E
E.E.N.S
Guest
That is a very subjective answer.The Scriptures are the Scriptures because God tells me so.
Now, this may sound âblasphemousâ to you, but in actuallity, it isnât. There was no canon of scripture in the early Church; there was no Bible. Perhaps the better word to use at this time would be codified. The Bible is the book of the Church; she is not the Church of the Bible. It was the Churchâher leadership, faithful peopleâguided by the authority of the Spirit of Truth which discovered the books inspired by God in their writing. The Church did not create the canon; she discerned the canon. Fixed canons of the Old and New Testaments, hence the Bible, were not known much before the end of the 2nd and early 3rd century.
Here is a brief overview:
Melito, bishop of Sardis, an ancient city of Asia Minor (see Rev 3), c. 170 AD produced the first known Christian attempt at an Old Testament canon. His list maintains the Septuagint order of books but contains only the Old Testament protocanonicals minus the Book of Esther.
The Council of Laodicea, c. 360, produced a list of books similar to todayâs canon. This was one of the Churchâs earliest decisions on a canon.
Pope Damasus, 366-384, in his Decree, listed the books of todayâs canon.
The Council of Rome, 382, was the forum which prompted Pope Damasusâ Decree.
Bishop Exuperius of Toulouse wrote to Pope Innocent I in 405 requesting a list of canonical books. Pope Innocent listed the present canon.
The Council of Hippo, a local north Africa council of bishops created the list of the Old and New Testament books in 393 which is the same as the Roman Catholic list today.
The Council of Carthage, a local north Africa council of bishops created the same list of canonical books in 397. This is the council which many Protestant and Evangelical Christians take as the authority for the New Testament canon of books. The Old Testament canon from the same council is identical to Roman Catholic canon today. Another Council of Carthage in 419 offered the same list of canonical books.
Since the Roman Catholic Church does not define truths unless errors abound on the matter, Roman Catholic Christians look to the Council of Florence, an ecumenical council in 1441 for the first definitive list of canonical books.
The final infallible definition of canonical books for Roman Catholic Christians came from the Council of Trent in 1556 in the face of the errors of the Reformers who rejected seven Old Testament books from the canon of scripture to that time.
So, however you want to look at it, one canât deny that God, through the Church, gave us the Canon. No Christian for about 1500 years would deny that, (however some protestants do now because they must separate the authority of the Church otherwise they havenât any leg at all to stand onâŚand IMO, itâs a leg of straw standing on sand.)
You are right on one thing though, it is by God that the canon was determined, but you canât seperate Christ and His Church. His work is done through the Church, which is His very Mystical Body.