U
uniChristian
Guest
You said “The Septuagint was the Bible of the earliest church”UniChristian, I meant that that was not your writing style. If you quote someone else’s words, it is customary (actually, it’s required) to credit your source.
Sharpen your pencil and get busy with your research. Protestants, starting with Martin Luther, excluded the so-called Apocrypha from the Bible.
A little dose of history does a body a world of good.
“The Septuagint was the Bible of the earliest church…The Septuagint had been regarded as the inspired Word of God…The church spread the Septuagint, together with its own writings contained in the New Testament, throughout the world in its
missionary activities…Until the Protestant Reformation, the canon of the church was the longer canon of the Septuagint; only then did the Hebrew text of the Old Testament replace the Septuagint.” Encyclopedia of Early Christianity, Second Edition, Everett Ferguson, Editor, Garland Publishing, New York, 1999, page 1048-49.
“Because the Septuagint had become the canonical form of the Old Testament for the Christian community, those fourteen writings [which Protestants call Apocrypha] were also regarded as canonical…The supporters of the Reformation came to the conclusion that the Apocrypha (those fourteen books from the Septuagint not contained in the Hebrew scriptures) were of inferior quality to the remaining thirty-nine books in the Old Testament, and in the course of time eliminated them from their canon. Protestant Bibles in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries were printed without the Apocrypha. Eventually a series of confessions (written statements of the basic Christian creed) confirmed this reduced canon from the Protestant side. The statements by the** Roman Catholic community** at the Council of Trent, however, continued to maintain the longer canon, which included the Apocrypha. That division of oponion has continued to the present day.” Understanding the New Testament, Fourth Edition, Howard Clark Kee, Prentice-Hall, 1983, page 384.
Both of the books cited are Protestant publications.
***“To be deep in history is to cease to be a Protestant” ***~ John Henry Newman, Anglican clergyman and Catholic convert.
(emphasis mine)
JMJ Jay
The earliest Church is a Jewish Church and its scriptures are written in Hebrew. I think you will agree the Jews are in authority of their own canon. I suggest you take a look at the Jewish canon and when it was actually canonized before we go any further with this. Do we agree the Jews canonized the Torah in 90C.E?