Hostname: page-component-8448b6f56d-wq2xx Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-16T15:00:14.873Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Vaticanus Distigme-obelos Symbols Marking Added Text, Including 1 Corinthians 14.34–5

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 September 2017

Philip B. Payne*
Affiliation:
Linguist's Software, 844 Alder St., Edmonds, WA 98020, USA. Email: philip.b.payne@gmail.com
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

The two-dot-plus-bar ‘distigme-obelos’ symbols in Vaticanus signal added text. Five characteristic features distinguish their obeloi from paragraphoi. Like scribe B's LXX obeloi, all eight distigme-obelos symbols mark the location of added text. A gap at the exact location of a widely recognised, multi-word addition follows every distigme-obelos except one with distinctive downward dipping strokes. The Vaticanus Gospels are so early that they have virtually no high stops, a feature older than even 75. Consequently, they contain none of these additions, but the Vaticanus epistles have high stops throughout and contain their one distigme-obelos-marked addition, 1 Cor 14.34–5. Contemporaneous LXX G has corresponding distigmai.

Type
Articles
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright
Copyright © Payne Loving Trust 2017

Introduction

This article publishes for the first time all eight instances in codex Vaticanus B (henceforth, Vaticanus) where a distigmeFootnote 1 identifying a textual variant is combined with a bar that has five specific characteristics.Footnote 2 It argues that just as bar-shaped obeloi in the Vaticanus prophets identify the locations of blocks of added text, so do all eight distigme-obelos symbols in the Vaticanus NT. Milne, Skeat and Canart ascribe each Vaticanus LXX book with obeloi and asterisks to the same scribe who penned the Vaticanus NT, scribe B.Footnote 3 On the line to the right of each distigme-obelos symbol – except one with a downward stroke from both dots and the bar, indicating a different hand – is a gap (henceforth, ‘following gap’) in the text at the exact location of a multi-word block of text widely recognised as not original, but added later (henceforth, ‘added text’). Only the original scribe could have put these gaps in the text. The distigme at Luke 14.24 matches the original Vaticanus ink. Therefore, since obeloi mark the location of added text, their conjunction with a gap at the exact location of added text is most naturally explained if scribe B penned these symbols and left the following gap to mark where text was added.

It appears that all studies of distigmai in Vaticanus agree that distigmai correlate closely with the location of textual variants.Footnote 4 Probability tests confirm this correlation to a high degree of reliability.Footnote 5 Ever since Canart concluded that fifty-one distigmai match the apricot colour of the original Vaticanus ink on the same page and identified traces of original ink protruding from some evidently re-inked distigmai,Footnote 6 there has been a growing acceptance that at least the original-ink-colour distigmai date to the fourth century and mark the location of textual variants.Footnote 7 Other surviving NT manuscripts contain a variant reading in over 92 per cent of these fifty-one distigme locations.Footnote 8

This article begins by establishing the use of distigmai near the time of Vaticanus in the fourth- or fifth-century LXX G. It then provides evidence that scribe B repeatedly left comments explaining that obeloi signify added text. After analysing the eight distigme-obelos symbols in the Vaticanus NT, it argues from the form and function of their characteristic bars that it is highly improbable these eight bars are simply paragraphoi unrelated either to the distigme or to the added text at the exact point of the following gap.

The article concludes by providing an explanation why the Vaticanus Gospels do not include any of the blocks of added text their five distigme-obelos symbols mark, but the Vaticanus epistles do include the block of added text their one distigme-obelos marks. The contrast between the presence of high stops throughout the Vaticanus epistles and their virtually complete absence from the Vaticanus Gospels indicates that practically all the Vaticanus Gospels’ text preceded the adding of high stops and so is earlier than the Vaticanus epistles’ text. It is even earlier than 75’s text, which has high stops throughout. This vindicates scholarly judgement that the Vaticanus Gospels’ text is earlier than its epistles’ text.Footnote 9 Its text is so early that it preceded all five of its distigme-obelos-marked additions, hence their omission from its Gospels.

This study demonstrates that scribe B was a careful textual critic who identifies 1 Cor 14.34–5, the only Bible passage silencing women in the church, as added text. Vaticanus provides early and credible judgement in what is widely regarded as the most important NT manuscript that vv. 34–5 were not in the body text Paul's original letter, but are a later addition. This is important theologically since it offers a resolution to the notorious difficulty of reconciling vv. 34–5 with Paul's many affirmations of women in vocal ministry and their equal standing with men in Christ.

1. Does Any Manuscript near the Time of Vaticanus Contain Distigmai?

The most extensive early hexaplaric manuscript known, the fourth- or fifth-century codex Colberto-Sarravianus,Footnote 10 called LXX G (henceforth, ‘G’), also marks the location of textual variants using distigmai. For example, the distigme at G 228 B20 (Deut 15.11) marks a textual variant between G and the LXX (see Fig. 1). The distigme in the margin is at the exact point where G omits words that occur in both the MT and LXX standard texts: ‘and to the one who is distressed’. It identifies where G text differs from the standard LXX text. Thus, like the Vaticanus distigmai, it marks the location of a Greek textual variant.Footnote 11

Figure 1. Distigme at LXX G 228 B20. Image made by the author from Vetus Testamentum graece: codicis Sarraviani-Colbertini quae supersunt in bibliothecis Leidensi, Parisiensi, Petropolitana phototypice edita (ed. H. Omont; Leiden: A. W. Sijthoff, 1897).

G's distigmai confirm that D. Parker was correct to reject C. Niccum's arguments that it is ‘likely’ the distigmai ‘originated with Sepulveda … Payne successfully vindicated his case [against Niccum's critique]’.Footnote 12 They also confirm E. Gravely's case against ‘the most recent (and only current) arguments for a late date for all the Vaticanus umlauts’ by P. Head.Footnote 13 Stark differences in ink colour in the same Vaticanus distigme, such as 1409 B25, 1469 A3 and 1501 B42,Footnote 14 are not compatible with Head's assertion that distigmai are all the product of the same process and of approximately the same date. Scribe B copied hexaplaric obeloi and asterisks, so may have also copied distigme use from a hexaplaric manuscript such as G, especially since the extensive parallels between these two manuscripts suggest they came from the same scriptorium.Footnote 15

2. Did Scribe B Understand that Obeloi Mark Added Text?

Scribe B used obeloi extensively and explained that they mark added text. Vaticanus is the principal manuscript showing hexaplaric readings in IsaiahFootnote 16 and also uses them in Zechariah, Malachi and Jeremiah. By the author's count, Vaticanus contains 121 obeloi but only twelve asterisks.Footnote 17 This illustrates the LXX translators’ far greater tendency to add than to omit text from the MT. Most obeloi are faint and appear to match the apricot colour of the original Vaticanus ink. Every Vaticanus LXX obelos is bar-shaped except four with two dots and a long bar (÷), each marking text not in the MT.Footnote 18 One of these four is in the middle of text (1016 C12 at Isa 14.23),Footnote 19 so is properly assigned to scribe B.

Vaticanus explains what obeloi signify three times in Isaiah adjacent to an obelos: ‘the [lines] marked with an obelos contain [text] not in [the] Hebrew [text]’.Footnote 20 In addition, Canart judges the explanation to be in the same ink as the original text of Vaticanus at 988 A7, 1034 B31 ( in original ink), 1046 A40, 1073 C36 and 1074 B17,Footnote 21 locations with no obelos. Each signals text not in the MT.Footnote 22 Their original apricot colour, their lack of obeloi, and the same explanation in apparently original ink with an obelos at 992 A20,Footnote 23 make scribe B the most likely originator of the Vaticanus abbreviations. All this indicates that scribe B knew enough about the Hebrew MT to mark where the LXX added text to the MT, even where Vaticanus’ exemplar had no obelos. It also indicates that scribe B faithfully copied the exemplar without even adding obeloi.

