 —-
Plato 427-347 B.C. 900 A.D. 1200 yrs 7 —-
Demosthenes 4th Cent. B.C. 1100 A.D. 800 yrs 8 —-
Herodotus 480-425 B.C. 900 A.D. 1300 yrs 8 —-
Suetonius 75-160 A.D. 950 A.D. 800 yrs 8 —-
Thucydides 460-400 B.C. 900 A.D. 1300 yrs 8 —-
Euripides 480-406 B.C. 1100 A.D. 1300 yrs 9 —-
Aristophanes 450-385 B.C. 900 A.D. 1200 10 —-
Caesar 100-44 B.C. 900 A.D. 1000 10 —-
Livy 59 BC-AD 17 —- ??? 20 —-
Tacitus circa 100 A.D. 1100 A.D. 1000 yrs 20 —-
Aristotle 384-322 B.C. 1100 A.D. 1400 49 —-
Sophocles 496-406 B.C. 1000 A.D 1400 yrs 193 —-
Homer (Iliad) 900 B.C. 400 B.C. 500 yrs 643 95%
New
Testament
1st Cent. A.D. (50-100 A.D. 2nd Cent. A.D.
(c. 130 A.D. f.)
less than 100 years 5600 99.5%

As you can see, the New Testament documents are very accurate. Therefore, when the scholars translate from the Greek into the English (or into any other language), we can trust that what is translated is accurate and reliable.

  1. 1. This chart was adapted from three sources: 1) Christian Apologetics, by Norman Geisler, 1976, p. 307; 2) the article “Archaeology and History attest to the Reliability of the Bible,” by Richard M. Fales, Ph.D., in The Evidence Bible, Compiled by Ray Comfort, Bridge-Logos Publishers, Gainesville, FL, 2001, p. 163; and 3) A Ready Defense, by Josh Mcdowell, 1993, p. 45.

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4 comments

  1. I think this is not correct. Many of the modern translations are derived from the KJV. The KJV itself was corrupted to a degree by King James to suit his views and what he wanted to believe. You are also leaving out the fact that there were many books of the bible that have been dropped over the millenia. Religious figures of the early christian church such as scribes, etc made decisions about what they considered to be canon or not. For that matter modern bibles that protestants use do not includes books that the catholic church considered canon.

    This all sounds like the mouthpiece of one of the “great” theological seminaries, many of whom distort facts and present intelligently to promote their own purposes.

  2. This is definitely not correct. Indeed there are thousands of different versions and they differ in quite a few areas. They are nowhere near 100% perfect copies. For a good reference on this, I recommend starting with the audio course, “History of the Bible: The Making of the New Testament Canon” taught by Bart D. Ehrman of The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (M.Div., Ph.D., Princeton Theological Seminary).

    Dr. Ehrman touches on the subject of the many thousands of different versions and important differences. There are probably better compilations of the variations and source information, but this is a good starting point.

  3. I’m with you – I agree totally with your evidence and have been promoting that very set of data for quite some time. It says nothing about lining up with the KJV, but with the ancient copies.

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