Rightlydivide,
I have to side with NHInsider on this one. You said:
“The exact contents of the LXX at the time of Christ are relevant as something that was brought up in post number 9. It is one thing to examine allusions or possibly direct quotes. As part of that process though, it raises the question about what the LXX actually looked like. There seemed to be a presupposition that we know that the LXX at the time of Christ contained the deuterocanonical books. A presupposition that should be examined in light of the OP. As far as your statement attempting to compare what is known about the contents of the New Testament during the first two centuries (ie what books were considered inspired) with the contents of the LXX during the safe time frame, the comparision simply is not the same. We have a number of patristic writers who attest to our New Testament and their books. It is interesting that early Christians do not affirm the Deuterocanonicals consistently in the same manner.”
Rightly, not knowing the contents of the Septuagint is EXACTLY THE SAME THING as not know for sure what was the NT canon at the time of Christ and the Apostles. Consider the following facts that cannot be disputed:
- NO NT book was written while Christ was alive. Thus, although his Church had already been instituted at Pentecost, his Church had no written NT.
- Several books that never made it into the 27 NT canon were argued by quite a few good Catholics at the time, but their arguments gave way to the Church’s decision - inspired by the Holy Spirit - to declare the 27 books we have in the NT today, as being the NT canon as early as Pope Damasus I in 425 AD, the first time anyone in authority with the Church proclaimed a listing of the NT (although it was not a definitive proclamation - that did not occur until Trent).
- Do you realize that NONE of the “Old Latin” texts that St. Jerome relied upon to create the Vulgate, are available for us to examine? Does that mean we should question St. Jerome’s translation of them into the Vulgate, just as you suggest we should question the contents of the Septuagint, because we didn’t know what it supposedly had by way of contents at the time Christ and the Apostles lived?
- Do you realize that even St. Jerome’s Latin Vulgate had LONG disappeared by the time that Pope Clement requested a revision of the the Bible? The Clementine Vulgate (which we DO have copies of) is NOT a verbatim translation of Jerome’s Vulgate, because Jerome’s Vulgate had become too corrupted (either by accident or otherwise) by the 1500/1600’s. Do we discount the so-called “Authorized Version” of the King James Bible (and it is called “authorized” only because King James ordered it to be published), as it relied not only on Tynedale’s bible, but also on the Douay Rheims - a purely Catholic translation?
You see, THIS is the danger of
sola scriptura. One might think that this is a topic for another thread and has no bearing on the current discussion. I agree that it is a discussion for another thread. But it has a tremendous bearing on the current discussion because* you specifically discounted my claim that Jesus and the Apostles were reading and quoting from a Septuagint Bible because their OT quotes are identical to the Septuagint translations we have today, yet we have no idea what the Septuagint looked like at the time of Christ and the Apostles*.
Well if we adopt the protestant/fundamental proposition of
sola scriptura, which translation, exactly, are we going to use to “argue” doctrines and scriptures?
None of the original texts as produced by the authors, while under the inspiration of the Holy Spirit, exist. So which text/translation do we use even for THIS discussion in THIS simple thread?
Until a protestant/fundamentalist can show me a bible that appeared written directly by the Hand of God (as what occurred with the Ten Commandments and Moses), then we all MUST rely on an infallible decision by the Catholic Church (protestantism/fundamentalism did not exist before the late 1400’s - the entire western Christian world was Catholic) that:
A. The NT has 27 books in its official canon.
B. The 27 NT books that appear in all Christian bibles were inspired by God, and thus are part of the NT’s official canon.
C. Without a formal infallible decision as to the contents of the NT, then we encounter the problem that even protestants faced with people such as Luther, who decided he wanted to begin removing certain NT books because they did not fit with this “new found theology”.
You might be comfortable with Luther referring to the Book of James, God’s Word, as “an epistle of straw” - I would never be so presumptuous.
So, in the end, you are left with:
A. I said that we rely in part on the Septuagint as a basis for keeping the deuterocanonicals in the Bible as sacred, based on the fact that Christ and his Apostles DID quote from the Septuagint (not the deuteros - but the Septuagint itself, because of a comparison of their quotes with the wording of the Septuagint’s OT), because their OT quotes are verbatim or almost verbatim with the wording of the Septuagint.
You said it is illogical and not truly representative of what occurred to draw such a conclusion, because we had no idea what the Septuagint said at the time Christ and his Apostles preached, as we have no extent copy of the Septuagint from that period.
B. Playing “devil’s advocate” and assuming your premise just stated, we cannot rely on ANY text of ANY OT or NT book, as we have no idea of what the original texts of the OT and NT said at the time they were written, much less at the time they were first printed by Gutenbergl
So what do we Christian’s turn to as our inspired word of God, considering no “originals” exist any more (and have not for several thousand years)?