The obelos was the standard symbol for spurious text in ancient Greek literature.Footnote 24 Indeed, it was its ‘first and most important’ text-critical symbol.Footnote 25 F. Schironi argues it has ‘a rather unequivocal meaning’ so the reader knows that an obelised ‘line is considered spurious, and this is an unambiguous piece of information’.Footnote 26 Basil (ca. 329–79), Hex. 4–5, identifies the obelos in the LXX as , a symbol of spurious text. Consequently, scribe B would understand that adding an obelos to a distigme would specify what kind of variant it marked, namely added text.

3. The Eight Vaticanus Distigmai Adjacent to a Characteristic Bar

Eight bars in the Vaticanus NT adjacent to a distigme correspond in shape to scribe B's LXX obeloi but are graphically different in two respects from the Vaticanus paragraphoi that occur at random adjacent to a distigme. First, they protrude into the margin,Footnote 27 on average, 3.0 mm compared to a sharply contrasting 1.6 mm for the twenty undisputed paragraphoi. Their greater extension into the margin brings them closer to the adjacent distigme, associating them with the standard Vaticanus symbol marking the location of textual variants. The characteristic bar adjacent to a distigme at the interface of 1 Cor 14.33 and 34 extends 3 mm into the margin. In contrast, the seventy-five other bars in 1 Corinthians extend, on average, 2 mm into the margin, and only one of these seventy-five extends 3 mm into the margin (1475 B29).Footnote 28 Greater extension into the margin is their primary graphic distinction, but they also average 4.7 mm long compared to the remaining twenty bars’ 3.6 mm average length. Thus, not only do they extend on average almost twice as far into the margin as these twenty undisputed paragraphoi, they are, on average, almost one third longer, as the characteristic bars near paragraphoi in Figs. 2–4 illustrate.

Figure 2. Matthew 13.51. Photograph by author.

Figure 3. Luke 1.28–9. Photograph by author.

Figure 4. 1 Corinthians 14.33–4 and 38–9. Photographs by author.

Of the twenty-eight bars following a distigme, only these eight combine noticeably further extension into the margin with noticeably greater length.

The function of the eight bars in question also evidently differs from paragraphoi. Each occurs at the location of a widely acknowledged block of added text. The NA28 apparatus identifies a multi-word textual variant at least three words long at each of these eight locations. In each case, at least two words are completely different from the Vaticanus text, not just different forms of the same word. ‘Multi-word variant’ entails this characteristic henceforth.

NA28’s apparatus is an appropriate basis for assessing whether distigme-obelos symbols are text-critical symbols since NA28 identifies ‘variants of text-historical relevance’.Footnote 29 Multi-word additions have important text-historical relevance. Scribe B marked added text in the LXX prophets with obeloi and explanations that text was added. This proves he or sheFootnote 30 regarded blocks of added text as significant. B. Ehrman, as others, argues that ‘even readings that are not attested in the fragmentary remains of the ante-Nicene age … are by and large best understood as deriving from documents of the first three centuries … The vast majority of all textual variants originated during … the second and third centuries.’Footnote 31 This highlights the value of the NA28 apparatus for identifying early textual variants.

Following all eight distigmai adjacent to a characteristic bar, except the one whose downward dipping strokes indicate that a different scribe penned it, there is a gap either in the middle or at the end of the line of text at the exact location of a multi-word, widely acknowledged block of added text. By contrast, a gap occurs in only twelve of the twenty lines following a distigme adjacent to an undisputed paragraphos (60 per cent).Footnote 32 Thus, both their characteristic form and apparent function distinguish these eight bars from paragraphoi and support viewing them as distigme-obelos symbols. The following analysis, however, refers to them neutrally as ‘characteristic bars’ until concluding that they are distigme-obelos symbols.

Following five of the seven apparently original characteristic bars, scribe B left a mid-line gap at least one letter wide at the exact location where other manuscripts add text. This far exceeds the average in Matthew of a correspondingly wide, mid-line gap only once every 23.5 lines of text.Footnote 33 The other two bars are at the location of a block of added text at a gap at the end of a line that is at least one letter shorter than the average line length in that column.

Following are images of all eight distigmai adjacent to a characteristic bar (Figs. 5–12). Each figure's title gives that passage's verse reference and its Vaticanus page number and column. The triangle in each image identifies the exact location of widely recognised, added text. After each image are the added text and the manuscripts NA28, NA27, and/or Swanson lists with this addition or providing evidence of it.

Figure 5. Matthew 13.51 1253 B. Photograph by author.

C K L N W Γ Δ Θ 0233 ƒ1.13 33. 565. 579. 700. 892. 1241. 1424 f h q syc.p.h bomss (a vgmss mae)

Figure 6. Matthew 18.11 1259 A. Photograph by author.

(+ Lmg 579. 892c c syh bopt) D K Lmg N W Γ Δ Θc 078vid. 565. 579. 700. 892c. 1241. 1424 lat syc.p.h bopt

Figure 7. Mark 5.40 1284 C. Photograph by author.

Footnote 34 M Φ ƒ1 124 pc syh**

Figure 8. Luke 1.28 1305 A. Photograph by author.

A C D K Γ Δ Θ ƒ13 33. 892. 1424. 2542. l 2211 latt sy bomss; Eus

Figure 9. Luke 14.24–5 1332 C. Photograph by author.

Ec Fmg G Y M* S Γ Λ Ω 1c 118c ƒ13 2. 28c. 579. 700. 892mg.1071 al

Canart confirmed that the Luke 14.24 distigme matches the colour of the original Vaticanus ink.Footnote 35

Figure 10. Acts 2.47 1385 B. Photograph by author.

D (p) mae

Figure 11. Acts 6.10 1390 A. Photograph by author.

D h t w syhmg (mae)

Acts 6.10 is the only one of these eight whose following line of text contains no noticeable gap. Both dots and the bar have downward strokes that are strikingly different from the other seven and distinguish it from the handwriting of scribe B. Consequently, it is highly doubtful this distigme and characteristic bar were in the original text. Furthermore, the added text is not as memorable as any of the other seven. Pamphilus and Eusebius circulated Origen's edited LXX text with obeloi and asterisks extensively in Palestine in the fourth century, so its readers, and any reader familiar with the obelos, including the obeloi in the Vaticanus prophetic books, would know that the obelos identifies the location of added text.Footnote 36 Presumably, one such scribe or reader understood that a distigme plus an obelos-shaped characteristic bar marks added text and inserted this one at Acts 6.10 to mark that another manuscript adds text here.

Figure 12. 1 Corinthians 14.33–4 1474 A. Photograph by author.

Vss 34/35 pon. p. 40 D F G ar b vgms; Ambst ¦ [– Straatman cj]. D. Parker observes, ‘Such variation in positioning often indicates an interpolation.’Footnote 37

If this distigme had indicated a transposition to the ‘Western’ location, there should also have been a distigme after v. 40 to indicate the corresponding variant there – but there is no distigme after v. 40. In any event, no other Vaticanus distigme plus characteristic bar occurs where there is a transposition within a passage. They all mark the location of multi-word additions, just like scribe B's obeloi in the Vaticanus prophetic books do. Consequently, this distigme plus characteristic bar far more appropriately identifies the addition of 14.34–5 than a transposition.

