No, it doesn't. Read it for yourself. It is a little hard to read in some places, but it is there.Basically in 10,000's of MSS, only 'missing' in: Aleph (Sinaiticus) [which omits Gen. 23:19-24:46,
Codex Sinaiticus - See The Manuscript | Genesis |
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No, it doesn't. Read it for yourself. It is a little hard to read in some places, but it is there.Basically in 10,000's of MSS, only 'missing' in: Aleph (Sinaiticus) [which omits Gen. 23:19-24:46,
I think John 20:1-2 and Matthew 28:1 indicate the same thing.jonC,
re: "That said, the passage does not alter Scripture - it does not introduce new doctrine."
Verse 9 kinda does. It is the only place in scripture - as it is translated in the KJV and similar versions - that places the resurrection on the first of the week.
I understand the concern, but I really do think that it is at the very minimum strongly implied (enough to constitute doctrine) that the discovery of the empty tomb corresponds with the Resurrection.jonC,
re: "I think John 20:1-2 and Matthew 28:1 indicate the same thing."
Those verses do not say when the resurrection actually took place. They only say that the women came to the tomb on the first of the week.
No, it doesn't. Read it for yourself. It is a little hard to read in some places, but it is there.
Codex Sinaiticus - See The Manuscript | Genesis |
... Then I opened by KJV Bible to where I thought it was
... I wish you could help me out but in all honesty this old dog is to old to go to language school nowNo, it doesn't. Read it for yourself. It is a little hard to read in some places, but it is there.
Codex Sinaiticus - See The Manuscript | Genesis |
... Brother GlenActually I don't. I am unabashedly Byzantine Preferred. I posted the reference only to disprove One Baptism's false claim that certain words/passages were missing.No offence TC but you brethren sure like to Sinaiticus and Vaticanius each other.
Actually I don't. I am unabashedly Byzantine Preferred. I posted the reference only to disprove One Baptism's false claim that certain words/passages were missing.![]()

Some here are Critical text preferred, some MT, others even Tr, so glad that we all can get along!Actually I don't. I am unabashedly Byzantine Preferred. I posted the reference only to disprove One Baptism's false claim that certain words/passages were missing.![]()
I believe that Scripture presents a concern that the crucifixion and burial take place before the Sabbath begins (to the extent I believe Christ's burial was the day before the Sabbath...i.e., Friday) and that Nicodemus and Joseph of Arimathea prepared the body (as the women could not under their law). I believe that the discovery of the women when they arrived with spices (I believe they went to the tomb on Sunday because this was their first opportunity under the Law). I also believe that Jesus was in the tomb 3 days. The resurrection, in my view, had to occur on Sunday based on Scripture apart from the ending of Mark.jonC,
re: "... I really do think that it is at the very minimum strongly implied (enough to constitute doctrine) that the discovery of the empty tomb corresponds with the Resurrection."
I'm really not trying to be difficult, but I wonder if you could point out the parts of those verses that you think strongly imply a first of the week resurrection?
BTW, I do think the resurrection probably did take place on the first of the week.
And citations from the Patristics dating to the opening years of the 2nd century, fully 150 years prior to the "oldest and best" manuscripts contain the longer reading.
So, number: supports longer ending.
Age: supports longer ending.
Layout of manuscripts: both Aleph and B support the longer ending.
Conclusion: the longer ending is canon.
Really? Did the day of Pentacost come before or after the tomb?Lastly, although this doesn't specifically mean what we have in vss. 9-20 are the final verses to end the Book of Mark, we can almost be assured that Mark 16:8 is not the ending to the book. "So they went out quickly and fled from the tomb, for they trembled and were amazed. And they said nothing to anyone, for they were afraid."
NKJV The very last line of the book being "And they said nothing to anyone, for they were afraid."???? I think not.
Maybe someone could enlighten me, this verse is in my KJV but I have heard it is not in other translations... Sorry you other brethren are missing it in yours... Could somebody explain to me why the controversy?... Beats anything I ever heard... Brother Glen![]()
If the original pizza had just red sauce and cheese on a flat bread and there are three pizzas made in that fashion...is it accurate to say that pizzas that add pepperoni and sausage are original pizzas?
The pizza may still be good to eat, but it's not identical to the original.
So...the earliest three manuscripts do not have vs 9-20 in Mark 16. This is important if we care about what the original version was. It doesn't matter that 900 versions added the other "elements". It matters what the original looked like.
The idea that the greater number is more important than the earliest version is extremely flawed when we are trying to determine what the original document said. The earliest documents carry more weight than the later documents. This is why there is an annotation regarding vs 9-20 of Mark 16.
King James translators did not have access to the earliest documents that have been discovered. That explains why there is no annotation in KJV Bibles.
Maybe someone could enlighten me, this verse is in my KJV but I have heard it is not in other translations... Sorry you other brethren are missing it in yours... Could somebody explain to me why the controversy?... Beats anything I ever heard... Brother Glen![]()