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Oxford's Oldest New Testament Fragments: 2,000-Year-Old Texts Reveal Jesus' Words

Feb 25, 2026 World News
Oxford's Oldest New Testament Fragments: 2,000-Year-Old Texts Reveal Jesus' Words

Tucked away in Oxford University's historic library are the oldest surviving New Testament fragments, papyrus texts nearly 2,000 years old that are among Christianity's most treasured writings. These fragile scraps, browned with age, preserve moments from the Gospel of Matthew, including four sayings of Jesus, key portions of the Last Supper, and Judas arranging his betrayal. For Dr. Jeremiah Johnston, who has studied the Magdalen Papyrus P64 extensively, being one of the few people allowed to hold the pieces of historic scripture was 'the single most awe-inspiring experience this side of heaven.'

Oxford's Oldest New Testament Fragments: 2,000-Year-Old Texts Reveal Jesus' Words

The fragments themselves are tiny, fragile scraps, yet they offer an extraordinary window into the earliest written record of Jesus' words. During a visit to the Old Library of Magdalene College, Johnston was granted the rare opportunity to hold the three fragments encased in a simple frame, an experience he described to the Daily Mail as life-changing. 'It was literally taken out of what looks like a shoebox, not even on display, and I had as much time as I wanted with one of the most priceless Christian artifacts on earth,' he said, recalling the almost ethereal nature of the encounter. 'I'm holding that fragment, and to know that it's 2,000 years old, and to know that it's true, and that the scales of truth tip in the favor of Christianity, was transformational for me.'

Oxford's Oldest New Testament Fragments: 2,000-Year-Old Texts Reveal Jesus' Words

The fragments preserve 24 lines of text from Matthew chapter 26, specifically covering verses 23 and 31, and date back at least to the first century AD. Alongside other early New Testament scraps, the P64 also represents the oldest known examples of a codex, a book with individual pages rather than a traditional scroll, underscoring the profound shift in how early Christians recorded and preserved their sacred texts. These tiny scraps, fragile and browned with age, preserve moments from Matthew 26, including four sayings of Jesus and key portions of the Last Supper and Judas arranging his betrayal.

The fragments land squarely in today's debates over how faithfully the Gospels were transmitted, offering physical evidence that early Christians had been preserving these texts for far longer than critics often claim. And its frayed edges and faded ink reveal that the story of Jesus was being written down earlier than skeptics sometimes admit. 'It's a reminder to me that Jesus died for my sins so that I could be forgiven,' said Johnston, who is set to release his new book 'The Jesus Discoveries.' 'It takes my breath away,' he added, describing the huge significance the specific excerpts hold as part of what Christians call the words of institution, in this case being the lead-up to the Last Supper and Jesus' crucifixion.

Oxford's Oldest New Testament Fragments: 2,000-Year-Old Texts Reveal Jesus' Words

These fragments were given to Magdalen by Charles Bousfield Huleatt in 1901. Huleatt, a Magdalen alumnus-turned-missionary, was working in Luxor, Egypt, when he obtained the papers. How he acquired them remains unknown, as does their ultimate origin. Johnston explained that the P64 fragments were dated entirely through paleography, meaning scholars compared the handwriting style of the scribe to thousands of other dated secular documents found in Egypt that have survived from the same era.

Oxford's Oldest New Testament Fragments: 2,000-Year-Old Texts Reveal Jesus' Words

He explained that because everything was handwritten before the invention of the printing press, these handwriting comparisons, along with the fact that the fragment is written on papyrus, rather than later parchment, and is formatted as a codex with writing on both sides, allow experts to date it to the late second century AD. This would mean that they may have been penned 'a full century' after Jesus' crucifixion, which many scholars believe occurred in 33 AD. However, some experts, such as German archaeologist Carsten Peter Thiede, argue that the same evidence points to an even earlier first-century origin date for the texts, around 70 AD.

On the back of Fragment 1, which is from Matthew 26:7-8, the words read: 'Poured it on his head as he was at the table. When they saw this, the disciples said indignantly.' The next piece features Matthew 26:10: 'Jesus noticed this and said, 'Why are you upsetting the woman? What she has done for me.' This passage is part of the story of the woman who anoints Jesus with expensive perfume at Bethany, shortly before the Passover. And the final excerpt, from Matthew 26:15, reads: 'Then one of the Twelve, the man called Judas Iscariot, went to the chief priests and said, 'What are you prepared to give me?'

The front side of the first fragment, with text from Matthew 26:31, reads: 'Jesus said to them, 'You will all fall away from me tonight, for the scripture says.' That quote is simply Jesus predicting that all his disciples would soon abandon him, as they later did. The second includes details from Matthew 26:32: '

Christianityhistoryold testamentpapyrusreligion