TEXTUAL CRITICISM: Two news items have just come up about textual variants in New Testament manuscripts that may remove one woman from a story and give us the lost name of another woman.
Manuscript Mystery. Mary, Martha, and Mary Magdalene in the Gospel of John (Bible History Daily)
In her article entitled “The Mystery of Mary and Martha” in the Winter 2024 issue of BAR, Elizabeth Schrader Polczer points out that some early copies of John’s Gospel exhibit unusual treatments of the sisters of Lazarus, which together suggest that an early version circulated in which there was only one sister, Mary—sometimes thought to be Mary Magdalene—while Martha was added later.
The BAR article is behind the subscription wall, but this BHD essay has a good summary of it.
Researchers Restore Long-Lost Greek Woman to the Bible After 2,000 Years (Nisha Zahid, Greek Reporter). HT Rogue Classicism.
A Brigham Young University researcher says he has recovered the name of a woman whose identity vanished from the Bible for nearly two millennia. According to new findings, the woman addressed in 2 John, New Testament , was not an unnamed “elect lady,” as scholars long believed, but a Greek woman named Eclecte.
[...]
The book is Lincoln H. Blumell,
Lady Eclecte: The Lost Woman of the New Testament (Minneapolis, MN: Fortress Press, 2025). You can read a review of it
here.
The Greek Reporter article is unclear about this, but the proposed reading of the name does appear in some NT manuscripts, so it is not just an emendation.
I would not bet the farm on either of these textual reconstructions, but they are worth noting.
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