Should one trust scribe B's distigme-obelos marking 14.34–5 as added text? NA28 and manuscript evidence confirms a block of added text at the gap after every other scribe B distigme-obelos. To judge from the range of manuscripts reflected in those textual variants and original-ink-colour distigme variants and by the Vaticanus Gospel's early text, scribe B had access to far more early manuscript text than is now extant, enough to trust scribe B's judgement on 14.34–5.Footnote 38

Transcriptional probability also argues that these verses’ differing locations result from a marginal gloss, not transposition. ‘The reading which can most easily explain the derivation of the other forms is itself most likely the original.’Footnote 39 No Pauline manuscript transposes any other passage nearly this large this far without an obvious reason.Footnote 40 The most detailed attempt to find long transpositions in ‘Western’ manuscripts identifies only three instances. The longest moves a seven- or eleven-word benediction three verses forward for the obvious reason, to make ‘an apt conclusion to the letter’.Footnote 41 A thirty-six- to forty-word transposition five verses away with no obvious reason is unprecedented in any Pauline manuscript. It was conventional, however, for scribes to copy text in the margin, including reader comments, into the body text, as U. Schmid has shown.Footnote 42 Vaticanus itself exemplifies this convention. Seventeen of its twenty instances of readable small uncial text in the margins of Matthew appear in the body text of most later manuscripts.Footnote 43 Something conventional is far more likely to occur than something unprecedented. One early copyist apparently inserted vv. 34–5 from the margin into the text after v. 40, which gave rise to their ‘Western’ location. Another early copyist apparently inserted vv. 34–5 after v. 33, which gave rise to their usual location.Footnote 44 This is the only explanation of this text's two locations congruent with common scribal practice. A marginal gloss far better explains both locations of vv. 34–5 than does an unprecedented transposition for no obvious reason. It is doubtful that vv. 34–5 could fit in a papyrus margin if written in Paul's ‘large hand’.Footnote 45

At least sixty-two textual studies argue that 14.34–5 is a later addition.Footnote 46 J. Fitzmyer notes that ‘the majority of commentators today’ regard vv. 34–5 as a later addition.Footnote 47 K. Haines-Eitzen affirms this of ‘[n]early all scholars now’.Footnote 48 Verses 34–5 silence women in church three times without any qualification. Chapter 11, however, guides how women should prophesy, and chapter 14, vv. 5, 24 (3x), 26 and 31 affirm ‘all’ speaking in church. Popular resolutions of this apparent contradiction limit 14.34–5's demand for silence only to disruptive chatter or, recently contrived, only to judging prophecies. These resolutions should be rejected since they permit speech v. 35 prohibits, namely asking questions from a desire to learn. In light of substantial evidence that vv. 34–5 were originally a marginal gloss and no evidence that any other block of text was added at this gap,Footnote 49 these verses are the obvious candidate for the multi-word addition signalled by this distigme plus characteristic bar.

In six of the eight cases under discussion, the addition is to the line of text the bar underscores. Paragraphoi also underscore a line of text when the paragraph break occurs within that line. When a paragraph ends at the end of a line, a paragraphos underscores that line, marking the interface between the paragraphs. Likewise, two characteristic bars adjacent to distigmai underscore the last line of the original text and mark the interface between original text and a later addition. Luke 14.24 ends with a five-letter gap (see Fig. 9). The characteristic bar marks the interface between the original text and the later addition, ‘For many are called but few are chosen.’ Similarly, the two-letter gap compared with the next lineFootnote 50 at the end of 1 Cor 14.33 marks the interface between the original text and the widely recognised addition, ‘Let women be silent in the churches … for it is a disgrace for a woman to speak in church’ (vv. 34–5) (see Fig. 12). A line preceded by a bar but followed by a distigme also separates John 7.52 from John 8.12 and marks the interface between the original text and the Pericope Adulterae.

All eight additions are arguably important theologicallyFootnote 51 and include some of the passages most widely regarded as later additions: ‘Jesus said to them’ (Matt 13.51), ‘For the Son of Humanity came to save the lost’ (Matt 18.11), ‘but Jesus [with an article]’ (Mark 5.40), ‘Blessed are you among women!’ (Luke 1.28), ‘For many are called but few are chosen’ (Luke 14.24), ‘in the church. In those days’ (Acts 2.47), ‘Because it was to convict them concerning him with all boldness, since they were not able to face the truth directly’ (Acts 6.10), and ‘Let women be silent in the churches … for it is a disgrace for a woman to speak in church’ (1 Cor 14.34–5). The content of the addition is easily memorable in every case except the one with distinctive downward strokes at Acts 6.10. Scribe B, who also marked text the LXX added to the MT with similarly shaped obeloi, was apparently aware of these seven memorable NT additions, left a gap at the exact point they begin, and highlighted their location with a distigme and characteristic bar.

4. Are These Characteristic Bars Paragraphoi or Obeloi, or Do They Have a Dual Function?

C. Niccum writes that the bars following distigmai ‘date to the fourth century’ but are paragraphoi, not obeloi.Footnote 52 He, Miller and Shack, although acknowledging that distigmai mark the location of textual variants, deny that there is any association between any bar and the adjacent distigme, and they deny that either these bars or the following gap mark the location of added text.Footnote 53 Shack asserts that it ‘is only a coincidence’ that these bars are followed by gaps that always occur at the exact location where multi-word blocks of text were added.Footnote 54

Even if there were no graphic differences between these eight bars and paragraphoi, their combination with distigmai could signal a more specific purpose just as other combined symbols do in Vaticanus. For example, a baseline dot functions like a comma at 1474 A1 and 36, but added to a high stop it signifies a section break at 1474 B4. Similarly, a short slash descending from left of the middle of a paragraphos specifies a section or book break.Footnote 55 Although their component parts individually convey distinct meanings, together these composite symbols convey a specific meaning that incorporates some of the meaning of both. Similarly, scribe B may have combined these distigmai with bars to convey a specific meaning.

There are, however, graphic differences between these eight bars and the other twenty bars adjacent to a distigme. All eight combine noticeably greater extension into the margin with noticeably greater length than the other twenty. Functionally also, all eight mark the location of widely acknowledged, multi-word, added text, which is the purpose of obeloi. This extraordinarily consistent pattern supports the identification of these characteristic bars as obeloi.

There are various possible relationships between the eight characteristic bars and obeloi and/or paragraphoi. Some of these blocks of added text occur at a natural paragraph break. Four of the seven gaps coincide with a paragraph break in NA28, and three with a paragraph break in the UBS5.Footnote 56 Only the gap at the interface of 1 Cor 14.33 and 34 is in the middle of an NA28 and UBS5 sentence. A. Lavrinoviča concluded, however, that every manuscript up to the twelfth century has a break at the beginning of v. 34, with the possible exception of the ambiguous 123.Footnote 57 This NA28 and UBS5 paragraph break, therefore, is not where virtually any early scribe understood it should be. Vaticanus has a high stop after v. 33, and all early ‘Western’ Greek text scribes treat vv. 34–5 as a unit. Scribe B may have even regarded all seven gaps as occurring at a paragraph break. Or scribe B may have positioned the first three characteristic bars in the normal paragraphos location because they are all at natural paragraph breaks, then retained the same position for the others to keep them consistent.

By extending these eight bars on average almost twice as far into the margin as the other twenty bars following a distigme,Footnote 58 scribe B associated the bar with the distigme marking the location of a textual variant. The obelos shape of the long bar and each gap at the exact location of a block of widely acknowledged added text strongly indicate that the bar does not function merely as a paragraphos, but also or especially as an obelos.

