aqwsed12345: Origen lamented textual corruption during his time, but this refers primarily to errors from scribal transmission, a common phenomenon in ancient texts, not deliberate theological manipulation.
Origen was not talking about "errors from scribal transmission". In his work "De adulteratione librorum Origenis" (On the Falsification of the Books of Origen). Rufinus writes :
I have shown from [Origen's] own words and writings how he himself complains of this and deplores it: He explains clearly in the letter which he wrote to some of his intimate friends at Alexandria what he suffered while living here in the flesh and in the full enjoyment of his senses, by the corruption of his books and treatises, or by spurious editions of them.
aqwsed12345 : Any significant textual corruption of their [Polycarp and Ignatius] writings would have provoked objections from the Christian communities safeguarding these texts.
Why pretend that forgeries didn't happen when I provided
abundant evidence they happened in the case of Ignatius. Or did you not say there were interpolations in the long recension? Where were the objections then?
aqwsed12345 : The Latin manuscripts [of Polycarp's Letter to the Philippians] are based on an earlier Greek text no longer extant. While there are some variations, the general consistency of the text across traditions supports its authenticity.
Some variations! More than half the Latin manuscripts omit the words "and God" in the expression "Lord and God Jesus Christ.
aqwsed12345 : While Michael Holmes has expressed caution regarding the phrase "our Lord and God Jesus Christ", he has not definitively ruled it an interpolation.
I quoted what Holmes said :
- It turns out that I had forgotten that I had in fact, after working on this passage in more detail, concluded by disagreeing with Lightfoot at this point; I argue the phrase et deum is more likely a later addition.
Holmes is a scholar, and scholars don't talk in absolutes on textual matters. But he could hardly be clearer that he has changed his mind regarding this interpolation.
aqwsed12345 : Even if "et deum" were a later addition, the rest of Polycarp’s letter reflects a high Christology consistent with early Christian faith, undermining claims of later doctrinal manipulation.
As slimboyfat says, what does this actually mean? If "et deum" were a later addition, that is evidence in itself of later doctrinal manipulation.