My point is that most errors people talk about are scribal errors that won't change the global meaning of the message. Added sentences in the Bible are put in parenthesis to indicate what a scribe copying the text added basing himself on other scriptures. Now, if you all know about Plato, Socrates, Ceasar and other great thinkers and men that came before Jesus and that we all learn about in school, that inspire a lot of things and that we quote extansively, you should know that the most recent copies of their texts are dated between 800 and 1000 years after they died in another language. Yet no one argues about the validity of the famous sentence "veni, vidi, vici" from Julius Ceasar. By comparison, the first influencial members of the Church (before denominations, like orthodox and catholic) were quoting extensively from the NT so much so that we can re-write it just using their quotations. That's about 20 to 40 thousand different documents written less than 150 years after Jesus' death.
Now consider this, if you want to know if a person tells the whole truth, find out if they tell even the less glorious parts of the story. In this case, imagine one of the writers of the Gospels sitting and listening to Peter tell his story about how he betrayed Jesus by saying he didn't know him before he died. Who would say such a thing if he believed he denied the Savior of all Mankind ? Think about John at the end of his Gospel saying that he ran to the tomb of Jesus and got there faster than Peter. The NT is filled with counter-productive information that validates the truthness of the people who wrote it. Thibk about Paul who says he used to persecute Christians but was changed by Jesus and then went on to plant Churches all over the place.
Think about the fact that pretty much all the NT was written while people who actually saw Jesus and knew what he did were alive! How easy would it be to go and find out if what is being told is the truth?
I apologize if anyone thought that my first post was dumb but I believe this whole argumentation about if the Bible is corrupt is like trying to strike at the wind... If you're a muslim, you should try to prove me how your book is true instead of how mine is broken! Because wasn't it the snake in the Garden of Eden who asked Eve: "Did God really say...?"