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mercygate
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“Neener-neener”? And does the word “Deutero” mean anything to him?
mercygate said:“Neener-neener”? And does the word “Deutero” mean anything to him?
It was my understanding that no books were officially canonized until Trent. Am I wrong?The RCC NEVER included the Apocrypha in the Bible as canonized Scripture before the Council of Trent. The writings were provided as addenda but NEVER as canonized Scripture. That is a crucial distinction which might be lost on you. Luther ALSO included the Apocrypha in a like manner, so he did not “leave the books out” of the Bible as is wrongly proposed by some.
You’re correct, none of the books at all were canonized infallibly until Trent. However, the same group of books (including the deuterocanonicals) were cited time and time again by previous councils ever since Hippo and Carthage. So, they had the list of books right ever since the 4th century. It’s just that they didn’t irrevocably affirm it until Trent.It was my understanding that no books were officially canonized until Trent. Am I wrong?
I am new to Catholic history so please correct me if I am wrong. I remember having read this somewhere before.It was my understanding that no books were officially canonized until Trent. Am I wrong?
That’s, more or less, how I understood it as well.I am new to Catholic history so please correct me if I am wrong. I remember having read this somewhere before.
Until Martin Luther, the deutrocannicals were accepted as part of the bible. When Protestants began questioning their worthiness, the church felt the need to restate that they were part of the bible. This doesn’t mean that they were added at the time, just that until the 1500’s no one had questioned these 7 books existence.
There came about a set of 2 accepted canon of the Old Testament in the 1st century AD.I am new to Catholic history so please correct me if I am wrong. I remember having read this somewhere before.
Until Martin Luther, the deutrocannicals were accepted as part of the bible. When Protestants began questioning their worthiness, the church felt the need to restate that they were part of the bible. This doesn’t mean that they were added at the time, just that until the 1500’s no one had questioned these 7 books existence.
For paragraph 2 I would mention Wisdom2 in reference to Matt.27;41-44 where the Jews mock Christ and say that if Christ is who He says He is, then God will protect Him. Paul references Wisdom in Romans.Some thoughts that just quickly came to me right after I posted that…
paragraph 1: I have no idea what his point is, nor do I really care.
" 2: this is just an outright lie, isn’t it? And anyways, I’m pretty sure there are several other books in the OT that are never quoted in the NT that are still accepted as canonical by protestants… not sure I can name them all, though.
" 4: Did Jerone really leave the “apocrypha” out of his vulgate translation? Even so, I guess it wouldn’t matter because he wasn’t the authority on which books were canon anyway.
In paragraph 6 he mentions the council of Trent as where the “apocrypha” were finally accepted as canon. The part he leaves out is, weren’t ALL the other books of the NT and OT first accepted (by an ecumenical council) here too??
Exoflare:Man, how disappointing. Here’s his half-baked reply. Mind you, everyone on that e-mail thread is seeing all of these replies from both me and him.
He only responds to the part where I say:
<< As for the rejection of these books by the “RCC” up until that time, I’ll ask you once again to tell us which council or papal decree (you know, actual Catholic teaching of some sort) reject these books. Meanwhile, these councils seem to have approved them. >>
And his “reply”:
**I DID answer your question – Council of Trent proclaimed the Apocrypha as canon – with the full support of the Pope. I quoted the admonition from Trent that proclaimed anyone who rejected these books “anathema.” (In RCC terms that is a very bad word)
** Yes that was his WHOLE reply! What a friggin’ coward, I tell you… But at least he’s not able to fool anyone else on that e-mail thread, even if he’s stuck in denial himself. This is how I replied:
LOL Did you even read the question? You claimed the Catholic Church had rejected these books before, so I’ll ask you for the THIRD time which council or Pope was it that rejected these books prior to the Council of Trent? And how do you explain all the previous councils that approved the very same canon that included the “Apocrypha”? You’re not fooling anybody here if your only recourse is avoiding the question.
That nothing be read in church besides the Canonical Scripture.
ITEM, that besides the Canonical Scriptures nothing be read in church under the name of divine Scripture.
But the Canonical Scriptures are as follows:
You’re right… if you look at my rebuttal above you’ll see that was one of the places I cited as well.There is a website that has tons, and tons of references from the New Testament that refer to the deuterocanonical books. I think it is scripturecatholic.com. If you go there, let me know if I am wrong…
AWESOME ANALOGY!!! I couldn’t have said it any better!will this analogy help??
saying that the Deutero did not exist in the Bible until Trent can be liken to saying that gravity did not exist until the apple dropped on Newton’s head??
makes sense??
Well, they don’t really claim that the deutero’s didnt exist til the Catholic Church put them in… The claim is that they weren’t considered inspired scripture by anyone up until that time.AWESOME ANALOGY!!! I couldn’t have said it any better!