Hello! Thank you for answering questions, this has been an interesting thread!
My question concerns receiving revelation and the canon of scripture.
I have read many of the documents that exist from the earliest Christian times. I understand that the Pastor of Hermas and 1st Clement were viewed remarkably similarly to scripture by some congregations, but they were not included in the canon. 2nd Peter was not as well attested in many congregations than most (all) the other books that made it in. Revelations fell into disfavor before the 4th century and barely made it into the Bible. That being said, 2nd Peter, 1st Clement, and the Pastor of Hermas (and Revelations) were all written after the synaptic gospels. The Early Church embraced these books and 2 of them were made part of the canon.
The most famous late (late 2nd early 3rd century) piece of purported revelation I know about is the Montanist prophets. Tertullian the brilliant Early Church Father and apologists embraced these revelations as being from God. From what I know about these revelations, they do not align with Catholic or hardly any other modern Christian view of truth. I do not point to them because I wish to argue they were revelations from God, but because I think their reception by Tertullian indicate that the idea that all Public Revelation ceased is later than Tertullian (or at the time of and in response to the Montanists).
The “orthodox” response to the Montanist was that “revelation had ceased.” Revelation was not in the Church and it certainly was not outside God’s church.
My HISTORICAL question is, “Are there any other ‘end of revelation’ comments/teachings from before Tertullian?" Today (and after Tertullian), folks point to some AMBIGUOUS Biblical passages, but those (Jude) pre-date 2nd Peter, 1st Clement, and the Pastor of Hermas (not to mention Tertullian’s reception of the Montanists).
Thanks for any insights. If you are aware of a book I should read (other than all the ECF which I plug away at when the mood strikes me), that would be great too.
Charity, TOm