No ecumenical council ever approved any canon of scripture. And that’s the point. And it isn’t moving the goalpost. It is recognizing a fact of history. Florence is only a council for the Roman Church. The eastern patriarchs did not approve it in the end.
So, where did God have His way? The Greek and Russian canons are different. The Roman canon is different.
Luther had his opinion on what the canon of scripture should look like. So did Jerome, and so did Cajetan, and so did Erasmus. They were all permitted to hold those opinions.
Jon
So “no ecumenical council ever approved any canon of scripture,” meaning that the Canon
of Scripture can be whatever we want it to be? That has to be what you’re saying, anything
goes essentially is what I’m inferring from this reply. I could even accept the Book of Enoch
as Scripture and, under your apparent logic, nobody can tell me I’m wrong for doing so.
That doesn’t sit well for me.
My knowledge is admittingly scant on Cajetan and Erasmus, but I know something in-
teresting about Jerome. You claim that he rejected the Deuterocanon all his life, or so
your lack in mentioning otherwise suggests. Jerome actually change his mind later on,
as suggested by how he used the books in his later writings.
And I say again, the Council of Florence and Council of Basel were ecumenical
councils, not that I think that is an absolute requisite, but just to entertain your
demands, both of those councils approved. Having met you demands, however,
you then changed the rules, so it IS moving the goalpost.
And Luther almost outed the Book of Revelation, he really wanted to, among other
books in the New Testament, but only didn’t because of what everybody else said.
I can’t see why you rest your soul on this rebellious friar.