Who Compiled Them? Who Preserved Them? And Do They Still Exist Today?
(An Apologetic and Historical Defense of the Christian Bible)
✦ Introduction: Did the Bible Just “Fall From Heaven”?
A common modern claim—especially in Bible-alone circles—is that the Bible is self-authenticating, independent of any Church authority.
But history tells a different story.
Before printing presses, before Protestant denominations, and even before the Latin Bible, complete Christian Scriptures containing both the Old and New Testaments already existed.
This article answers four critical questions:
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What were the earliest complete Christian Scriptures?
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Who compiled them?
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Who preserved them?
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Do physical copies still exist today—and where are they kept?
✦ What Were the Earliest Complete Christian Scriptures?
📖 1. The Septuagint Old Testament + Apostolic New Testament
The Septuagint (LXX) is the Greek translation of the Old Testament, produced between the 3rd–2nd century BC, centuries before Christ.
The New Testament, meanwhile, was written in Greek by the Apostles and their associates during the 1st century AD.
📌 Key fact:
The earliest Christians did not use a Latin Bible.
They used Greek Scriptures—the Septuagint for the Old Testament and apostolic writings for the New.
✦ The Earliest Complete Bible Manuscripts (4th–5th Century)
While early Christians possessed Scripture as separate scrolls and codices, the first surviving manuscripts that contain both Old and New Testaments together are from the 4th century.
📜 2. Codex Vaticanus (c. AD 300–325)
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Codex Vaticanus
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Written in Greek
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Contains:
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Septuagint Old Testament
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New Testament (nearly complete)
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One of the most reliable biblical manuscripts in existence
📍 Preserved today in the Vatican Library
📜 3. Codex Sinaiticus (c. AD 330–360)
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Codex Sinaiticus
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Greek Old and New Testaments
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Includes some early Christian writings, showing how the canon was still being discerned
📍 Preserved today in the British Library
📜 4. Codex Alexandrinus (early 5th century)
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Codex Alexandrinus
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Greek OT and NT
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Confirms continuity of the same canon
📍 Preserved today in the British Library
✦ Who Compiled the Bible?
❌ Not Jesus writing a table of contents
❌ Not individual believers deciding on their own
✅ The Early Catholic Church
📜 The Historical Process
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The Apostles wrote Scripture
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Gospels and letters circulated among churches
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Local Churches preserved and read them in worship
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Bishops (successors of the Apostles) discerned authenticity
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Apostolic origin
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Orthodox doctrine
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Universal usage in the Church
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📌 Important:
The Bible does not contain a list of its own books.
The canon had to be identified by the Church.
✦ The Canon Was Formally Recognized by the Church
🏛️ Church Councils (4th Century)
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Council of Rome
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Council of Hippo
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Council of Carthage
These councils listed the same 27 New Testament books used today.
📌 This occurred more than 1,000 years before the Protestant Reformation.
✦ Who Preserved the Scriptures?
🛡️ The Early Catholic Church
The Scriptures were preserved through:
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Apostolic churches (Rome, Alexandria, Antioch)
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Bishops and clergy
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Monasteries and scriptoria
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Continuous liturgical use
Despite:
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Roman persecutions
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Heresies
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Political upheavals
…the Scriptures were never lost.
✦ Do These Manuscripts Still Exist Today?
✅ Yes—physically, verifiably, and publicly accessible
| Manuscript | Current Location |
|---|---|
| Codex Vaticanus | Vatican Library |
| Codex Sinaiticus | British Library |
| Codex Alexandrinus | British Library |
The British Library is:
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A state-run, secular institution
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Overseen by the UK government
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Independent of Catholic or Protestant control
📌 This eliminates claims of religious manipulation.
✦ What About the Latin Vulgate?
The Latin Vulgate was translated by St. Jerome (AD 382–405).
🔑 Critical clarification:
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Jerome did not create the canon
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He translated an already recognized canon into Latin
✦ Apologetic Conclusion: One Unavoidable Truth
✔ The Apostles wrote the Scriptures
✔ The Church compiled the canon
✔ The Church preserved the manuscripts
✔ The world received the Bible from the Church
Without the Church, there would be no Bible.
The Bible is not the source of the Church—
the Church is the historical source of the Bible.
✦ Final Thought
Any claim that Scripture exists independently of the Church collapses under historical evidence.
The earliest complete Christian Scriptures:
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Were compiled by the Catholic Church
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Preserved by the Catholic Church
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And are verified today by neutral academic institutions
📜 History is not anti-Bible.
📜 History explains the Bible.