Four factors explain why scribe B did not simply use the usual LXX obelos position entirely in the margin to mark these blocks of text added to the NT. First, that position had already been taken by the customary Vaticanus distigme marking where these Greek variants occur. Second, this Vaticanus LXX obelos position marks text actually in Vaticanus as added, but the added words are not in the Vaticanus NT text, except in the last case.Footnote 59 Third, that obelos position marks differences between the LXX and MT, not between Greek texts. Fourth, readers associated hexaplaric marginal symbols with the LXX, not the NT.

A dual purpose of (1) marking the location of added text (2) at a paragraph break would explain the paragraphos position of the NT obeloi. An additional benefit (or alternative explanation) of this position is that putting an obelos below and to the right of a distigme is a logical way to specify the location of a specific kind of textual variant, the same kind scribe B's obeloi identify in the LXX, blocks of added text.

5. How Strong is the Evidence that These Eight Bars are not Simply Paragraphoi?

What is the statistical probability that in a random distribution all eight characteristic bars following distigmai would be at the location of a textual variant at least three words long in manuscripts cited in NA28’s apparatus? Using Matthew as a conservative baseline, the probability that all eight Vaticanus lines would coincide with the location of a multi-word variant listed in NA28 is 1 in 31.88 = 1,045,723,722,517.Footnote 60

Since distigmai mark the location of textual variants, however, lines following distigmai in Vaticanus are more likely to coincide with textual variants, including multi-word variants, than random lines are. So, this author compared the occurrence of multi-word variants at these eight distigmai adjacent to characteristic bars (eight of eight) to the twenty distigmai adjacent to undisputed paragraphoi (two of twenty).Footnote 61 The standard probability test shows that the likelihood of such a stark difference occurring at random is far less than one in 10,000.Footnote 62 This is over 500 times greater than the threshold needed to reject the null hypothesis. In this case, the null hypothesis is that characteristic bars adjacent to distigmai do not correlate with multi-word textual variants. This test result justifies distinguishing the eight characteristic bars from paragraphoi.

Furthermore, a gap follows all seven apparently original distigme-obelos symbols at the exact point where a multi-word addition begins. This identifies their location over sixteen times more precisely than simply somewhere in the line.Footnote 63

All this shows to a high degree of probability that these characteristic bars are not simply paragraphoi that merely by chance share the following five characteristic traits:

  1. 1. Each occurs immediately after a distigme.

  2. 2. Each extends noticeably further into the margin than most bars adjacent to distigmai.

  3. 3. Each is noticeably longer than most bars adjacent to distigmai.

  4. 4. Each occurs at the location of a widely recognised, multi-word addition.

  5. 5. A gap at the precise location of this addition follows all seven apparently original characteristic bars.

None of the other twenty bars adjacent to a distigme, which fulfils the first characteristic, shares more than two of the remaining four characteristics. Mere coincidence does not adequately explain the data.

All eight characteristic bars occur at the location of the same kinds of additions that scribe B marked with similarly shaped obeloi where the LXX added text to the MT. Since these eight characteristic horizontal bars are distinguishable in both form and function from paragraphoi, since their primary function of identifying the location of blocks of added text is the standard function of obeloi, and since this is not a function of paragraphoi, they should be recognised as obeloi. Since a distigme identifies a textual variant, and since an obelos identifies a specific category of textual variant, text that was added after the original composition, ‘distigme-obelos’ is the most appropriate name for this symbol. This conclusion is compatible with the possibility that some or all distigme-obelos symbols, as a secondary function, mark a paragraph break and that this may have influenced the obelos position.

6. Why does Vaticanus Include the Added Text Only after the One Distigme-obelos in the Epistles and Never in the Gospels?

1 Cor 14.34–5, the text at the gap following the only distigme-obelos in the Vaticanus epistles,Footnote 64 is the only added text marked by a distigme-obelos to be found in the Vaticanus text. Why is the added text here, but never in the Gospels? A satisfying answer comes from a surprising source. ‘There is nothing apparently more “minor” or “trivial” than a mere dot, and yet matters of significance can depend on one.’Footnote 65 High stops hardly ever occur in the Vaticanus Gospels, but they mark the end of sentences throughout the Vaticanus epistles.Footnote 66 Since scribe B copied both the Vaticanus Gospels and epistles, why this sharp contrast in use of high stops? The most natural explanation, and the only one congruent with a copyist's primary task, to reproduce the exemplar's text, is that the Gospels’ exemplar(s) had virtually no high stops, but the epistles’ exemplar(s) used high stops extensively, and scribe B copied both exemplars faithfully enough to preserve this difference. Canart agrees with this explanation.Footnote 67

The text of 75 (NA28, 796, third century) is remarkably similar to the corresponding text of Vaticanus throughout Luke and John.Footnote 68 Unlike the Vaticanus Gospels, however, 75 uses high stops extensively. Like the Vaticanus Gospels, none of the NT papyri NA28 identifies as second-century (52, 90, 98, 104) contains a high stop. Metzger and Ehrman write, ‘the earliest manuscripts have very little punctuation’,Footnote 69 and the Alands state, ‘the original texts … naturally also lacked punctuation’.Footnote 70 The lack of high stops in the Vaticanus Gospels, therefore, indicates a text even earlier than 75’s text. It corroborates both halves of Metzger's judgement: ‘Since B is not a lineal descendent of 75, the common ancestor of both carries the … text to a period prior to ad 175–225, the date assigned to 75.Footnote 71 It also supports Pisano's affirmation ‘of the text of B as an extremely reliable witness …, especially of the Gospels and Acts’.Footnote 72

The contrast in use of high stops between the Gospels and epistles in Vaticanus adds to other evidence that scribe B was careful to preserve the text of the Vaticanus exemplars. Only scribe B preserved obeloi and asterisks in the Vaticanus LXX text. As explained above (pp. 5–6), the original-ink (‘is not in the Hebrew’) where there are no obeloi in the prophetic books shows that scribe B did not even add obeloi to the exemplar's text.Footnote 73 Scribe B preserved text its exemplars added both in the prophets and in 1 Cor 14.34–5, but marked these as later additions. In keeping with such faithful manuscript copying, it appears that scribe B faithfully copied the Vaticanus Gospels’ exemplar with virtually no high stops but its epistles’ exemplar with abundant high stops. This thesis, that scribe B faithfully copied a primitive text of the Gospels, explains both why the Vaticanus Gospels have virtually no high stops and why its text does not include any of the five blocks of added text its distigme-obelos symbols mark. The Vaticanus Gospels’ text is so early that it preceded each of these five additions.Footnote 74

Conclusion

Distigmai in Vaticanus mark the location of Greek textual variants, as do some distigmai in the fourth- or fifth-century LXX G. Eight of the twenty-eight bars adjacent to distigmai are different from the other twenty in four respects:

  1. 1. They extend, on average, almost twice as far into the margin as the other twenty.

  2. 2. They are, on average, almost one third longer than the other twenty.

  3. 3. Each occurs at the location of a widely recognised, multi-word addition to the text.

  4. 4. All but one, with downward dipping strokes from both dots and the bar, indicating a different hand,Footnote 75 have a gap in the following line at the precise location of the addition.

None of the other twenty bars shares both the first two graphic differences, and only two of the other twenty bars are at the location of a multi-word textual variant.

