ContentsPrefaceList of Figures and TablesAbbreviationsContributorsIntroduction: Paratextual Features of Early Greek ManuscriptsStanley E. Porter, Chris S. Stevens, and David I. Yoon1 What Is Paratext? In Search of an Elusive CategoryStanley E. Porter2 Missing the Point: Modern Punctuation Practice as Authoritative but Possibly Problematic Decision-MakingHans Förster3 Pointers to Persons and Pericopes? A Study of the Intermarginal Signs in Sahidic Manuscripts of the Gospel of JohnMatthias H. O. Schulz4 But for Me, the Scriptures are Jesus Christ (Ι̅Ϲ̅ Χ̅Ϲ̅; Ign. Phld. 8:2). Creedal Text-Coding and the Early Scribal System of Nomina SacraTomas Bokedal5 Segmentation and Interpretation of Early Pauline ManuscriptsS. Matthew Solomon6 Can Papyri Correspondence Help Us to Understand Paul’s “Large Letters” in Galatians?William Varner7 The Tradition and Development of the Subscriptions to 1 TimothyTommy Wasserman and Linnea Thorp8 Second Timothy: When and Where? Text and Traditions in the SubscriptionsConrad Thorup Elmelund and Tommy Wasserman9 Composite Citations in New Testament Greek ManuscriptsSean A. Adams and Seth M. Ehorn10 Titus in P32 and Early Majuscules: Textual Reliability and Scribal DesignChris S. Stevens11 The Scribal Use of Ekthesis as a Paragraph Marker? The Galatians Text in Codex Sinaiticus as a Test CaseDavid I. Yoon12 Miniature Codices in Early ChristianityMichael J. Kruger13 Marginalia in New Testament Greek Papyri: Implications for Scribal Practice and Textual TransmissionMichael P. TheophilosConclusion: Paratextual Features: Summary and ProspectsStanley E. Porter, Chris S. Stevens, and David I. Yoon