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2.7 Comparing Details in MT to Other Text Traditions

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It is standard academic practice to compare the Masoretic Text to other text traditions. NJPS compares small details with other textual readings, while many scholars offer more extensive comparisons. Scholars have found thousands of small differences between MT and the LXX, SP, Dead Sea Scrolls, and all the other sources, and it is natural to try to form an opinion on the reading that is »better« or »more original«.

Scholars express different views on the comparative value of MT and the other texts.

Here are a few highlights of those comparisons.

a. Quality. Roughly speaking, MT and its forerunner, proto-MT, is an excellent text, as exemplified below, especially for the Torah, and it is therefore no coincidence that this text has become the central text of Judaism. It has been copied very carefully from a certain point onwards, although we cannot pinpoint the exact moment. It probably preceded the time of our earliest evidence, namely the third century BCE.

b. Early Mistakes. Before that time, the proto-MT was copied less precisely, and these imprecisions in content (e.g., mistakes in 1–2 Samuel) and spelling have been carefully preserved in the proto-MT scrolls and the medieval MT.

c. Torah without Harmonizations. The MT of the Torah lacks the frequent harmonizing additions of most other texts, especially the LXX, SP and the exegetical and liturgical texts.55 It also lacks the editorial additions of SP and the frequent changes inserted by exegetical texts like 4QRP (Revised Pentateuch).56 As a result, the preferential position of MT in the Torah is a remarkable feature of that text.

d. Different Editions of Books—In several instances, the LXX and the MT seem to represent different editions (recensions) of the same book. In these cases, the LXX differs from MT not in small textual details, but in groups of related features that reflect a different stage in the literary development of the book than MT: the short (and somewhat different) text of Jeremiah—in this case LXX is joined by two Qumran scrolls‒, the short text of Ezekiel, the different text of Joshua, and sundry shorter or different texts. The LXX versions probably preceded those of MT in these cases. In other cases, the Hebrew texts underlying the LXX were in the nature of exegetical texts commenting upon MT (1 Kings, Esther, and Daniel).

The MT in Sum. The upshot of this analysis is that MT is a mixed bag containing units that reflect a conservative tradition and those that do not, units that seem to be later than the LXX (Joshua, Jeremiah, Ezekiel), and units that are earlier than the Vorlage of the LXX (1 Kings, Esther, and Daniel). Each book of scripture was produced at a different time by a different scribe, reflecting his personal character.

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