This is an interesting point Robycop3; is it possible that family groups have been somewhat "adopted" rather than "blood" kin?Originally posted by robycop3:
This fact drives a major salient into the "differing manuscripts" argument when one applies the same principles to the differences between books in the same "family" of manuscripts as he/she does to the differences between "families" of manuscripts. Failure to look at these differences in the same light is to use a DOUBLE STANDARD. No, it's NOT apples & oranges. Go figure...the differences WITHIN a family of mss should be LESS than the differences between "families", but they're NOT.
Please think this over........
Here is what I mean. We lump a LOT of texts into a "Byzantine" family. Although there may be connections between these manuscripts there may also be differences. Differences in time. Differences in actual locations and actual groups of people.
We see manuscripts that have essentially the same text-type, so we lump them in a family, when in reality the actual manuscripts may be from a different branch of the tree leading back to the originals.
Like I say, our only discussion here is to determine which manuscripts that we now have available as compiled into a complete set (I added this) are the most accurate to the originals. NOT whether one set contains the Word-Of-God and the other set is invalid. NO, NO, we are just doing a legit study to try to determine which set we have today that are the closest.