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So which are the other books that should be in the Bible? Are you saying that all Bibles should include the Apocrypha? Have you read the content of (1) Tobit and, (2) Bel and the Dragon lately?pom2014 said:Man made it 66, not God.
To be specific, anti Catholic protestant man.
The New Testament at one point included all writings of Christians.OzSpen said:So which are the other books that should be in the Bible? Are you saying that all Bibles should include the Apocrypha? Have you read the content of (1) Tobit and, (2) Bel and the Dragon lately?
Or, should the Gospel of Peter, the Gospel of Thomas, the Gospel of the Hebrews, Gospel of Philip, Gospel of Nicodemus, Gospel of Judas, and the Gospel of the Nazoreans should also be included? Where should the number of books stop? Why not include Augustine's City of God and Confessions?
Oz
Irenaeus didn't want us to have Revelation.Wormwood said:The problem is that there were many groups surfacing that sought to change the message of Christ from those who originally passed it down. Marcion was the first to try to reshape the person and message of Jesus by making an anti-Semitic canon. The canon was formed not to "control" what Christians could or couldn't read. It was formed to protect the original message that was passed down and distinguish it from new cults and heresies that were developing. The NT is filled with warnings of such perversions that would exchange the truth for a lie. You guys read too many tabloids and conspiracy novels... and far too few church history books.
pom,pom2014 said:The New Testament at one point included all writings of Christians.
It was FOUR times the size of what we have now.
But Irenaeus decided that there should ONLY be the four gospels, because there were four corners of the earth, four winds and four angels in the prophecy of Ezekiel.
And only the letters of Paul should be included. He even said that we SHOULD NOT have Revelation. Said it was NOT for the laity. But people who had sat at the feet of John begged and he allowed it.
HE ALLOWED IT.
I agree with Timothy that ALL scripture is useful. Even what might be considered not viable by one or two men. Like Irenaeus.
Include it all. Hold nothing back. No hidden knowledge.
OZ,OzSpen said:So which are the other books that should be in the Bible? Are you saying that all Bibles should include the Apocrypha? Have you read the content of (1) Tobit and, (2) Bel and the Dragon lately?
Or, should the Gospel of Peter, the Gospel of Thomas, the Gospel of the Hebrews, Gospel of Philip, Gospel of Nicodemus, Gospel of Judas, and the Gospel of the Nazoreans should also be included? Where should the number of books stop? Why not include Augustine's City of God and Confessions?
Oz
The fact is that the RCC declared the Apocrypha to be part of the canon at the Council of Trent far more in response to Protestantism than anything else. I think the Apocrypha has good material in it, but even among Jews it was scarcely viewed as inspired in the first century. The fact that it was in the LXX and the LXX was quoted at times by NT authors does not mean they held to the Apocryphal books as inspired. There was debate on the issue. Again, most did not view these books as authoritative, there were other texts that did not include these books and it is only really referenced one time whereas the other sections of the OT are quoted and declared to be God's Word many, many times. I think you are overstating the case there a bit, Jim.[SIZE=medium]The LXX MSS are paralleled by the writings of the early Christian Fathers, who (at any rate outside Palestine and Syria) normally used the LXX or the derived Old Latin version. In their writings, there is both a wide and a narrow Canon. The former comprises those books from before the time of Christ which were generally read and esteemed in the church (including the Apocrypha), but the latter is confined to the books of the Jewish Bible, which scholars like Melito, Origen, Epiphanius and Jerome distinguish from the rest as alone inspired. The Apocrypha were known in the church from the start, but the further back one goes, the more rarely are they treated as inspired. In the NT itself, one finds Christ acknowledging the Jewish Scriptures, by various of their current titles, and accepting the three sections of the Jewish Canon and the traditional order of its books; one finds Revelation perhaps alluding to their number; and throughout the NT one finds most of the books being referred to individually as having divine authority; but none of the Apocrypha. The only apparent exception is the reference to Enoch in Jude 14f, which may be just an argumentum ad hominem to converts from the apocalyptic school of thought.[/SIZE]
[SIZE=medium]R. T. Beckwith, “Canon of the Old Testament,” ed. D. R. W. Wood et al., New Bible Dictionary (Leicester, England; Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press, 1996), 169.[/SIZE]
Jim,JimParker said:OZ,
The Septuagint (LXX) was the accepted book of the scriptures at the time of Jesus. The quotes of the OT found in the NT are from the LXX which contained the Apocrypha.
The Jewish canon of scripture without apocrypha, upon which Protestants base their OT canon, did not come into existence for about 300 years after Christ.
The apocrypha were part of every English translation of the Bible and were not removed from the King James Bible of 1611 until 1885.
