Hi Buster,
Head a bit clearer now and I can confirm that the source of your dates is somewhat dubious. It is a group called the Christian Separatist Church Society and distinguishes itself by its antisemitism (e.g. see their journal Nationalist Free Press at http://www.liesexposed.net/nfp/nfp.htm). The CSCS proposes that because the OT in most English bibles is based on the Masoretic Text, originally written by Jews, it is designed to hide rather than reveal the truth. Instead they only recognize their own Anointed Standard Translation (AST), derived from the Greek Septuagint, which they argue is the earliest translation of the Bible from Greek to English. This was translated by V.S.Herrell and published by Herrell Brothers Publishing House in 1995. It is particularly noteworthy for its translation of the sixth commandment as 'You will not mongrelize' (http://members.tripod.com/ApocryphalText/The6thCommandment.htm).
Pastor Herrell has also written such gems as:
- Jesus was White (http://www.geocities.com/empireministries/jcww.html)
- The White Holocaust (http://www.liesexposed.net/nfp/issue0204/whhol.htm)
- Have the Jews Started WWIII? (http://www.publiceye.org/frontpage/911/Jews_WIII.htm)
- Was Adolf Hitler a Bible Christian?
So I have to say I remain unconvinced we have any extant copies of the NT written prior to the substitution of God's name in the LXX.
But what of your 'court stenographer' scenario where the reader did not say the divine name although it was in the text, and so the stenographer(s) did not write it. That may have happened as there is some evidence that scribes of the LXX were confused whether to write the tetragammaton or kyrios. And I do think this became more likely as the church expanded beyond its Jewish origins. And yet, despite a reluctance to speak God's name, we do still find it written in the scrolls kept by the Dead Sea community.
You suggest that the name was dropped as a 'Christ-initiated, conscious decision that was reflected in the first Christian writings and was eventually echoed in later LXXs'. Wow! I had never thought of it being that way round...and the more I think of it the more likely it seems. But I do not think it probable when the gospels and letters were first written. Later when the church was more organised and less Jewish (probably after the destruction of Jerusalem) it may well have happened that way.
Best wishes,
Earnest
Edited by - Earnest on 1 November 2002 22:59:57