Shows how early papyri, Alexandrian codices, and careful correction preserved Paul’s distinctive vocabulary and theological language with remarkable stability.
New Testament Textual Family Groupings and Their Documentary Value
Explores how Alexandrian, Western, and Byzantine textual families emerged, how shared errors reveal their relationships, and how early papyri confirm the reliability of the New Testament text.
The Transition From Scroll to Codex in the Early Church
Explains how the early church’s adoption of the codex format, especially in the Alexandrian tradition, strengthened the preservation and accuracy of the New Testament text.
The Role of Early Correctors in Alexandrian Manuscripts
Explores how early correctors in Alexandrian manuscripts guarded exemplar accuracy, refined major codices, and helped preserve and recover the autographic New Testament text.
How Papyrology Confirms the Reliability of the Greek New Testament Texts
Shows how the early New Testament papyri—whether extensive codices or small fragments—confirm the reliability of the Alexandrian text and the recoverability of the original wording.
Scribal Awareness of Sacred Names in Revelation
Shows how scribes preserved sacred names and Christological titles in Revelation through consistent nomina sacra, reverent copying, and Alexandrian accuracy.
The Phenomenon of Itacism in Greek New Testament Manuscripts
Explores itacism in Greek New Testament manuscripts, showing that vowel-shift spelling errors are predictable, corrected, and doctrinally irrelevant.
Early Abbreviations and the Stability of the New Testament Text
An exploration of early abbreviations in New Testament manuscripts, showing how scribal shorthand contributed to, rather than threatened, textual stability.
Accidental Omissions and Their Impact on New Testament Textual Transmission
A study of accidental omissions in New Testament manuscripts, showing how parablepsis, correction, and Alexandrian accuracy affect textual transmission.
Harmonization in the Gospel Manuscripts
An examination of harmonization in the Gospel manuscripts, highlighting Alexandrian resistance, papyrus evidence, and the role of harmonized readings in textual groupings.


