Roman_Catholic:
I was reading this web-site
geocities.com/aprofaith/bible.htm “Abridging the Bible” and it was talking about why the Prostestants dont have the same amount of books in the Bible as Catholic Bibles do… Well I came across this:
“Initially the seven Books continued to be placed in a section called the Apocrypha. But since it was cheaper to print bibles without them, the seven books were slowly dropped altogether.”
…Since it was cheaper to print bibles without them? Please tell me this isnt the reasoning behind excluding them now.
Actually many Puritans wanted the Apocrypha expunged much earlier; they felt that including the Deuterocanonicals in Scripture lent them an air of respectibility they did not deserve.
The Apocrypha were left out not to save money, generally, but specifically to save printing and shipping costs for missionary editions of the Bible being sent overseas. Such editions also became widely available at low cost outside of the missions fields and this fed their popularity. Since the Apocrypha were already seen in a poor light by Protestants generally, the habit of leaving those books out gradually became commonplace.
Cost certainly is not a major factor today. If you have ever seen ‘study editions’ of Protestant Bibles you know that enormous amounts of ‘Bible Helps’ are bound into them: maps, graphs and diagrams, commentaries, biographies, Bible dictionaries, concordances, topical indexes, summaries of the various books of the Bible, reading plans, even abbreviated histories of the translation of the Bible, etcetera are often found in such Bibles. (I am mentioning the main features of two actual study Bibles I have close at hand at the computer as I type this. The two I am looking at are the Thompson Chain-Reference Bible and The Open Bible. Both have virtually all of the features I just named plus many I didn’t).
In case this isn’t clear: reference Bibles and study Bibles are simply Bibles of any translation whatsoever which include reference or study helps. The same study Bible or reference Bible is often available in many popular translations–for example one can get the ThompsonChain Reference Bible in either the
King James Version, the New King James Version, the
New American Standard Bible version (not to be confused with the Roman Catholic
New American Bible translation), or the
New International Version. I mention this because I have seldom or never seen anything in a Roman Catholic edition of the Scriptures which would be an equivalent to Protestant study Bibles. Reference Bibles tend to cost considerably more than Bibles with minimal ‘helps’, so cost is not a factor any longer either.
The reason that Protestant generally leave the Apocrypha out even today is that they deem the books of limited historical interest and devoid of any spiritual qualities which would commend them as being placed on a par with the inspired books. Protestants point out that even Catholics deem these books part of a ‘secondary Canon’ and not at all reliable historically or theologically.