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Daniel_Marsh
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What Jewish canons of scripture exist today and in history?
Did any of those include the apocrypha?

Did any of those include the apocrypha?
Jewish canon consists of the Tanakh and Talmud. Tanakh pretty much is consistant with your OT, although some large differences in translation. THere are said to have been “secret texts” that some sects of Judaism kept, but…they’re secretWhat Jewish canons of scripture exist today and in history?
Did any of those include the apocrypha?
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The Septuagint (Greek translation) contained the apocrypha: 1 and 3 Esdras, the Prayer of Manessah, Tobit, Judith, Psalm 151, 1, 2, 3, & 4 Maccabees, and longer texts of Esther and Daniel.What Jewish canons of scripture exist today and in history?
Did any of those include the apocrypha?
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It is hard to determine what the Jews at in the Holy Land at the time of Christ believed were scripture. We do know from the New Testament that the Torah, Psalms, and Prophets were held in high esteem. As for the rest of the writings, the New Testament authors and Christ don’t give us definite answer. The New Testament authors did make allusions to them along with psuedopigripha so it is hard to tell. The Essenes also favored the apocrypha and psuedopigripha, they were discoverd as the dead sea scrolls. So we do know these writings were circulated in the Holy Land at the time of Christ.I can’t answer the questions in your original post, but it’s easier to address the question in the title of the thread.
The answer is no. First and Second Maccabees were never part of Jewish scripture, to my knowledge. I have Jewish friends who have a Catholic bible, just so that they can read those scrolls.
The way I’ve heard it, those scrolls would have been lost, except that the Catholic Church considers them inspired.
That, incidentally, is the same reason that protestants do not accept them, because the Jews, in the first place, never considered them to be inspired.
The Scrolls contained quite a few of the early texts not admitted to the Tanakh. In fact, they seem to be the most prominently represented group after versions of the Torah texts. The Essenes seem to have had esoteric reading tastes.Jewish canon consists of the Tanakh and Talmud. Tanakh pretty much is consistant with your OT, although some large differences in translation. THere are said to have been “secret texts” that some sects of Judaism kept, but…they’re secretMaybe the Dead Sea Scrolls would qualify.
By definition, a canon cannot include apocryphaWhat Jewish canons of scripture exist today and in history?
Did any of those include the apocrypha?
I should also note that the Septuagint was a Greek translation of the Hebrew scriptures. The Septuagint is sometimes abbreviatedbookmark
Apparently, a few Catholic websites include this claim, most likely because others do. If you look at the contents of the scrolls, you will see that they do not include Hebrew or Aramaic versions of the seven texts which are included in Catholic Bibles but not in Protestant ones. In fact, they only include a fragment of Tobit in Aramaic (4Q1962) and most of chapter 6 of Ecclesiasticus (Sirach) in Hebrew (2Q18). I think that someone may have picked up on the comment that the scrolls contain a considerable proportion of the apocrypha, and thought that it meant what Protestants most often designate as such, when it actually refers to the apocrypha to the Tanakh: the scrolls contain quite an impressive collection of the texts which did not make it into the Jewish canon.With the discovery of the dead sea scrolls, we now know that these books in question were written in Hebrew and/or Aramaic.
I find it interesting that the Jewish holiday of Hanukkah celebrates the Maccabean victory but the record of that victory is not found in their cannon but in the Catholic cannon.Some interesting discussions are in Jaroslav Pelikan’s book, Whose Bible is It?
As the book title suggests, it’s a valid question, since the Jews wrote the books of Maccabees but it’s the Catholics who seem to take more “ownership” of them.
The Jews don’t really have a “canon” as such, since they have no one with the authority to set one.What Jewish canons of scripture exist today and in history?
Did any of those include the apocrypha?
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No. That is not correct. There is a canon, as has been said in this thread it is the TaNaKh – an acronym for Torah, Neviium (Prophets) and Ketuvim (Other Writings). Ultraorthodox, Orthodox, Conservative, Reform and Reconstructionsts read from the same set of texts.The Jews don’t really have a “canon” as such, since they have no one with the authority to set one.
There are various lists used, depending on the Jew - the ultra-Orthodox stick to the five Books of Moses (known as the ToraH), and other groups also include other sets of books - the Wisdom, the Prophets, and so on, and even the Talmud, in some cases.
How does the book of Maccabees support Christian doctrines? I’m assuming you are referring to book 1?I find it interesting that the Jewish holiday of Hanukkah celebrates the Maccabean victory but the record of that victory is not found in their cannon but in the Catholic cannon.
The current Jewish cannon was decided upon in council well after the startlingly quick growth of Christianity. Their excuse for removing the books was the lack of Hebrew originals but it’s just as likely they didn’t like the book’s support of Christian doctrines.
The real question is what did Jesus and the apostles use. If you follow tier teaching, you should use what they used.
Fragments of the Epistle of Jeremiah, part of the book of the Prophet Baruch was also found with dead sea scrolls. I have also read that before the dead sea scrolls were discovered two Hebrew copies of Judith, that differ on some ways from each other, were found.Apparently, a few Catholic websites include this claim, most likely because others do. If you look at the contents of the scrolls, you will see that they do not include Hebrew or Aramaic versions of the seven texts which are included in Catholic Bibles but not in Protestant ones. In fact, they only include a fragment of Tobit in Aramaic (4Q1962) and most of chapter 6 of Ecclesiasticus (Sirach) in Hebrew (2Q18). I think that someone may have picked up on the comment that the scrolls contain a considerable proportion of the apocrypha, and thought that it meant what Protestants most often designate as such, when it actually refers to the apocrypha to the Tanakh: the scrolls contain quite an impressive collection of the texts which did not make it into the Jewish canon.
We have 2 Mac 15:11-16 which shows prayers to saints in heaven have the power of intersession and 2 Mac 12:39-46 which show how the prayers of those on earth can help the dead - an implicit example of souls in purgatory.How does the book of Maccabees support Christian doctrines? I’m assuming you are referring to book 1?
Well, we certainly believe that prayers here can help the dead. That is why we say mourner’s kaddish for the first 11 months after a parent or sibling dies.We have 2 Mac 15:11-16 which shows prayers to saints in heaven have the power of intersession and 2 Mac 12:39-46 which show how the prayers of those on earth can help the dead - an implicit example of souls in purgatory.