The Center for New Testament Textual Studies NT Critical Apparatus
© 2004 by the New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary
This database is a project of the H. Milton Haggard Center for New Testament Textual Studies (CNTTS), a research center under the auspices of New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary (NOBTS).
Dr. Bill Warren, Director of the CNTTS
Due to this being a long-term project, several people have been involved in various roles along the way. Past and present Project Directors have included Dr. Mark Tagami, Dr. Earl Kellett, Dr. David Champagne, Matt Solomon, and Jesse Coyne.
Past and present Project Assistants and Researchers have included Dr. Warren Langford, Dr. Charlie Ray, III, Dr. Roland McMillan, Dr. Jin Sup Ahn, Dr. Jeong Seop Ahn, Vivek Arora, Ronald van der Bergh, Bob Cole, Ray Doss, Donna Hicks, David Justice, Owen Nease, Angela Nugent, Nathan VanHorn, Steven Whatley, Dr. Stan Helton, Kyle Norton, Katie Unsworth, Allyson Presswood, Les Jensen, Sean Grunblatt, and others who have contributed various collations and given help along the way.
CNTTS Textual Database Information
Welcome to the CNTTS textual database. The database is presented in the form of a textual apparatus that includes as much of the textual data as possible. The base text is that of the 3rd edition UBSGNT. The sources for the manuscript readings are given below, but in brief come primarily from our own collations with some information also derived from the works noted below. Part of the ongoing work is to verify the information derived from others by means of our own collations.
Work began on this project in 2000, with some foundations having been put in place even before that. The first section of the module to be completed was the Gospels in 2004, and slowly other sections of the New Testament (NT) were added at the rate at which the collation and compilation process allowed. In spite of about a one-year delay caused by Hurricane Katrina, the entire NT was finished and made available in 2010, with updates having been integrated since then on a regular basis. In 2012, a major update was made that included a change in the numbering scheme for the variants to make the module more user friendly (an explanation of that scheme is given later in this introduction information). In 2013, a total review of the variation units was started, with those updates still ongoing, but with many included in this edition of the apparatus. Plans are to finish the update on the variation units for the entire NT in 2015. Future stages will include the on-going work of reviewing and correcting or clarifying the data as well as the addition of more witnesses each year as part of the planned annual updates. The advantage of the electronic database is that additions such as these can be done on a continual basis, with the next few years already full of planned expansions and revisions. So this is a growing work that will improve in both quality and comprehensiveness as more data is added....
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About The Center for New Testament Textual Studies: NT Critical ApparatusThe Center for New Testament Textual Studies (CNTTS) New Testament Critical Apparatus is the most detailed and comprehensive critical apparatus on the market. Existing only in digital format, this database provides almost 17,000 pages of compiled data on Greek New Testament manuscripts, fragments, and sources, allowing scholars to closely examine variations in the text and discover each source manuscript for any given word or passage in the New Testament. Completely searchable, this massive apparatus contains findings and textual information not published in any other resource. Textual variants are classified categorically, allowing scholars to easily sort through the minor textual differences (spelling differences, for example) and the major ones (such as entirely different words or phrases, or missing text). “This is a first in the field, both as a comprehensive, electronic apparatus and in terms of how searchable it is,” says Dr. William F. Warren Jr., professor of New Testament and Greek at New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary. “We are among the top U.S. institutions working with the manuscripts.” |
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