The first edition of the Textus Receptus, dedicated to Pope Leo X on February 1, 1516, was compiled by Erasmus, primarily using the Gospel text from Minuscule 2, a 12th-century Byzantine manuscript of von Soden’s Kx family. Erasmus published four subsequent editions through 1535. Robert Stephanus later issued four revisions of Erasmus’ text, incorporating a variant apparatus and consulting approximately 15 manuscripts, including Codices D, L, and the Complutensian Polyglot. Theodore Beza’s 1589 revision, based on Stephanus’ work, served as the primary text for the King James Version translators. The Elzevir brothers published revisions in 1624 and 1633, favoring Stephanus’ text. The 1624 edition’s preface proclaimed, “textus ergo habes textus habes nunc ab omnibus receptum”, thus solidifying the term “Textus Receptus.” In 1894, F.H.A. Scrivener reverse engineered the King James Bible’s text by comparing its readings with prior Textus Receptus editions, contrasting them with Westcott and Hort’s Critical Text of 1881.
This month, I uploaded my revision of the Textus Receptus for the Gospel of Matthew to Academia.edu. The footnotes document all variants between the Nestle-Aland (NA) Text, the Majority Text (M-Text) of Hodges and Farstad, and the M-Text of Robinson and Pierpont. Additionally, I’ve included historically significant textual decisions by Hort, Tregelles, and Tischendorf, as well as references to Wilbur Pickering’s text and the Vulgate of Stuttgart when they align with the primary variant.
The footnotes also highlight potential alternative readings and robust variants not adopted in the main text, along with internal weaknesses of the selected readings. My methodology, primarily based on external evidence, considers four factors: antiquity, diversity, internal coherence, and preservation. For details, please refer to the preface.
I welcome feedback on any errors in the Greek text, translation, or apparatus. This work is dedicated to the public domain and can be downloaded via the link below:
https://www.academia.edu/129096361/A_Revision_of_the_Textus_Receptus_The_gospel_of_Matthew
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