by Brett Williams | Sep 12, 2019 | Central Blog, Textual Criticism, Tradition, Worship
Leigh Ann Thompson, of CSNT (Center for the Study of New Testament Manuscripts) reminds us of the importance of memory and visualization in our liturgy. Memory, Liturgy, and Illustrations in Lectionaries Both the physical worship space, the reading, and the...
by Brett Williams | Nov 1, 2017 | Textual Criticism, Uncategorized
An interesting forthcoming look at public reading and textual reliability in the early church. This will be on my list. I ultimately argue that communal reading events were already a prevailing practice over a wide geographic range in the first century CE, and...
by Brett Williams | Feb 23, 2017 | Resources, Textual Criticism
Peter Gurry (PhD Cambridge) offers a balanced, evangelical review of Anthony Le Donne’s book What Can We Know and How Can We Know It? It’s worth a look. Moreover, “the best explanation of many textual variants” in the Gospels is not “that there was no one...