Seven key facts support the conclusion that all eight of these characteristic bars adjacent to a distigme are obeloi marking the location of a block of added text:

  1. 1. A multi-word textual variant in NA28’s apparatus occurs at all eight locations. If all eight were simply paragraphoi, this conjunction would have to be mere coincidence. The standard statistical test result rejects the coincidence hypothesis to a degree of probability over 500 times greater than the normal threshold needed to reject this hypothesis.

  2. 2. Scribe B left a gap at the exact location of a widely acknowledged block of added text following every characteristic bar, except one that is evidently from a different hand.

  3. 3. None of the other twenty bars adjacent to a distigme combines as much extension into the margin and total length as any of the eight characteristic bars.

  4. 4. Scribe B used horizontal-bar-form obeloi in the Vaticanus LXX prophets to mark the locations of blocks of added text. Only the original scribe could have penned the obelos in the text of Isa 14.23, and explanations that obeloi mark added text contain original Vaticanus ink. These lines of evidence confirm that scribe B understood that obeloi mark added text.

  5. 5. The eight long characteristic bars adjacent to distigmai resemble the shape of the 117 long horizontal-bar-form obeloi attributed to scribe B in the Vaticanus prophets.

  6. 6. The obelos was the standard Greek symbol to mark added text.

  7. 7. Other NT manuscripts also use obeloi to mark blocks of added text, including John 7.53–8.11 and Mark's longer endings.Footnote 76 Apparently, every manuscript with an obelos introducing Mark's longer ending notes that this ending is not ‘in some of the copies’.

The name ‘distigme-obelos’ is ideal since it identifies the form of these symbols, a ‘two dot-horizontal line’, and their function, marking the location of blocks of added text. Their extension into the margin, on average, almost twice as far as the other twenty bars after distigmai, associates them with the adjacent distigme. The distigme-obelos symbols simply combine the Vaticanus standard distigme, marking the location of textual variants, with scribe B's favourite horizontal-bar-form obelos, specifying the variant is added text.

The virtually complete absence of high stops in the Vaticanus Gospels but their presence throughout the Vaticanus epistles and 75 indicates that the text of the Vaticanus Gospels is earlier than the text of the Vaticanus epistles and of 75. This explains why the only case where a distigme-obelos marks added text that is actually in the text of Vaticanus is in its epistles. The Vaticanus Gospels preserve a text so early, it is not contaminated by any of the five additions its distigme-obelos symbols mark.

These symbols give evidence scribe B was aware of variants, copied exemplars faithfully, and preferred the earliest possible text. Scribe B was extraordinarily careful not to add to or take away text from Vaticanus’ exemplars, not even adding high stops or obeloi at some places where original ink marginal notes identify LXX additions to the MT. Scribe B identifies 1 Cor 14.34–5 as added text,Footnote 77 but faithfully preserved those verses from the epistles’ exemplar, just as scribe B faithfully preserved obelised text in the Vaticanus prophets. It is precisely because of this honesty with the textual data that scribe B's text-critical judgements should be respected, not dismissed. All this supports Birdsall's judgment, ‘Behind the quality of the New Testament text in this codex, there appears to be critical “know-how”.’Footnote 78 Since manuscripts confirm the accuracy of every other one of scribe B's distigme-obelos text-critical judgements, one ought to assume that scribe B also had manuscript evidence that 1 Cor 14.34–5 is added text. Indeed, scribe B evidently had access to far more early NT manuscript text than survives today.Footnote 79

This is important theologically since the distigme-obelos at the interface of 1 Cor 14.33 and 34 provides a resolution to the notorious difficulty of reconciling vv. 34–5 with 1 Corinthians 11's inclusion of women prophesying and chapter 14's affirmations of ‘all’ prophesying: vv. 34–5 were not in Paul's original letter, but are a later addition. Therefore, Paul's unqualified affirmations of the equal standing of man and woman in Christ (Gal 3.28; Romans 16; Corinthians 7; 11.11–12) need not be qualified by vv. 34–5's huge caveat. Nor must one resort to exegetically implausible interpretations of vv. 34–5.

Just as critical editions use B¨ to designate Vaticanus’ distigmai marking the locations of textual variants,Footnote 80 this study recommends using B¨– to designate the eight distigme-obelos symbols marking added text. An appropriate apparatus entry for the omission of 1 Cor 14.34–5 is: om. B¨– 88* Fuldensismg Cl TP.Footnote 81

References

1 D. Parker, H. Houghton, T. Wasserman, M. Holmes, T. Brown, P. Canart, P. Andrist, P. Payne and classicist A. Kelly chose this name (plural, distigmai). For their reasons, see Payne, P. and Canart, P., ‘Distigmai Matching the Original Ink of Codex Vaticanus: Do They Mark the Location of Textual Variants?’, Le manuscrit B de la Bible (Vaticanus graecus 1209): Introduction au fac-similé, Actes du Colloque de Genève (11 juin 2001), Contributions supplémentaires (ed. Andrist, P.; Lausanne: Éditions du Zèbre, 2009) 199–226, at 199–200Google Scholar. The current article uses this now-conventional name and the corresponding Greek forms ‘obelos’, ‘obeloi’ and ‘distigme-obelos’ to be consistent with recent scholarly literature about these Vaticanus symbols.

2 See below, pp. 620–1.

3 Milne, H. and Skeat, T., Scribes and Correctors of the Codex Sinaiticus (London: British Museum, 1938) 8790Google Scholar; Skeat, T., ‘The Codex Sinaiticus, the Codex Vaticanus, and Constantine’, JTS NS 50 (1999) 583625, at 604CrossRefGoogle Scholar; P. Canart, ‘Le Vaticanus graecus 1209: notice paléographique et codicologique’, Le manuscrit B, 19–43, at 25.

4 As concluded by Gravely, E., ‘The Relationship of the Vaticanus Umlauts to Family 1’, Digging for the Truth: Collected Essays Regarding the Byzantine Text of the Greek New Testament: A Festschrift in Honor of Maurice A. Robinson (ed. Billington, M. and Streitenberger, P.; Norden, Germany: FYM, 2014) 5472, at 54Google Scholar and Wasserman, T., The Epistle of Jude: Its Text and Transmission (CBNTS 43; Stockholm: Almqvist & Wiksell, 2006) 239Google Scholar.

5 Payne and Canart, ‘Distigmai’, 209–10 identify two chi-square test results, both showing that the probability of such a high correlation between original-ink-colour distigmai and NA28 textual variants occurring in random distribution is far less than 1 in 10,000.

6 Payne and Canart, ‘Distigmai’, 203–9, 214–15 identify protruding ink at 1469 A3 and 1501 B42. In both cases NA28 cites a variant. Original-ink-colour distigmai occur by each of the six columns in roughly even distribution: respectively, eight, nine, seven, seven, nine, eleven. Consequently, they defy any explanation of their distinctive apricot colour based on their position on the page.

