You have rather thorough misunderstanding of the motive and purpose of textual criticism.
Firstly, no matter how much you want to deny it, Erasmus asked exactly the same question: "Did God really say...?"
What you don't seem to grasp is the vast difference in motivation behind the question. When the serpent asked
Eve that question, his purpose was to get her to doubt the validity of God's word. When Erasmus or any other
textual critic asks the question, they are wanting to ensure the validity of the written word, asking, "Is that
what God really said, or has the message been modified somehow since it was written?"
Firstly, no matter how much you want to deny it, Erasmus asked exactly the same question: "Did God really say...?"
What you don't seem to grasp is the vast difference in motivation behind the question. When the serpent asked
Eve that question, his purpose was to get her to doubt the validity of God's word. When Erasmus or any other
textual critic asks the question, they are wanting to ensure the validity of the written word, asking, "Is that
what God really said, or has the message been modified somehow since it was written?"
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