Yes, the Catholics love their myths, don’t they! Unfortunately for them, that is nothing more than a myth. “Wishful thinking” is another way to describe it. The Catholic Church gave us no such thing. The Bible itself tells us who gave us the Bible. It is God who gave us the Bible; and He did so by inspiring His chosen prophets and Apostles to write them:
The Catholic Church did give us the Bible. History shows it. LDS on the other hand contain many erroneous claims which cannot be supported by historical facts.
The Council of Rome in 382 A.D, Council of Hippo in 392 A.D, and Council of Carthage in 396 A.D.
Find a source outside how the Bible was made, and you’ll be lead directly to these Councils.
Second, Mormonism rely on King James Bible written in 1610 A.D, and was translated from the Latin Vulgate.
The Douy Rheims Bible was written before the King James Bible and this English translation was written in 1609 A.D.
Both these books were translated from St. Jerome’s Latin translation called the Latin Vulgate. The Latin Vulgate was translated from both Septuagint and the Masoretic Text or the Tanakh.
The Tanakh is an acronym that identifies the Hebrew Bible.
History has show that during the time of Jesus Christ, there was no official canon of Scripture or Tanakh. It was not until the Jewish Leaders themselves were struggling with their own Text during the rise of Christianity.
As we both know, the early Church were Jewish, but soon the Gentile Christians outnumbered the Jewish converts to Christianity. Many of these Gentiles were Greeks or spoke Greek. The Septuagint were widely used by the Christians.
The Jews felt the need to defined what books they should use in their worship and so in the Council of Jamnia in 90 A.D, they accept only Hebrew Text as inspired, or the Tanakh.
The 72 Books of the OT was widely used by them and it was commonly used in the early Christian liturgy. It was not until some Gnostics use books claimed to be written by the Apostles were used.
Many of these books are the Gnostic Gospels, like the Gospel of Thomas, Acts of Peter, Gospels of Judas, etc. So the Council of Rome was gathered. Pope Damasus sent the ball rolling, as St. Jerome as his secretary. St. Jerome translated the Tanakh and the Septuagint into the Latin Vulgate.
On another note, the KJV omitted the Septuagint text since Martin Luther feel that it didn’t fit his doctrines. The Book of Maccabees contains a prayer for the dead but that is another discussion.
Now ask yourself. How did the English Translation of the came about? What source did KJV got its Translation from?
The Answer is the Latin Vulgate, which the Catholic Church gave us. This is historical fact my friend. It is NOT MYTH~!!!