I saw in the news today that the World's oldest Bible has been 
published in full online. 

Viewing it was not easy at 
http://www.codexsinaiticus.org/en/manuscript.aspx

I couldn't select anything with my browser. Perhaps too many "hits" on 
the server? 

The following article hints at significant differences with current 
orthodoxy, for example no resurrection in the 4th Century version of St 
Mark (but perhaps all that means is that those fragments are missing?). 
It would be very interesting to see the results of a thorough 
comparison. Who knows, perhaps the Cathars were more biblical than the 
Roman Church would allow?

>From the Daily Telegraph:
http://tinyurl.com/oq6bp2

<< More than 800 surviving pages and fragments from the The Codex 
Sinaiticus, which was written in Greek on parchment leaves in the 
fourth century, have been reunited.

Last year The British Library put The Book of Psalms and St Mark's 
Gospel online, and now the remaining pages have been made free for 
public use for the first time.
 
Along with the Codex Vaticanus, the Codex Sinaiticus is considered the 
oldest known Bible in the world. Originally more than 1,460 pages long 
and measuring 16in by 14in, it was written by a number of hands around 
the time of Constantine the Great.

It offers different versions of the Scriptures from later editions of 
the Bible, notably in St Mark's Gospel which ends 12 verses before 
later versions, omitting the appearance of the resurrected Jesus Christ.

The reunification of the book is the culmination of a four-year 
collaboration between the British Library, Leipzig University Library 
in Germany, the Monastery of St Catherine in Mount Sinai, Egypt, and 
the National Library of Russia in St Petersburg, each of which hold 
different parts of the manuscript.

They hope that by bringing together the digitised pages online, the 
project will help scholars worldwide to research in depth the Greek 
text, which is fully transcribed and cross-referenced.

"The Codex Sinaiticus is one of the world's greatest written 
treasures," said Dr Scot McKendrick, Head of Western Manuscripts at the 
British Library.

"This 1,600-year old manuscript offers a window into the development of 
early Christianity and first-hand evidence of how the text of the Bible 
was transmitted from generation to generation. The project has 
uncovered evidence that a fourth scribe – along with the three already 
recognised – worked on the text; the availability of the virtual 
manuscript for study by scholars around the world creates opportunities 
for collaborative research that would not have been possible just a few 
years ago."

To mark the reunification, the British Library is also holding a new 
exhibition, open today that tells the story of the book.

Professor David Parker from the University of Birmingham's Department 
of Theology, who directed the team which made the electronic 
transcription of the manuscript said the four-year process was a "huge 
challenge".

"The transcription includes pages of the Codex which were found in a 
blocked-off room at the Monastery of St Catherine in 1975, some of 
which were in poor condition," he said.

"This is the first time that they have been published. The digital 
images of the virtual manuscript show the beauty of the original and 
readers are even able to see the difference in handwriting between the 
different scribes who copied the text. We have even devised a unique 
alignment system which allows users to link the images with the 
transcription. This project has made a wonderful book accessible to a 
global audience.>>

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