7 Including W. Willker, ‘Codex Vaticanus Graece 1209, B/03: The Umlauts’, www.willker.de/wie/Vaticanus/umlauts.html; Miller, J., ‘Some Observations on the Text-Critical Function of the Umlauts in Vaticanus, with Special Attention to 1 Corinthians 14.34–35’, JSNT 26 (2003) 217–36Google Scholar; Epp, E., Junia: The First Woman Apostle (Minneapolis: Fortress, 2005) 1819Google Scholar; Wasserman, Jude, 239; Amphoux, C., ‘Codex Vaticanus B: les points diacritiques des marges de Marc’, JTS NS 58 (2007) 440–66, at 447CrossRefGoogle Scholar; P. Andrist, ‘Le milieu de production du Vaticanus graecus 1209 et son histoire postérieure: le canon d'Eusèbe, les listes du IVe siècle des livres canoniques, les distigmai et les manuscrits connexes’, Le manuscrit B, 227–56, at 240–52; Canart, ‘Vaticanus graecus 1209’, 42; A. Lavrinoviča, ‘1.Kor.14:34,35 – Interpolācija?’ (Master's Thesis, University of Latvia, 2012) 69–70; Forte, A., ‘Observations on the 28th Revised Edition of Nestle–Aland's Novum Testamentum Graece’, Biblica 94 (2013) 268–92, at 289–91Google Scholar; Shack, J., ‘A Text Without 1 Corinthians 14.34–35? Not According to the Manuscript Evidence’, JGRChJ 10 (2014) 90112, at 102 n. 45Google Scholar; and Gravely, ‘Vaticanus Umlauts’, 54.

8 All but numbers 4, 35, 42 and 51 in Payne and Canart, ‘Distigmai’, 204–9. Swanson, R., New Testament Greek Manuscripts, Variant Readings Arranged in Horizontal Lines against Codex Vaticanus: 1 Corinthians (Wheaton, IL/Pasadena, CA: Tyndale House/William Carey, 2003) 125, 178, 211 and 257Google Scholar lists variants for numbers 46, 47, 48 and 49 at 1 Cor 9.6–7; 11.28; 14.3; and 15.34.

9 E.g. Pisano, S., ‘The Text of the New Testament’, Bibliorum Sacrorum Graecorum Codex Vaticanus B: Prolegomena (Rome: Istituto Poligrafico e Zecca dello Stato, 1999) 2741, at 40Google Scholar.

10 Explanatio signorum, quae in Septuaginta (ed. Rahlfs, A.; Stuttgart: Württembergische Bibelanstalt, 1935)Google Scholar.

11 Similarly, the distigme at G 219 B8 marks as an addition to both the standard LXX text and the MT. If the two dots were joined, the resulting line would be far shorter than any G obelos. G 273 A12's distigme marks text replacing the MT. G 144 A28 and 229 A15's distigmai function as obeloi.

12 D. Parker, ‘Through a Screen Darkly: Digital Texts and the New Testament’, JSNT (2003) 395–411, at 408 n. 17. Niccum, C., ‘The Voice of the Manuscripts on the Silence of Women: The External Evidence for 1 Cor 14.34–5’, NTS 43 (1997) 242–55, at 245, n. 20CrossRefGoogle Scholar. Payne, P. and Canart, P., ‘The Originality of Text-critical Symbols in Codex Vaticanus’, NovT 42 (2000) 105–13, at 109 n. 25Google Scholar and Payne, P., Man and Woman, One in Christ: An Exegetical and Theological Study of Paul's Letters (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 2009) 235–7Google Scholar rebut Niccum's arguments.

13 Gravely, ‘Vaticanus Umlauts’, 54–5 regarding P. Head, ‘The Marginalia of Codex Vaticanus: Putting the Distigmai in their Place’, presented to the SBL New Testament Textual Criticism Seminar, New Orleans, 2009. Cf. E. Gravely, ‘The Text Critical Sigla in Codex Vaticanus’ (PhD diss., Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary, 2009) 81–9, www.pbpayne.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/03/Critique-of-Vaticanus-Marginalia-15Apr2010.pdf, gives a detailed critique of Head's argument.

14 Payne and Canart, ‘Distigmai’, 214–15, with a magnified photograph, Plate 8b.

15 Daniel Buck suggests this, noting that both omit Deut 9.22's at http://evangelicaltextualcriticism.blogspot.com/2010/02/putting-distigmai-in-their-place-payne_08.html. Both are biblical manuscripts of similar date with hexaplaric content and extensive text in double columns (all 306 surviving G pages and Vaticanus 625–893) on vellum by skilled calligraphers using similar letter-forms. Scholars identify Alexandria as the provenance of both G and Vaticanus. They share similar use of distigmai, bar-shaped and ÷ shaped obeloi, asterisks, diplai, nomina sacra and spelling ( for ).

16 Andrist, ‘Le milieu’, 242; Plate 4b shows both asterisks and obeloi. J. Ziegler, ed., Isaias (Septuaginta: Vetus Testamentum Graecum auctoritate Academiae Scientiarum Gottingensis editum 14; Göttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 19833) 38–41 identifies B and V as the main group of hexaplaric witnesses for Isaiah.

17 117 bar-shaped obeloi (Isaiah has ninety-two, Jeremiah nine, Zechariah eleven, Malachi five), 4 ÷ shaped obeloi in Isaiah, 6 asterisks each in Zechariah and Isaiah.

18 The ÷ shaped obelos occurs by 1012 C9, 1014 C15 and 1016 C12 (twice).

19 Ziegler, Isaias, 56 incorrectly writes that there are no obeloi in the text.

20 At Isa 51.23; 54.17; 60.14 and abbreviated at Isa 36.22; Zech 8.2. Cf. Ziegler, Isaias, 56. Peter Gentry's 6 June 2015 email to the author identifies as the perfect medio-passive of . The OdysseaUBSU Greek font used throughout this article is available from www.linguistsoftware.com/lgku.htm.

21 4 June 2015 email to the author, ‘Dans tous les endroits indiqués, l'encre, pâle, me semble la même que celle des passages non repassée.’

22 Respectively, Zech 1.19, ‘my Lord’; Isa 35.9, ‘and gathered’; Isa 46.1, ‘exhausted, hungry’; Jer 8.7, ‘wild’; and Jer 8.21, ‘as of a woman in travail’.

23 Canart, 20 October 2015 email to the author, ‘l'encre, très pâle, pourrait être celle de l'original’.

24 Turner, E., Greek Manuscripts of the Ancient World (London: University of London Institute of Classical Studies, 1987 2) 38Google Scholar, ‘obelos … to indicate spurious text’; Gardthausen, V., Griechische Paleographie, vol. ii: Die Schrift, Unterschriften und Chronologie im Altertum und im byzantinischen Mittelalter (2 vols.; Leipzig: Veit, 1911–132) ii.413–14Google Scholar, ‘zur Tilgung von Worten und Buchstaben … Athetesen, durch einen Obelus’, cites ‘Diogenes Laert. 3,65–66, Parker, D., An Introduction to the New Testament Manuscripts and their Texts (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2008) 192CrossRefGoogle Scholar explains the obelos as ‘a symbol indicating a measure of uncertainty … Nestle–Aland … double square brackets around the text serve the same function … (German text p. 7*; English text, p. 50*): they “indicate that the enclosed words, generally of some length, are known not to be part of the original [ursprunglichen] text.”’ de Lange, N., ‘The Letter to Africanus: Origen's Recantation?’, Papers Presented to the Seventh International Conference on Patristic Studies held in Oxford 1975, Part ii (ed. Livingstone, E.; StPatr 16; TU 129; Berlin: Academie-Verlag, 1985) 242–7Google Scholar, at 246, ‘spurious’; Schironi, F., ‘The Ambiguity of Signs: Critical ΣΗΜΕΙΑ from Zenodotus to Origen’, Homer and the Bible in the Eyes of Ancient Interpreters (ed. Niehoff, M.; Leiden/Boston: Brill, 2012) 87112Google Scholar, esp. 89, 95, 103, 108, ‘athetesis’, ‘spurious’, ‘addition’. LSJ p. 1196 s.v. ii ‘a critical mark to point out that a passage was spurious’, p. 31 s.v. ii ‘Gramm., reject as spurious’.

