One of the first discoveries that reshaped my thinking was
learning that the King James Version, authorized in 1611 by King James I
of England, was based primarily on a Greek text compiled in the sixteenth
century by the scholar Desiderius Erasmus. That Greek text, known as the Textus
Receptus, was constructed from a small number of manuscripts that Erasmus
happened to have available at the time—only about six or seven. Most of those
manuscripts dated from the twelfth to fifteenth centuries. In other words, the
textual foundation of the King James Version came from manuscripts copied
roughly a thousand years after the original writings of the New Testament.
When the King James translators did their work, those later
manuscripts were essentially all that Western scholars had access to. But in
the centuries since then, the discovery of many older manuscripts has
dramatically expanded our knowledge of the biblical text. Today scholars know
of nearly six thousand Greek manuscripts of the New Testament, along with
thousands more in Latin and other ancient languages. Among these are
manuscripts that are far older than anything Erasmus had access to. Two of the
most famous examples are Codex Sinaiticus and Codex Vaticanus. These
manuscripts date to the fourth century, meaning they are more than a thousand
years earlier than many of the manuscripts used to produce the King James
Version.
When scholars began comparing these earlier manuscripts with
the later ones used by Erasmus, they discovered something very interesting. In
most places the text is remarkably consistent, which speaks to the care with
which scribes preserved the scriptures. But in some passages the earliest
manuscripts paint a slightly different picture than the later manuscript
tradition. Certain verses that appear in the King James Bible are either absent
from the earliest manuscripts or appear in different forms. Examples often
discussed by scholars include the longer ending of the Gospel of Mark, the
story of the woman caught in adultery in John’s Gospel, and the famous
Trinitarian phrase in 1 John 5:7. These readings entered the later manuscript
tradition and therefore became part of the Textus Receptus, but they are not
found in the earliest witnesses we possess today.
For me this discovery did not undermine the Bible at all. In
fact, it made the text even more fascinating. The enormous number of
manuscripts available today allows scholars to trace the development of the
text with remarkable clarity. Rather than threatening faith, this process
reveals how carefully the scriptures were preserved over centuries. But it also
reminds us that a particular translation—especially one based on later
manuscripts—should not automatically be treated as if it represents the earliest
possible form of the text.
This is where the modern King James Only movement
often misses the larger picture. The King James Version is a beautiful and
historically significant translation. Its language has shaped English-speaking
Christianity for more than four hundred years. Yet insisting that it alone
represents the authentic Bible overlooks the fact that the translators
themselves were working with limited manuscript evidence. If those translators
had access to the earlier manuscripts discovered in the nineteenth and
twentieth centuries, they almost certainly would have taken those into account
as well.
My research also led me to explore the Old Testament
manuscript traditions, which opened an entirely new window into the history of
scripture. One of the most important discoveries in this area involves the Septuagint,
the ancient Greek translation of the Hebrew scriptures produced in Alexandria
several centuries before the time of Jesus. This translation became the Bible
of the early Christian movement. When the New Testament writers quoted the Old
Testament, they often quoted from the Greek Septuagint rather than from the
later standardized Hebrew text known as the Masoretic Text.
For centuries scholars assumed that whenever the Septuagint
differed from the Hebrew text it was simply because the Greek translators
misunderstood the Hebrew. But the discovery of the Dead Sea Scrolls in
the twentieth century changed that assumption dramatically. These scrolls
contain Hebrew manuscripts dating from two centuries before Christ to the first
century of the Christian era. In several places these ancient Hebrew
manuscripts agree with the Septuagint rather than with the later Masoretic
text. This means the Septuagint sometimes preserves readings that reflect older
Hebrew traditions that were circulating in the Second Temple period.
One passage that fascinated me appears in Deuteronomy 32:8.
In the later Masoretic Hebrew text the verse says that God divided the nations
according to the number of the “sons of Israel.” But both the Septuagint and
some Dead Sea Scroll manuscripts preserve a different reading: the nations were
divided according to the number of the “sons of God.” This difference suggests
that the ancient writers sometimes imagined the world as structured within a
larger spiritual order. In this worldview God presides over a heavenly assembly
of spiritual beings while Israel belongs directly to the Lord.
Other passages hint at the same idea. Psalm 82 depicts God
standing in the midst of a divine assembly and judging the “gods,” declaring
that although they are called sons of the Most High they will die like men.
Psalm 29 calls upon the “sons of God” to give glory to the Lord. Even in the
New Testament this layered cosmology is not entirely absent. Paul speaks about
principalities and powers, rulers of the present age, and spiritual authorities
operating behind the structures of the world. These passages suggest that the
spiritual imagination of the ancient world was far more cosmological and
multi-layered than the flattened worldview that sometimes developed in later
theological traditions.
As I studied these things, I began to see the Bible less as
a rigid doctrinal manual and more as a living record of humanity’s encounter
with divine reality across centuries. The scriptures were preserved within
communities that were asking profound questions about the nature of God, the
structure of the cosmos, and humanity’s place within it. When we examine the
manuscript traditions carefully, we gain a clearer window into that world.
For me personally, exploring the history of the biblical
manuscripts has deepened rather than diminished my appreciation for scripture.
The Bible becomes even more remarkable when we recognize the long chain of
translators, scribes, and seekers who preserved it. From the scholars who
produced the Septuagint in ancient Alexandria, to the communities that
preserved scrolls in the Judean desert, to the medieval scribes copying
manuscripts by hand, and finally to the translators of the King James Version
and beyond—each generation contributed to the transmission of these sacred
writings.
Understanding that history also reminds us to approach the
text with humility. The goal is not simply to defend a particular translation
or tradition but to seek the deeper truth the earliest witnesses were trying to
communicate. When we take the earliest manuscripts seriously and explore the
broader textual history of the Bible, we gain a richer and more nuanced
understanding of the biblical narrative and the spiritual world in which it
first emerged. In my own journey that realization has opened the door to a
deeper appreciation of both the scriptures and the vast spiritual story they
continue to tell.






