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Mark 16:9-20 as Forgery or Fabrication A detailed case against Mark 16:9–20, including all relevant stylistic, textual, manuscript, and patristic evidence, and an extensive bibliography. Mark 16 King James Bible - Wikisource; English Translation with Parallel Latin Vulgate Archived 2020-09-22 at the Wayback Machine
Eusebius, in the first half of the fourth century, wrote, in response to a query from a man named Marinus, about how Matthew 28:1 conflicts with the Longer Ending on which day Jesus rose from the dead, with the comment, "He who is for getting rid of the entire passage [at the end of Mark] will say that it is not met with in all the copies of ...
Mark 16:9-20 or the longer ending of Mark is a variant found within the Textus Receptus which has generally been assumed to have been a later addition into the text by modern textual critics. [110] The earliest extant complete manuscripts of Mark, Codex Sinaiticus and Codex Vaticanus , two 4th-century manuscripts, do not contain the last twelve ...
The end of Mark in Vaticanus. Mark 15:47 [25] Μαρία ἡ Ἰωσῆτος (Mary the mother of Joses) ... Mark 16:8-20 Entire pericope ...
Mark 9:46 [21]: 121 Mark 11:26 [21]: 128 Mark 15:28 [21]: 144 The end of Mark in Vaticanus contains an empty column after Verse 16:8, possibly suggesting that the scribe was aware of the missing ending. It is the only empty New Testament column in the Codex. [22]: 252 Mark 16:9–20 — The Book of Mark ends with verse 16:8.
Matthew 28 covers the same material as Mark 16, Luke 24, and John 20 in the other gospels. As with the rest of Matthew it seems clear that Matthew is adapting what appears in Mark. Unusually the material not from Mark most closely matches the Gospel of John, unlike the rest of the gospel where non-Markan material is often matched in Luke. Some ...
The codex contains a small part of the Gospel of Mark 16:6-8; shorter ending; 16:9-18, on one thick parchment leaf (32 by 26 cm). The text is written in two columns per page, 32 lines per page, in large uncial letters. [2] [3] It has two endings to the Gospel of Mark (as in codices Ψ 0112 274 mg 579 Lectionary 1602). [4] The Greek text of this ...
The text of Codex Vercellensis is related to the text of Codex Corbeiensis II (ff 2), another Old Latin copy (in which Mark 16:9-20 is included). According to a respectable tradition, this codex was written under the direction of bishop Eusebius of Vercelli , which would date it to the late fourth century.