25 Reynolds, L. D. and Wilson, N. G., Scribes and Scholars: A Guide to the Transmission of Greek and Latin Literature (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2013 4) 11Google Scholar.

26 Schironi, ‘Ambiguity’, 103.

27 ‘The margin’ is at the far-left edge of letters on the margin, excluding and whose vertical stroke is at the margin, and , which straddles the margin. The VaticanusLSU font is available from www.linguistsoftware.com/ntmssu.htm.

28 Excluding the bar at 1470 B2 since it is noticeably lower than all the other eight paragraphoi on 1470–1; it does not match the surrounding text's ink colour or stroke thickness, but rather the colour, graininess and stroke thickness of the ink of the adjacent, later, marginal addition; and, unlike every other paragraphos bar in 1 Corinthians, it does not underscore the first letter of its line. Contrast the paragraphos five lines later, at 1470 B7, that crosses a descender, just as paragraphoi cross the descender of all eight adjacent (1242B, 1259C, 1260C, 1262B, 1264B, 1271C, 1273A, B) and all twelve adjacent (1239C, 1246 B, C, 1247A, 1249B, 1256B, 1257A, 1262A, 1270A, 1272A, 1273C, 1274B) in Matthew.

29 NA28, 49*.

30 ‘Or she’ reflects Eusebius’ record of the employment of ‘girls skilled in penmanship in Origen's scriptorium at Caesarea, Eusebius, Hist. eccl. 6.32.2 (trans. J. Oulton, LCL, 1957) II.68–69. Similarly, Gerontius, Life of Melania 26 praises the calligraphic copying of Melania the Younger. Doerpfeld, W. and Hepding, H., Die Arbeiten zu Pergamon 1908–1909, vol. ii: Die Inschriften, Mitteilungen des kaiserlich deutschen archäologischen Instituts, Athenische Abteilung 35 (1910) no. 20Google Scholar identifies an inscription in Pergamum of a girl who wins a contest in For more evidence, see Haines-Eitzen, K., The Gendered Palimpsest: Women, Writing, and Representation in Early Christianity (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2012) 29–31 and 41–52Google Scholar.

31 Ehrman, B., The Orthodox Corruption of Scripture: The Effect of Early Christological Controversies on the Text of the New Testament (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2011 2) 33Google Scholar. Cf., similarly, Colwell, E., ‘The Origin of Texttypes of New Testament Manuscripts’, Early Christian Origins: Studies in Honor of Harold R. Willoughby (ed. Wikgren, A.; Chicago: Quadrangle, 1961) 128–38, at 138Google Scholar and Aland, B., ‘Die Münsteraner Arbeit am Text des Neuen Testaments und ihr Beitrag für die frühe Überlieferung des 2. Jahrhunderts: Eine methodologische Betrachtung’, Gospel Traditions in the Second Century: Origins, Recensions, Text, and Transmission (ed. Petersen, W.; Notre Dame/London: University of Notre Dame, 1989) 5570, at 65Google Scholar, ‘Fast alle Varianten, die in den Papyri vorkommen, waren vorher schon aus späteren Handschriften bekannt.’

32 Eight have no gap: 1342 C, 1345 B, 1361 A, 1401 B, 1442 C, 1504 B, 1505 B26, 1505 B33. Nine have a mid-line gap: 1237 B, 1268 A, 1280 C, 1301 B, 1365 A, 1403 A, 1428 C, 1470 A, 1500 C. Three have a line-ending gap: 1262 C, 1403 B, 1460 B.

33 Namely gaps 0.32 cm or longer in 228 of the 5343 Vaticanus lines in Matthew.

34 Metzger, B. and Ehrman, B., The Text of the New Testament: Its Transmission, Corruption, and Restoration (New York: Oxford University Press, 2005 4) 86–7Google Scholar conclude that ƒ1 text is early: ‘Textual analysis of the Gospel according to Mark indicates that the type of text preserved in [ƒ1 …] appears to go back to the type current in Caesarea in the third and fourth centuries.’

35 Payne and Canart, ‘Distigmai’, 203–5 and 223–5. P. Payne, ‘Fuldensis, Sigla for Variants in Vaticanus, and 1 Cor 14.34–5’, NTS 41 (1995) 240–62, at 253 incorrectly omitted it because in the only colour facsimile available to him then, Novum Testamentum e Codice Vaticano Graeco 1209 (Codex B) tertia vice phototypice expressum (Vatican: Bibliotheca Apostolica Vaticana, 1968) 98Google Scholar, it is red, not the original apricot colour.

36 H. Swete, ‘Septuagint’, ISBE (1915) iv.2726.

37 Parker, Introduction, 272, 276. ‘Gloss’, however, avoids misunderstanding since some writers define ‘interpolation’ as deliberate polishing of the body text, but a ‘gloss’ as text written in the margin and later inserted into the text by copyists, as seems more likely here.

38 E.g. the wide range of manuscripts that represent variants marked by distigmai matching the colour of the original ink of Vaticanus that are listed in Payne and Canart, ‘Distigmai’, 204–8 and 214–15.

39 Aland, K. and Aland, B., The Text of the New Testament: An Introduction to the Critical Editions and to the Theory and Practice of Modern Textual Criticism (trans. Rhodes, E.; Leiden/Grand Rapids: Brill/Eerdmans, 1989 2) 276Google Scholar; Metzger and Ehrman, The Text, 300, ‘Perhaps the most basic criterion for the evaluation of variant readings is the simple maxim, “choose the reading that best explains the origin of the others”.’

40 The different endings of Romans best explain the different locations of its doxology: at 16.25–7, after 14.23 and after 15.33, as argued by Parker, Introduction, 270, 272, ‘there is compelling evidence that fourteen and fifteen chapter forms existed … the Doxology is evidently a concluding formula’, Gamble, H. Jr., The Textual History of the Letter to the Romans: A Study in Textual and Literary Criticism (SD 42; Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1977)Google Scholar and, particularly insightful, Hurtado, L., ‘The Doxology at the End of Romans’, New Testament Textual Criticism: Its Significance for Exegesis. Essays in Honour of Bruce M. Metzger (ed. Epp, E. and Fee, G.; Oxford: Clarendon, 1981) 185–99Google Scholar.

41 J. J. Kloha, ‘A Textual Commentary on Paul's First Epistle to the Corinthians’ (PhD diss., The University of Leeds, 2006) 549.

42 Schmid, U., ‘Conceptualizing “Scribal” Performances: Reader's Notes’, The Textual History of the Greek New Testament: Changing Views in Contemporary Research (ed. Wachtel, K. and Holmes, M.; Atlanta: SBL, 2011) 4964, at 58Google Scholar, ‘The inclination of scribes, at least in the view of the ancients, seems to have been toward the inclusion of marginal material into the main text.’

43 Each of these seventeen is in NA28’s body text and in according to NA28.

44 As argued by Fee, G., The First Epistle to the Corinthians (NICNT; Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1987) 699708Google Scholar and God's Empowering Presence: The Holy Spirit in the Letters of Paul (Peabody, MA: Hendrickson, 1994) 272–81Google Scholar.

45 Gal 6.11; 2 Thess 3.17, pace E. Ellis, ‘The Silenced Wives of Corinth (i Cor. 14,34–5)’, Essays in Honour of Bruce M. Metzger, 213–20, at 219.

46 Payne, Woman, 226–67, cites fifty-five textual studies arguing this and analyzes seven external and nine internal evidences these verses are a later addition.

