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Mannyfit75
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Pope Damasus affirmed The Council of Rome with the Deutorocanonical Canon of Scripture. Pope Gregory the Great was a Pope who reign in 594-604 A.D. What he said regarding Maccabees was an opinion, and he knew well that Pope Damasus in 382 A.D. affirmed the Septuguaint, and he couldn’t reverse it because the Holy Spirit would not allow him to reverse the Councils.Pope Gregory didn’t think the first book of Maccabees was canonical, at least he didn’t according to this quote.
Gregory the Great - “With reference to which particular we are not acting irregularly, if from the books, though not Canonical, yet brought out for the edification of the Church, we bring forward testimony. Thus Eleazar in the battle smote and brought down an elephant, but fell under the very beast that he killed” (1 Macc. 6.46). (Library of the Fathers of the Holy Catholic Church, (Oxford: Parker, 1845), Gregory the Great, Morals on the Book of Job, Volume II, Parts III and IV, Book XIX.34, p.424.)
The incident with the elephant occurs in chapter 6 if memory serves me.
It just struck me that it is possible that this was written before he became pope and therefore wouldn’t matter one way or the other.
However, if he wrote this when he was pope, and it is obvious that he didn’t regard 1 Maccabees as canonical, he would be denying a dogmatic decree from the councils of Rome, Carthage, and Hipo, if in fact these councils were dogmatic or infallible, whatever the term is.
I know I keep beating this drum but I thought Rome, Carthage, and Hippo were regional councils and therefore wouldn’t meet the requirements of being infallible councils.
No Pope have ever reverse their position or their predecessor position on any Magisterium document by the Church, especially when it comes to the canon of Scripture.
POPE Gregory the Great made no Magisterial pronouncements concerning the canon. In his commentary on Job, Gregory did reject the Deuterocanon of the OT, but this was a private composition, not an offical Church document. There is no evidence that he wrote this book while he was Pope. Gregory was a churchman for his whole life and a Pope for only a short time. Most likely this book was written prior to his becoming Pope. His personal opinions are not infallible in any case, only his official pronouncements as Pope