The LXX continued to be "the Scriptures" until the Church determined which documents would be included in the New Testament based on authorship and content.Apostolic authorship was required of the books off the NY. The Gospels of Peter, Thomas, the Hebrews, Philip, Nicodemus, Judas, and the Nazoreans were all obviously written by people other than the Apostles and deviated from the teachings of the 4 Gospels and the letters which were accepted as being from Paul, John, Peter, and James.
The first complete listing of NT books did not appear until the Pascal Letter of St. Athanasius in 367. And the canon of NT scripture was not an issue to the early church until false gospels and letters started being written which contained gnostic and neo-Platonist teachings which were contrary to the teaching of the apostles.
The fact, which seems to have been lost to the modern Protestant church, is that the original scriptures used by the apostles and their heirs to the Gospel was the LXX complete with apocrypha.
A selection of explanations of how from websites provides some insight as to why the modern Protestant church does not accept them. They tend to all agree that it was those Catholics who insisted on having them. And that is probably accurate when one realizes that the original church was "catholic."
And I have read both Tobit and Bell and the Dragon. I don't have a problem with either of them in the manner that most Christians don't have a problem with a axe head floating.
It's good to see you here, Oz.
jim
Bel and the Dragon:OzSpen said:Jim,
There is some fanciful material in Tobit and Bel and the Dragon. Here are but a couple examples (I have read the entire Apocrypha, i.e. deuterocanonical books). In fact, in my BA, I took a course in the Apocrypha. Let's look at a couple of examples:
Tobit 6:1-8 (RSV):
5 So the young man did as the angel told him; and they roasted and ate the fish. And they both continued on their way until they came near to Ecbatana.
6 Then the young man said to the angel, "Brother Azarias, of what use is the liver and heart and gall of the fish?"
7 He replied, "As for the heart and liver, if a demon or evil spirit gives trouble to any one, you make a smoke from these before the man or woman, and that person will never be troubled again.
8 And as for the gall, anoint with it a man who has white films in his eyes, and he will be cured."
JimParker said:Let me respond to each example.
"As for the heart and liver, if a demon or evil spirit gives trouble to any one, you make a smoke from these before the man or woman, and that person will never be troubled again. And as for the gall, anoint with it a man who has white films in his eyes, and he will be cured."
Comparing it to scripture which is acceptable to the Protestant church I can find several examples of people being told by God to do things which appear to make no sense or are impossible.
First: Noah's ark is described as being about 450 feet long. A wooden ship of that length is guaranteed to break up in even moderately uneven seas because the hogging and sagging forces exerted by the uneven lifting of the waters would be greater than any wooden keel could sustain. And, lacking a tree large enough to fashion a 450 foot keel, the keel would have had to be made in pieces which would further weaken it. The ship would simply come apart at the seams as it was flexed by the seas, leak, fill with water and sink. a ship of that size not breaking up in stormy seas is simply not a possibility.
Second: God told Moses to fashion a serpent of brass and fix it to a pole to be held upward for anyone to be able to see. Anyone who was bitten by a deadly poisonous snake was told to look at the brass serpent and they would be healed. There is no logical reason for such a method of healing to be accomplished.
Third: The healing of the child by Eli'sha. 2Ki 4:32-35
When Eli'sha came into the house, he saw the child lying dead on his bed. So he went in and shut the door upon the two of them, and prayed to the LORD.
Then he went up and lay upon the child, putting his mouth upon his mouth, his eyes upon his eyes, and his hands upon his hands; and as he stretched himself upon him, the flesh of the child became warm.
Then he got up again, and walked once to and fro in the house, and went up, and stretched himself upon him; the child sneezed seven times, and the child opened his eyes.
You won't find that procedure in any medical journal.
Then in 2 Kings 6, the (expensive) iron head of a borrowed axe flies off the handle and falls into the Jordan river where it would be impossible to recover. When the man told Eli'sha what happened, Eli'sha threw a stick in the water and the axe head floated to the surface where it could be recovered. Does that seem like a bit of a stretch for you?
How about Jonah surviving 3 days in a huge fish's gut?
So, if an angel from the Lord told someone to make a smoke from the heart and liver of a fish before the man or woman, and that person will never be troubled by evil spirits or demons again, then, it seems to me, that it would behoove the person to remember this remedy. It makes no sense but neither did the specifications for the ark or looking at the brass serpent or laying on the body of the child until he sneezed and came to life or throwing a stick in the water to make the iron axe head float..
But all of those are accepted without question because they're "right there in the Bible."
So why not the prescription in Tobit?
Then there is the exploding "dragon."
