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by Susy Flory
Israel, 450 B.C. Benjamin loved numbers.
“Seventeen . . . eighteen . . . nineteen . . .” He
remembered counting his father's sheep each night. If
he missed even one, it might be snatched away by a
hungry wolf or robber and not survive the night.
Now Benjamin counted words, Hebrew letters inked
onto a papyrus scroll. Benjamin worked with a team of
scribes for the great priest Ezra to copy the holy
writings. He sat cross-legged on the floor, working with
a reed dipped in ink made from charcoal, gum and
water.
The room was noisy with the sound of Hebrew words
and numbers being spoken. Scribes said each word
aloud as they wrote. When a line was complete, the
scribe counted each letter to make sure he had not
added or left out anything.
Benjamin's job was to recount every letter, an extra
measure to ensure accuracy. If there was a copying
error, it was not erased or corrected. Instead the scroll
was placed in a sealed room called the genizah
and carefully guarded until it could be destroyed.
As Benjamin counted he smiled. These scrolls tell
the story of God and his people, he thought.
Benjamin realized he and the other scribes were a very
important part of His story.
Preserving God's Story
Many scribes, like Ezra, have worked diligently over
thousands of years to protect the accuracy of God's
Word. Check out a few of the reasons you can put your
faith in this amazing book.
Writing. The Bible is a collection of 66 separate
books, written over a period of about 1,500 years by 40
different authors. These writers included kings, military
commanders, fishermen, poets, musicians, scholars
and shepherds. They wrote in different time periods,
different styles, different languages and even in
different countries.
What makes the Bible unique is that every book was
inspired by a single author—God. And each of
the 66 books points to the same central message: God
created you, loves you and has a plan to save you
through His Son, Jesus.
Preserving. The Bible has outlasted kingdoms,
cultures and eras. It has survived wars, threats and
book burnings. God promises His Word will last forever:
“Heaven and earth will pass away, but my words will
never pass away” (Mark 13:31). Early in the history of
God's Word, the Scriptures were kept safe in the Ark of
the Covenant, the most holy place in all Israel.
For thousands of years, scribes, priests and massoretes
(specialists on the Scripture) guarded biblical writings,
carefully copying and counting every word, syllable and
letter. Today, scholars still examine and study the
thousands of existing manuscripts, guarding them
against errors.
Sharing. John Wycliffe first translated the Bible
into English in 1382. Before this, only churches owned
Bibles, which were written in Latin. They were kept
locked away, and the people had to rely on priests to
hear God's words. Today, translators continue to work
diligently so that someday every person will be able to
read the Bible in his or her own language.
In 1440, Johannes Gutenberg invented the printing
press. Fifteen years later he printed the Bible, making
the distribution of God's Word faster and more
affordable. In the last two centuries, an estimated 6
billion Bibles have been printed! In the United States,
91 percent of families own a Bible.
You. Like Benjamin, you are a very important
part of God's story. Every time you open a Bible, you're
opening a message from God. This message was
written to you and carefully protected, copied, saved,
translated and printed by people who loved and
treasured it. A Bible professor, Wilbur Smith, called the
Bible “the most remarkable volume that has ever been
produced in these some 5,000 years of writing on the
part of the human race.”
Does the Bible Have Mistakes?
Bible experts who study the thousands of existing Old
and New Testament manuscripts have concluded that
the Bible we have today is 99.99 percent accurate to
the authors' original writings.
More than 14,000 Old Testament manuscripts still
exist. Although copied by hundreds of different scribes,
the manuscripts are virtually identical. Of the more than
5,300 New Testament manuscripts in Greek that exist,
some date as far back as A.D. 60! An additional 19,000
copies of the New Testament exist in other languages.
Compare that to Homer's Iliad, the most
renowned book of ancient Greece. The Iliad has
only 643 copies, with the earliest one dating to 500
years after Homer wrote the original.
Another interesting Bible discovery took place between
1947 and 1956. The Dead Sea Scrolls, discovered in
caves near the ancient ruins of Qumran in the Middle
East, provided Scriptures from every Old Testament
book that dated back to 100 to 200 B.C. This proved
that the messianic prophecies copied before the time of
Christ are the exact ones we have in our Bibles today!
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