Maurice A. Robinson


Maurice Arthur Robinson is an American professor of New Testament and Greek and a proponent of the Byzantine-priority method of New Testament textual criticism.

Background and education

Robinson was born in Quincy, Massachusetts, to Arthur and Olga Robinson, but grew up in Bradenton, Florida. He earned his B.A. in English and secondary education from the University of South Florida, M.Div. and Th.M. from Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary, and Ph.D. from Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary. Robinson married Renee Guscott in 1970.

Career

Robinson served as assistant professor of biblical studies and languages at St. Petersburg Baptist College, associate professor of biblical studies and languages at Luther Rice Seminary, and then joined the faculty of Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary in 1991, where he served as associate professor, professor, senior professor, and research professor of New Testament and Greek. Robinson also served as pastor of two churches during the years 1985–1991 and 1993–1997.
Robinson is best known as a proponent of the Byzantine-priority method of New Testament textual criticism. This method maintains that when differences appear among the manuscripts of the Greek New Testament the best representation of the original text is usually found in the agreement of most manuscripts, that is, a “consensus text” which “reflects a unified dominance that permeates the vast majority of manuscripts.”
Robinson is a member of the Evangelical Theological Society and has presented over 20 papers at its regional and national meetings.
In 2014 on the occasion of Robinson being announced research professor of New Testament and Greek a Festschrift was published in his honor: Digging for the Truth: Collected Essays regarding the Byzantine Text of the Greek New Testament. Contributors included Timothy Friberg, Andrew Wilson, Paul Himes, Edward Gravely, Timothy Finney, James Borland, Mike Arcieri, et al.

Interesting facts

Robinson's move away from reasoned eclecticism, to which he still held in writing as late as 1975, is traced directly to the influence of noted New Testament textual critic Kenneth W. Clark, who guided Robinson in a mentored program of study from 1971 to 1977 and was guest-supervisor for his Th.M. thesis. Clark's influence on Robinson focused on a skepticism of the necessarily "subjective and tendentious" nature of reasoned eclecticism, the need for a "critical history of transmission," and the proposition that reasoned eclectic procedure should accept "a stronger role for the Byzantine Textform coupled with a strong transmissional historical view." At least the first two of these come out clearly in Robinson's Th.M. thesis, where he opined, "Eclecticism reigns, and it has left textual criticism in a state of fluidity.... ur objectivity has been surrendered to the whims of individual critics.... Our feet have become mired and mudbound in the trenches of subjectivity." He advocated that critics must determine the "history of the transmission of the New Testament text viewed in its total chronological perspective," and that the "primary value of texttypes is their utilization in reconstructing the history of textual transmission." In contrast to his current Byzantine-priority stance, Robinson stated at the time that "it is more likely that the original text itself was what we today would term 'mixed,'" that "ll known texttypes proceeded from this original 'mixed' , coming into existence as types primarily from local-text situations," and even that "the uncontrolled, popular text of the second century... corrupted the original with its own scraps of oral tradition and theologically motivated alterations." Even then Robinson expressed that "the Alexandrian text have arisen as the first attempt to produce an alternative controlled text against the multiplicity of wild texts which characterized the Western groups," a view to which he still holds more than 40 years later. Robinson's obsession with constantly evaluating "all pertinent transmissional and transcriptional factors... in relation to the various aspects of external and internal criteria" before making any final decisions regarding the text to be established may be summarized in how he describes his method: "reasoned transmissionalism."
As mentioned above, the genesis of Robinson's career dedication to "reasoned transmissionalism" essentially goes back to Clark and is best expressed in Robinson's own words:
Clark’s views, written and oral, laid the basis for my shift away from reasoned eclecticism to a transmission-based hypothesis; this ultimately led to my Byzantine-priority position. Clark’s hints and allegations in his published material were enhanced by his private tutelage, where he lamented over much of his previous career, having focused on reasonable internal and external principles that nevertheless led to faulty conclusions. As he expressed to me in the mid-1970s, had he been 30 years younger, he would chart a new course, predicated on transmissional probabilities, including the strong view that the autograph text of any New Testament book would more likely be preserved within a single existing texttype rather than amid an eclectic conglomeration drawn from multiple sources. Clark suggested that the question of which texttype should be dually established from the likelihood of its archetypal reconstructability, and the quantitative and qualitative evidence relating to the transmission and perpetuation of that archetype. Clark’s final conclusion shocked my reasoned eclectic viewpoint: he suggested that the Byzantine Textform — to the extent that such could be established in its archetypal form — was the most likely candidate for autograph originality against all rival claimants, whether favored Greek manuscripts, other texttypes or subjective internal factors. As Clark told me then, "I am now too old to explore and delineate this position; but you are young, and should pursue it." That has been my endeavor since approximately 1975.

Magnum opus

Robinson's single largest project is the text of the Pericope adulterae, or the passage of the adulteress. Having examined more than 1750 continuous-text manuscripts related to the passage or its perimeter, he completely collated the nearly 1500 manuscripts and 500 lectionaries which contain the passage. This was done at the Institut für Neutestamentliche Textforschung in Münster, Germany, primarily during a 1997–1998 sabbatical leave, with briefer visits in the years 1999, 2000, and 2005. The computerized data entry of 15 years' worth of primary collation material was completed in 2012, as was the volume, "The Greek Manuscript Witnesses to the Pericope Adulterae: A Comprehensive Collation of All Accessible and Readable Continuous-text and Lectionary Manuscripts according to the Various Locations in which the Passage is Present." Another volume appeared in 2014, "A Comprehensive Bibliography of Material relating to the Pericope Adulterae : Various Entries Annotated, generally by Direct Quotation from the Source Cited." Both volumes, including Robinson's original collation documents and handwritten notes, may be accessed at the SEBTS library and are preparatory for the final work, still in progress: The Text of the Pericope Adulterae , 3 vols. Vol. 1: Text and Apparatus; Vol. 2: The Textual Interrelationships among the Manuscripts which contain the Pericope Adulterae; Vol. 3: The Archetype of the Pericope Adulterae and its Relationship to the Gospel of John. Until these volumes appear, two articles by Robinson remain of primary interest in relation to his magnum opus: "Preliminary Observations Regarding the Pericope Adulterae based upon Fresh Collations of nearly all Continuous-Text Manuscripts and all Lectionary Manuscripts containing the Passage"; and, "The Pericope Adulterae: A Johannine Tapestry with Double Interlock."

Publications

Robinson is most recognized for editing a Greek New Testament based on Byzantine-priority principles which previously had been explored, formulated, and expressed in various papers and publications. The Greek text, although prepared by Robinson in digital form several years earlier, appeared in 1991 in an initial softback edition without accents or breathing marks and was titled, The New Testament in the Original Greek according to the Byzantine/Majority Textform. Fourteen years later a more elegant edition appeared, The New Testament in the Original Greek: Byzantine Textform 2005, a fully accented edition with an apparatus showing every variation of the text from that of the standard Nestle-Aland Novum Testamentum Graece, marginal readings indicating major splits in the Greek manuscript tradition, and a 53-page appendix explaining “The Case for Byzantine Priority.” This was followed in 2010 by a corrected Reader's Edition, produced in cooperation with Jeffrey Dodson.
Some titles of Robinson's other publications include:
At various professional venues, but especially those of the Evangelical Theological Society, Robinson has presented many papers, the titles of some of which are: