Description
Table of ContentsContents Preface List of Figures and Tables Abbreviations Contributors Introduction: Paratextual Features of Early Greek Manuscripts Stanley E. Porter, Chris S. Stevens, and David I. Yoon 1 What Is Paratext? In Search of an Elusive Category Stanley E. Porter 2 Missing the Point: Modern Punctuation Practice as Authoritative but Possibly Problematic Decision-Making Hans Förster 3 Pointers to Persons and Pericopes? A Study of the Intermarginal Signs in Sahidic Manuscripts of the Gospel of John Matthias H. O. Schulz 4 But for Me, the Scriptures are Jesus Christ (Ι̅Ϲ̅ Χ̅Ϲ̅; Ign. Phld. 8:2). Creedal Text-Coding and the Early Scribal System of Nomina Sacra Tomas Bokedal 5 Segmentation and Interpretation of Early Pauline Manuscripts S. Matthew Solomon 6 Can Papyri Correspondence Help Us to Understand Paul’s “Large Letters” in Galatians? William Varner 7 The Tradition and Development of the Subscriptions to 1 Timothy Tommy Wasserman and Linnea Thorp 8 Second Timothy: When and Where? Text and Traditions in the Subscriptions Conrad Thorup Elmelund and Tommy Wasserman 9 Composite Citations in New Testament Greek Manuscripts Sean A. Adams and Seth M. Ehorn 10 Titus in P32 and Early Majuscules: Textual Reliability and Scribal Design Chris S. Stevens 11 The Scribal Use of Ekthesis as a Paragraph Marker? The Galatians Text in Codex Sinaiticus as a Test Case David I. Yoon 12 Miniature Codices in Early Christianity Michael J. Kruger 13 Marginalia in New Testament Greek Papyri: Implications for Scribal Practice and Textual Transmission Michael P. Theophilos Conclusion: Paratextual Features: Summary and Prospects Stanley E. Porter, Chris S. Stevens, and David I. Yoon