Catholics consider making worshipping graven images a violation of the first commandment and therefore, part of it. Catholics count all of this as the first commandment. Seethe Roman Catholic denomination has removed the 2nd . commandment
not making idols that that we worship. And split the 9th into 2 commandment.
So you can believe differently. On some issue’s.
Where I believe @Special believes “you shall not covet” is a single commandment is based on the apostle Paul’s epistle to the church of Rome, where he uses it as a single quote to encompass everything Catholics would consider the 9th & 10th Commandments separately (see Romans 7:7; 13:9). As a result, if what Catholics consider the 1st Commandment isn’t separated as two separate commandments (“You shall have no other strange gods before Me” and “You shall not create a graven image”), then you only end up with 9 Commandments instead of 10.Catholics consider making worshipping graven images a violation of the first commandment and therefore, part of it. Catholics count all of this as the first commandment.
If the OT canon was the only object of this thread your point would be relevant. But sense you consider the canon of Christian scriptures, the Christian bible, much more than the OT, how is your post relevant to the OP and to his follow up post on post #3?So, the OT canon was not something that was established during the church age, but prior to that:
Deuteronomy has a different list of the Decalogue. That’s the list we use.As a result, if what Catholics consider the 1st Commandment isn’t separated as two separate commandments (“You shall have no other strange gods before Me” and “You shall not create a graven image”), then you only end up with 9 Commandments instead of 10.
It’s the same list as in Exodus. If you look at Deuteronomy, and you blend the first & second commandment into one (“You shall have no other strange gods before Me” and “You shall not create a graven image”), in order to have 10 Commandments, you have to separate the 10th Commandment (“You shall not covet”) into 2 different kinds of “coveting” (“not coveting neighbor’s wife” & “not coveting neighbor’s good”). However, again, Paul lists “not coveting” as a single commandment in his epistle to the Romans.Deuteronomy has a different list of the Decalogue. That’s the list we use.
If the OT canon was the only object of this thread your point would be relevant. But sense you consider the canon of Christian scriptures, the Christian bible, much more than the OT, how is your post relevant to the OP and to his follow up post on post #3?
It’s relevant because the OT canon was inspired the moment it was penned, which was before Jesus built His church, which He held the Jews accountable for knowing what it was. As far as the NT canon, most of it was considered just as inspired as the OT by the mid-first century. Jude stated he received his information by the apostles, and quotes 2 Peter extensively. Peter stated that all of Paul’s epistles are just as inspired as the “rest of the Scriptures.” Paul stated all Scripture is God-breathed & referred to Luke’s writings as “Scripture.” Luke stated he received much of his information by “eyewitnesses” of which Matthew was one, whose writings are “synoptic” to both Luke & Mark. The book of Revelation is self-authoritative, as it is the Revelation of Jesus Christ Who commanded the apostle John to write down what he saw.That’s true, although it was the Church that preserved and canonized the writings and handed them down to subsequent generations of Christians. We probably can’t know for sure how the OT would have been handled and transmitted as a purely Jewish book, in the absence of the Catholic Church.
RC the truth never changes and it hasn’t changed sense our last conversation on this topic here. Why Protestant Bibles Are Smaller - #181 by adf417Hope this addresses your comments & how this all relates to the OP.
Was there anything disagreeable in what RC wrote in this thread?As was said there you can profess it all you want but it doesn’t make it truth and your primes is misguided. There is a deeper historical aspect you are missing.
Nothing disagreeable and very informative - if one doesn’t care to truly consider the entirety of the deeper historical aspect. Other than that its all good!adf417:![]()
Was there anything disagreeable in what RC wrote in this thread?As was said there you can profess it all you want but it doesn’t make it truth and your primes is misguided. There is a deeper historical aspect you are missing.
(I thought it was well written and informative. Didn’t seem to be very controversial?)
Ummmmm…hold on a second. If taken with a strict materialist kind of historicity you could make this case.Certainly the New Testament is Catholic. The Old Testament is Jewish and would exist if Christ had never come.