47 Fitzmyer, J., First Corinthians (AB; New Haven: Yale, 2008) 530Google Scholar, citing twenty scholars, including, Cope, Delling, Fuller, Keck and Roetzel.

48 Haines-Eitzen, Palimpsest, 62.

49 The addition of is before the high stop, so precedes this gap, is not a multi-word addition, is not listed in NA28, and is apparently in no Greek manuscript before the ninth century. Furthermore, since its earliest occurrences are in ‘Western’ texts, it is doubtful that any scribe would have noted the addition of but not the far more obvious and noteworthy transposition of vv. 34–5.

50 The gap in the preceding line after is the result of the normal pattern throughout all thirty-six Vaticanus occurrences of the word in Romans–2 Corinthians of only breaking either after (nine times, Rom 16.1; 1 Cor 1.2; 11.18; 14.5, 12, 33, 34; 2 Cor 8.1, 18) or after (six times, 1 Cor 11.16; 16.1; 2 Cor 8.19, 24; 11.28; 12.13), not anywhere else in the word. The breaks after in 1 Cor 14.5 (1473 A17) and 2 Cor 8.1 (1482 C14) leave a similar gap to that at 1 Cor 14.33 (1474 A19). Similar gaps are required in order to keep together on one line at 1 Cor 7.17 (1466 C22); 12.28 (1472 B2); and 14.35 (1474 A31).

51 This does not imply that these are the only theologically important variants or that they follow a particular thread theologically.

52 Niccum, ‘Voice’, 244–5.

53 Niccum, ‘Voice’, 244–5; Miller, ‘Observations’, 217–24.

54 Shack, ‘A Text’, 102.

55 For example, 1463 B9, 1477 A6, 1483 C9, 1498 C22, 1516 A9.

56 Matt 13.51; 18.11 (NA28 only); Luke 14.24/25; Acts 2.47, the last two with old section numbers.

57 Lavrinoviča, ‘1.Kor.14:34.35’, 38–64.

58 See above, pp. 610–11.

59 See above, pp. 612–18 and below, pp. 621–3.

60 By the author's count NA28’s apparatus contains only 168 multi-word variants in Matthew. Compared to the 5,343 Vaticanus lines in Matthew, this is fewer than one in 31.8 Vaticanus lines. Matthew is probably at the high end of how frequently multi-word variants occur because NA28, 792–9, lists more papyri of Matthew (twenty-four) than of any other NT book except John (thirty). Furthermore, variant readings due to harmonisation, which are often multi-word, are more frequent in the synoptic Gospels than any other part of the NT. Accordingly, five of the eight multi-word variants marked by distigme-obelos symbols are in the synoptic Gospels, two are from Matthew, and three are inter-synoptic harmonisations.

61 The two are Mark 14.70 (1301 B) and Acts 14.18 (1403 B). Both bars are short, only about 3 mm long, and neither extends much into the margin.

63 There are 694 letters in the 42 lines of Vaticanus 1236 column A, Matthew's first column of narrative text, an average of 16.5 letters per line.

64 See above, pp. 615–18.

65 Aland and Aland, The Text, 287.

66 P. Canart's 10 June 2013 email to the author states that he knows of no publication of this apparently original observation. Tischendorf, C., ed., Novum Testamentum Vaticanum post Angeli Maii aliorumque imperfectos labores ex ipso codice (Leipzig: Giesecke et Devrient, 1867) xx–xxiGoogle Scholar notes that punctuation is much more frequent in the letters than in the Gospels but does not comment on its significance.

67 10 June 2013 email to the author.

68 Martini, C., Il problema della recensionalità del codice B alla luce del papiro Bodmer xiv (AnBib 26; Rome: Pontificio Istituto Biblico, 1966)Google Scholar argues this in detail.

69 Metzger and Ehrman, The Text, 41.

70 Aland and Aland, The Text, 287.

71 Metzger, B., ‘Recent Developments in the Textual Criticism of the New Testament’, Historical and Literary Studies: Pagan, Jewish, and Christian (NTTS 8; Leiden/Grand Rapids: Brill/Eerdmans, 1968) 145–62, at 157–8CrossRefGoogle Scholar, building on Martini, Bodmer xiv, 181–3.

72 Pisano, ‘The Text’, 40. C. Stevens, ‘Titus in 32 and Sinaiticus: Textual Reliability and Scribal Design’, Atlanta ETS Annual Meeting 18 Nov. 2015, found that 32 (NA28, 793, ‘ca. 200’) and Sinaiticus differ in only one letter throughout their respective texts of Titus. Since scribes then copied entire collections of NT epistles, this indicates that the entire text of the epistles in Sinaiticus goes back at least to ca. 200. The Vaticanus Gospels combined with the Sinaiticus epistles apparently supply a second-century text of virtually the entire NT.

73 See above, pp. 608–9.

74 Of course, this limited set does not imply that there are no blocks of added text in the Vaticanus Gospels. Metzger, B., A Textual Commentary on the Greek New Testament (Stuttgart: Deutsche Bibelgesellschaft, 1994 2) 59Google Scholar, argues convincingly that Matt 27.49b in Vaticanus is added text.

75 See above, p. 614.

76 Cf. Metzger, Textual Commentary, 103, 189.

77 See above, pp. 615–18, and 621–2.

78 Birdsall, J., ‘The Codex Vaticanus: Its History and Significance’, The Bible as Book: The Transmission of the Greek Text (ed. McKendrick, S. and O'Sullivan, O.; London/New Castle, DE: British Library/Oak Knoll, 2003) 3341, at 35Google Scholar.

79 See above, p. 615 and n. 38.

80 So Swanson, 1 Corinthians, 293–304; Swanson, R., New Testament Greek Manuscripts, Variant Readings Arranged in Horizontal Lines against Codex Vaticanus: 2 Corinthians (Carol Stream, IL/Pasadena, CA: Tyndale House/William Carey, 2005) 189–93Google Scholar.

81 TP = transcriptional probability. So Forte, ‘Observations’, 291; Payne, P., ‘Ms. 88 as Evidence for a Text without 1 Cor 14.34–5’, NTS 44 (1998) 152–8CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Payne, ‘Fuldensis’, 240–50; Payne, Woman, 227–51.

Figure 0

Figure 1. Distigme at LXX G 228 B20. Image made by the author from Vetus Testamentum graece: codicis Sarraviani-Colbertini quae supersunt in bibliothecis Leidensi, Parisiensi, Petropolitana phototypice edita (ed. H. Omont; Leiden: A. W. Sijthoff, 1897).

Figure 1

Figure 2. Matthew 13.51. Photograph by author.

Figure 2

Figure 3. Luke 1.28–9. Photograph by author.

Figure 3

Figure 4. 1 Corinthians 14.33–4 and 38–9. Photographs by author.

Figure 4

Figure 5. Matthew 13.51 1253 B. Photograph by author.

Figure 5

Figure 6. Matthew 18.11 1259 A. Photograph by author.

Figure 6

Figure 7. Mark 5.40 1284 C. Photograph by author.

Figure 7

Figure 8. Luke 1.28 1305 A. Photograph by author.

Figure 8

Figure 9. Luke 14.24–5 1332 C. Photograph by author.

Figure 9

Figure 10. Acts 2.47 1385 B. Photograph by author.

Figure 10

Figure 11. Acts 6.10 1390 A. Photograph by author.

Figure 11

Figure 12. 1 Corinthians 14.33–4 1474 A. Photograph by author.