First of all, it wasn't a dragon like the ones in folk lore and fairy tales that a valiant knight would gladly slay in order to rescue in order to win the heart of the fair damsel. It was an alligator or a crocodile or a Komodo Dragon or similar reptile. (Probably not a big snake because they wouldn't eat the "cakes.") And, once the reptile died from the effects of consuming those nasty cakes, might it not "exlode" as did the whale
I don't find that story to be a serious stretch of the imagination.
And as for Habakkuk being taken up by an angel to bring food to Daniel, is it not very similar to Phillip who was translated to Azo'tus? How about the devil taking Jesus to a high mountain from which he could see all the kingdoms of the world (which the curvature of the earth would make impossible) or to the pinnacle of the temple?
With reference to dating of OT original manuscripts, I don't think that makes a difference. My point is that the LXX was the most widely used scriptures used by the Jews at the time of Jesus. This was due to the fact that the Hebrew, in which the original texts were written, had been lost to all but scholars among the Jews during the exiles of the two kingdoms. That loss created a need for a translation which people could read and teach their children according to the commandment.
So the scriptures which Jesus and the writers of the NT quote is the LXX including the apocrypha which is why we may identify over 300 quotations, references, or paraphrases of the apocrypha in the NT.
I see a similarity between the Sadducees, who accepted only the Pentateuch as inspired and authoritative, primarily, I think, because of the prophesy of a new covenant by Jeremiah (31:31) which would put them all out of a job, and the Protestant rejection of the apocrypha because it gives support to the practice of prayer for the dead which is contrary to Protestant teaching. So, from my perspective, it is not because the stories are unlikely that the LXX is rejected; it is because the LXX is rejected that the stories are unlikely. (Though not more so than stories in the "God-breathed" Protestant canon.)
As for the concept of "God-breathed" scripture, I would ask; is not all truth "God-breathed"?
And do we apply the term "θεόπνευστος" as Paul intended, affirming that scripture is from God and useful for teaching, for reproof, for correction, and for training in righteousness, that the man of God may be complete, equipped for every good work? Or has it been commandeered it to be used as a polemic against the Papists in defending the exile of scripture that was accepted by the original church?
The problem with all you Protestants is that you open your eggs at the wrong end. :) (heh! heh! heh! heh!)
Grace and peace to you
Iakov the fool
Question: St Jerome was persuaded, against his original inclination, to include the deuterocanonicals in his Vulgate edition of the Scriptures. What are your comments?
Answer: True, yet he classed the Apocrypha in a separated category. He differentiated between the canonical books and ecclesiastical books, which he did not recognize as authoritative Scripture. This is admitted by the modern Catholic church:
“St. Jerome distinguished between canonical books and ecclesiastical books. The latter he judged were circulated by the Church as good spiritual reading but were not recognized as authoritative Scripture. The situation remained unclear in the ensuing centuries...For example, John of Damascus, Gregory the Great, Walafrid, Nicolas of Lyra and Tostado continued to doubt the canonicity of the deuterocanonical books. According to Catholic doctrine, the proximate criterion of the biblical canon is the infallible decision of the Church. This decision was not given until rather late in the history of the Church at the Council of Trent. The Council of Trent definitively settled the matter of the Old Testament Canon. That this had not been done previously is apparent from the uncertainty that persisted up to the time of Trent” (The New Catholic Encyclopedia, The Canon).
The practice of the Church up to the time of the Reformation was to follow the judgment of Jerome who rejected the Old Testament apocrypha on the grounds that these books were never part of the Jewish canon. These were permissible to be read in the churches for the purposes of edification but were never considered authoritative for establishing doctrine. The Protestants did nothing new when they rejected the apocrypha as authoritative Scripture. It was the Roman church that rejected this tradition and ‘canonized’ the ecclesiastical books.
That is by far the best answer I have seen on here. Well one of the best. Not to discredit others who have put up good posts. Well put, Aspen. :)aspen said:The Bible is inspired, not magic. The OT is a collection of stories about God reaching out to humanity and humanity failing in countless ways to respond to God. The NT is Gods perfect response to Himself - Jesus and another invitation for humanity to join with the HS to, once again become perfect lovers of God and His Body.
It is not the only book that contains inspiration, yet it is complete. It is certainly not meant to stop us from reading about the experiences of the saints that followed the closing of the canon. The reason the Gnostic Gospels or the Book of Mormon are not considered scripture is no mistake - neither portray a correct view of God.
Im not sure what you mean by this. The experiences of the saints are inspiring, but not inspired. Very different concepts. I would not say there are other God-breathed texts.It is not the only book that contains inspiration...