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Dear kelman, thankyou for the above response.It’s difficult, rather impossible, to get behind any church which considers certain inspired holy words of God to be “irrelevant”, even in face of the fact they alone among all of Christendom, do not consider themselves to be “people of the Book”. Is it so much an argument or simply the plain words of God?
There’s no justification for your church to decide which inspired holy words of God are “irrelevant”. Do you have some evidence that God abrogated, annulled, rescinded, made null and void both Acts 7:38 and Rom 3:2? If not, then I believe we need to follow both the sacred Scriptures and the historical record and not follow those who seek to support their private judgment by rejecting the commandments of God: ”And he said unto them, Full well ye reject the commandment of God, that ye may keep your own tradition.”(Mark7:9).
First, the RCC has no authority to decide for Christendom what the canon is. To choose a canon for itself?..sure, go right ahead.
The historical evidence demonstrates quite handily that the “truncated” Hebrew canon is the extent of God’s revelation to the Jews which, btw, was closed well before 70AD – well before they became, according to you, the unchosen people. No, the Hebrew nation was and will always be the “chosen people” – there has never been another individual nation alone to whom God chose to reveal Himself and out of whom the Messiah would come. This does not imply that the “chosen people” were chosen unto salvation – just as the NT visible churches were not chosen unto salvation. Only the spiritually chosen – the elect – of both the nation of Israel and the NT church are chosen unto salvation.
The Christians had been officially excomunicated from the Synagogue in 85 AD. Now if fifteen years later the Pharisees are still undecided regarding their canon of Scripture, separated from the Christian community and excluding it from their decision making, why should we look to them as some source of authority? Our Lord had prophesied (see St. Matt. 21: 43) that the kingdom of God, and with it His authority, would be taken from Israel and given unto to the new Israel of God, that is to say the Catholic Church of Christ. It would now fall to the Church to decide as to what comprised of the new canon of the bible, and this is precisely what happened.
Whilst I would not disagree that the Jews were entusted with the “oracles of God”, this does not equate to being delivered a closed canon of the O.T. Moreover, St. Paul also says that whilst the Jews were indeed God’s chosen people, they were not particularly reliable sources of knowledge for Christians to rely upon (cf. Rom. 10: 1-3; Rom. 11: 25). Are you suggesting, dear friend, that we must defer to a group of anti-Christian Jews at a non-binding council in Jamnia who were sadly ignorant of God’s righteousness and sought to establish their own righteousness? Why now should the Jews be accepted as God’s mouthpiece for determining the canon of the O.T.? The whole argument respecting the Jews being custodians of the Scriptures is irrelevant, given their rejection of the Messiah, even our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ, who Himself had predicted that the kingdom of God would be taken from them and given unto the Church. Indeed, the Jews ceased being the chosen people when the temple was destroyed on 70 AD and they were scattered over the face of the earth, otherwise we would all still be Jewish.
There is now no valid or cogent reason for Christians to accept any determination of the O.T canon by the Jews; we are not the “One, Holy,Catholic and Jewish Church”, we are the “One, Holy, Catholic and Apostolic Church” established by Christ upon St. Peter. If the Apostles entertained no qualms about using the LXX, then neither do Catholics entertain any qualms about using the LXX and wider O.T. canon.
My dear brother, it is tradition and tradition alone which enables us, Catholics or Protestants, to determine the table of contents for Sacred Scripture. Thus as a Protestant you yourself are dependent upon tradition, even if it is questionable Jewish tradition, for the bible alone does not help as far as deciding of what the canon comprises. The Catholic accepts this and looks to extra-canonical tradition to determine the canon, except he looks to the Catholic Church for his source of authentic tradition and not to some non-binding anti-Christian Jewish council. This Church, the new Israel of God, informs him that the Deutrocanonical books are not contrary to the bible, but indeed are the Holy Bible and are, therefore, to be received on the authority of the Church.
It is very easy work to selectively select from the ECF’s and accommodate them to the Protestant standpoint on the canon, but the ECF’s were decided Catholics in their beliefs, not Protestants, as scholars like William A. Jurgens have evinced most clearly. May I commend to you Mr. Jurgen’s three volume work, The Faith of the Early Fathers (The Liturgical Press,1970), he has a great deal of information on the canon of the bible.
Warmest good wishes,
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Pax