S
SyCarl
Guest
Well as to 393, this is what Jerome wrote at that time.This is a joke. You read decrees the same way a Muslem reads the Qu’ran; the same way a literalist reads the Bible. No wonder you are so confused with your own admitted hasty conclusion. You make it sound as if Trent INVENTED the canon. You don’t seem to see historical context in anything, including scripture, let alone definitive decrees. It wasn’t necessary for the Pope, after the Council of Hippo to be so definitive as the Council of Trent, because the Church wasn’t challenged in the same way, and the Church had developed the manner in which infallibility was applied. Nobody was ripping out entire books and adding words to the bible in 393 AD, the way it was being done in the 16th century. You confuse definitive with invention, take entire councils out of historical context, and refuse to see the facts of the development of Sacred Scripture.
ccel.org/ccel/schaff/npnf206.vii.iii.x.htmlAs, then, the Church reads Judith, Tobit, and the books of Maccabees, but does not admit them among the canonical Scriptures, so let it read these two volumes for the edification of the people, not to give authority to doctrines of the Church. If any one is better pleased with the edition of the Seventy, there it is, long since corrected by me. For it is not our aim in producing the new to destroy the old. And yet if our friend reads carefully, he will find that our version is the more intelligible, for it has not turned sour by being poured three times over into different vessels, but has been drawn straight from the press, and stored in a clean jar, and has thus preserved its own flavour.