R
RaisedCatholic
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Yet, Jimmy Akin right here from Catholic Answers stated the Pharisaic canon & the Protestant canon were identical. Christie quoted NewAdvent.org that the differences between the Pharisaic schools of Shammai & Hillel were “theoretical differences” but not enough to count any of these books out of their canon. And by the time of Jesus, even He affirmed the Pharisaic canon, which Christie brought up both in the debate & in his book, by quoting Jesus from the Gospel of Luke, which demonstrates by that time, there was a fixed Pharisaic canon. Assuming there wasn’t is merely speculation.we don’t have a definition of who exactly all the Pharisees considered inspired. Don’t ever assume that any group of Pharisees agreed with other Pharisees. It’s quite likely that they varied in opinions on this.
But as Christie pointed out in the debate, they wouldn’t have said “Old Testament,” because there was no “NEW Testament” back then. Terms like “Moses & the Prophets” & “the Law & the Prophets” were terms they used instead of “Old Testament.” And Christie pointed out that the “Bible” of the Pharisees were identical that of later Protestants, which is why Jesus used that these two terms with them & stated “They have Moses & the Prophets” - meaning having possession of the OT canon, which Jesus did not say about any other Jewish sect, including the Sadducees or the Essenes.Another consideration is the the term Moses and the Prophets is just a way to say “ the Bible “… an everyday term without a specific definition
Agreed. There is no evidence prior to the second century AD that ANY Jew embrace ALL 7 books of the Deuterocanon. Even the Dead Sea Scrolls have only produced TWO books from the Deuterocanon, while listing virtually every book from the Protocanon, except Esther. But Christie even points out in his book that a writing called “Proto Esther” - which was a commentary on Esther - WAS found in the DSS, so they were certainly aware of the book, despite not being found.another is that the diaspora Jews may not agree with the Jerusalem Jews. Quite likely, in fact. Which books would they have disputed or had disagreement with? The books in the Deutero most likely.
While books like Esther were in dispute even into the church age, like Christie pointed out in the debate, that is the exception that proves the rule because both Jews & early Christians enumerated the OT books as “only 22 books” which are the same books in Protestant OTs, only grouped differently. And we can only get to “22 books” if Esther is included. And that the time frame of these “only 22 books” are from the time of Moses to the death of Artaxerxes which would end around 400 BC. And this is when the last of the Protocanon (Nehemiah) was written.
So, while these are popular arguments which I have heard as well, Christie did a good job addressing them, & bringing up others, which Gary did not seem to be able to answer.
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