Three scientists—Papaia, Banani, and Ravioli—and their assistant, Igor, are supposed to attend the famous dark matter conference. However, they board the wrong flight and end up on the other side of the world. After landing at the wrong airport, they book a hotel for the night, but it’s not quite what they expected… meaning it’s awful.
Inside Papaia’s room.
After fleeing their own rooms, Banani and Ravioli decide to go to Papaia’s, where they start discussing the study Ravioli downloaded on the New Testament.
Banani thinks for a moment.
Banani: But there’s another problem. The manuscripts we have date back to the second century. How do we know the scribes didn’t change the original manuscripts, which have been lost?
Ravioli: Good question. But you have to consider that the original manuscripts were regarded as Scripture and were carefully preserved in the apostolic churches. Some of them were destroyed during persecutions, but others remained available to scribes for centuries.
Banani: Oh, right! I think I read something about this from one of the Church Fathers…
Ravioli: Exactly! Irenaeus of Lyon, in the second century, spoke about how the Scriptures were publicly read in churches, which means the copies had to be faithful to the originals.
Banani: So, if someone had tried to change something, people would have noticed?
Ravioli: Exactly! The churches had copies spread across different regions, and any modification would have been immediately evident when comparing the texts. That’s why scholars today can analyze textual variants and confirm that the essential content of the New Testament has remained unchanged.
Banani: I think it was Eusebius who wrote that some of the original manuscripts were still available in the apostolic churches.
Ravioli: That’s right! Eusebius of Caesarea, in the fourth century, mentioned that some churches still preserved the original manuscripts or very ancient copies. This means that, for centuries, scribes could compare their copies with older ones, reducing the risk of significant errors or alterations.
Banani: So it’s not like they were copying blindly?
Ravioli: No, quite the opposite! The copying process was very meticulous, especially because these were sacred texts. Even though small errors or variations inevitably crept into individual manuscripts, comparing thousands of them allows us to reconstruct the original text with great precision.
Igor then remarked:
Igor: “Copying process? Listen to him! Ravioli is an expert on the subject. Especially when it came to written exams at university…
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…a true master at copying others ‘with great precision’!”
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