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CatholicZ09
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I know that it is a popular belief in revisionist history that the Catholic Church did not compile the Holy Bible. Well, if that’s the case, then who did?
I’ve heard the holy spirit beforeI know that it is a popular belief in revisionist history that the Catholic Church did not compile the Holy Bible. Well, if that’s the case, then who did?
Before that , can I ask you one question. What is the literacy rate of the world before one century?. How many people can read and write?. How an illiterate layman read bible?.What is the use of him with a bible?.I know that it is a popular belief in revisionist history that the Catholic Church did not compile the Holy Bible. Well, if that’s the case, then who did?
The unified Apostolic Church. The Proto-Catholic/Orthodox split church. Technically the “Catholic” Church gave it to us, in the sense that both the Orthodox communion and Catholic communion is “Catholic” in name; but in the conventional sense “Catholic” usually means the Latin West, and the Latin Church was only half of that which gave us the Bible.I know that it is a popular belief in revisionist history that the Catholic Church did not compile the Holy Bible. Well, if that’s the case, then who did?
The fact that the Jews were given the honor of preserving/ handing down the greatest portion of Gods sacred text … as well as producing the Messiah (The Word, became flesh, of God) … is so often overlooked when this subject is repeated (ad infinitum …The unified Apostolic Church. The Proto-Catholic/Orthodox split church. Technically the “Catholic” Church gave it to us, in the sense that both the Orthodox communion and Catholic communion is “Catholic” in name; but in the conventional sense “Catholic” usually means the Latin West, and the Latin Church was only half of that which gave us the Bible.
Thus, I usually say the “Early Church” or “First Church” and not “Catholic Church.”
Martin Luther.
Luther knew from whence scripture came - The One Holy Catholic and Apostolic Church, in unity prior to the Schism.“We concede – as we must – that so much of what they [the Catholic Church] say is true: that the papacy has God’s word and the office of the apostles, **and that we have received Holy Scriptures, **Baptism, the Sacrament, and the pulpit from them. What would we know of these if it were not for them?” - Luther
To many Protestants you would think it fell out the sky magicallyI know that it is a popular belief in revisionist history that the Catholic Church did not compile the Holy Bible. Well, if that’s the case, then who did?
What gives you that impression?To many Protestants you would think it fell out the sky magically
When Luther wrote that, the schism has already happened, and the western church was known as Catholic.Luther knew from whence scripture came - The One Holy Catholic and Apostolic Church, in unity prior to the Schism.
Jon
Indeed. And certainly he knew that the books making up the scripture were written prior to it. Be that as it may, as a western Christian, he was very much giving credit to Rome, as well. And there’s nothing wrong in that.When Luther wrote that, the schism has already happened, and the western church was known as Catholic.
Honestly? I was raised in an Evangelical household…and it’s kind of what I thought. Just as Jesus ascended, I sort of thought the Bible “descended.” A lot of my Evangelical friends and cohorts are aware that each Book has its own background, message, and themes, even though a few share authors, but they are completely unaware of the entire concept of an “ecumenical council,” let alone those that officially recognized a canon.What gives you that impression?
Jon
Here is a list of councils that took place well before the schism in 1054.Tradition plays a big role. Not all Apostolic Churches share the same canon as the Latin Church. Several of these Churches include additional books or chapters not considered canonical by the Latin Church. It has less to do with any intended deviation from Roman practice than a traditional adherence to what texts and translations have been used and passed down in the particular Church. The Greek Septuagint in early Christianity was widely held, East and West, as divinely inspired, and was the official version of the OT for the Churches, but other translations made in certain regions and in certain times played important roles as well (e.g. the Peshitta, the Vulgate).
Protestants are an interesting case in that they rejected the text as passed down in the Latin Church and sought to recover the “pure” Scripture by going back to the sources (ad fontes). They more or less rejected the Vulgate and the Septuagint and latched onto the Masoretic Text version of the OT, which has its origins in translations made by Jews after the Church was founded. The Masoretic Text does not include the deuterocanonical works found in the Latin Catholic canons, nor any other works included by the other Apostolic Churches.
I would have to look into the issue more, but my understanding is that early Protestants saw the Masoretic Text as a more ancient and original version than the Septuagint and the Vulgate, and so adopted this as the standard for their own canon and translations of the Old Testament. If you notice, Protestant apologists will disclude certain deuterocanonical books because there is no known Hebrew original, but only a Greek version known. Many modern scholars, however, now regard parts of the Greek Septuagint, which often includes these deuterocanonical books, as of more antiquity than the Masoretic Text, and will prefer the LXX reading over the MT. The Protestants, in my opinion, owe the OT version of their Bible to the Jewish editors of the 1st millenium AD. As to the NT, they received the text from both Western and Eastern Christian monastic and scholastic communities that had passed down the text in the original koine Greek language.
I see your point. Of course, American evangelicalism is relatively small compared to “mainline” protestantism. And perhaps I’m giving others too much credit.Honestly? I was raised in an Evangelical household…and it’s kind of what I thought. Just as Jesus ascended, I sort of thought the Bible “descended.” A lot of my Evangelical friends and cohorts are aware that each Book has its own background, message, and themes, even though a few share authors, but they are completely unaware of the entire concept of an “ecumenical council,” let alone those that officially recognized a canon.
I still remember the days of High School FCA (Fellowship of Christian Athletes, a Protestant/Evangelical group) where I taught the group, and the staff member leading it, about the Council of Nicaea and canonization of the New Testament.
You also have to realize that for some of those belonging to non-Apostolic churches, Christian history stops around 70 AD and doesn’t really pick back up until Martin Luther, unless it’s necessary to call a group “Christian” to make Muslims and Jews look bad.
But I’m well aware that there are just as many informed Protestants and Evangelicals as there are those who don’t dare to look back at Christian history.
Many Fundamentalist Evangelicals are that wayWhat gives you that impression?
Jon
I’m totally new to being Anglican. My theology has become more mainline over the years, and not very conservative evangelical at all, which leaves my present Assemblies of God church no longer a good doctrinal fit. I’ve been sort of an honorary Anglican for years, because of C.S. Lewis and N.T. Wright, my two favorite Christian writers, and now it’s time to make it official.Izdaari: apparently you are Anglican. What happened at the Lambeth conference in the 1930’s that “allowed” birth control in the Christian ranks for the very first time? Do you believe that that outcome was from a correct rendering of scripture? If so, how?