A
amcintosh
Guest
I’m relatively new to the Catholic faith and haven’t been keen on reading Scripture, although I have been reading about Scripture and the Apostles lately. I just have a question that’s probably not simple and out of sheer curiosity: are non-canonical Biblical texts valuable for the faithful Christian, and why exactly are they excluded from the Canon? The latest example I read about was the works of Barbaras; his Epistle, Gospel, and Acts are not canonized and apparently sound more Islamic than they do Christian.
The non-canonized texts are definitely assessed case-by-case, but are there any of value, even if not divinely inspired and comprehensive within the larger scripture? I’m a curious man and if I choose to study theology in graduate school, this type of information would be useful.
The non-canonized texts are definitely assessed case-by-case, but are there any of value, even if not divinely inspired and comprehensive within the larger scripture? I’m a curious man and if I choose to study theology in graduate school, this type of information would be useful.