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tws
Guest
These issues I bring up were some of the reasons I became a Catholic.
The earliest lists of the complete NT canon as we know it today were recognized as scriptural at the Council of Rome in 382, Synod of Hippo in 393, the Synod of Carthage in 397, and another in Carthage in 419 A.D. I’ve never heard of any Protestant churches challenge the NT list. However, these same councils were in agreement about the authoritative books of the OT. These lists include seven books in the Old Testament that Protestant Reformers began to question and now practically reject as authoritative (Tobit, Baruch, Judith, Wisdom, Sirach, 1 & 2 Maccabees).
The problem as I see it is the SAME PEOPLE who finalized the list of NT and OT books for Christians. I don’t understand how one can question the early church choices of OT books, but not the NT books, too. I have a number of questions and wonder how Protestants responds to these:
What guarantee do we have the early church got ANY of the canon right, if Protestants are correct that they got PART of it wrong?
If the early church mistakenly accepted some OT books, could they have also have have mistakenly accepted some NT books? The writings of the early church fathers show there were disputes about admitting 1st and 2nd Peter, 2nd and 3rd John, and Revelation. 2nd Peter, for example, is regarded by many scholars as not written by Peter and authored some years after the last of the apostles died.
On the flip side, could the early church have mistakenly left out some NT books that should have been included? We have writings from other hearers of apostles, like Ignatius of Antioch, Polycarp, or Clement of Rome. At least one of these letters was written while the Apostle John was still alive. 1 Clement was included alongside the NT books in an early copy of the Bible called the Codex Alexandrinus, which was compiled during the same time frame as the councils mentioned above.
Why would God wait over 1000 years before enlightening people like Martin Luther that the Church was mistaken about what is the Word of God?
Are there books or papers written by the Reformers, or later sources, explaining the criteria for declaring a book as scripture or not? Or maybe the question could be phrased as, who has the authority to make the call on what belongs in the Bible?
Thanks
The earliest lists of the complete NT canon as we know it today were recognized as scriptural at the Council of Rome in 382, Synod of Hippo in 393, the Synod of Carthage in 397, and another in Carthage in 419 A.D. I’ve never heard of any Protestant churches challenge the NT list. However, these same councils were in agreement about the authoritative books of the OT. These lists include seven books in the Old Testament that Protestant Reformers began to question and now practically reject as authoritative (Tobit, Baruch, Judith, Wisdom, Sirach, 1 & 2 Maccabees).
The problem as I see it is the SAME PEOPLE who finalized the list of NT and OT books for Christians. I don’t understand how one can question the early church choices of OT books, but not the NT books, too. I have a number of questions and wonder how Protestants responds to these:
What guarantee do we have the early church got ANY of the canon right, if Protestants are correct that they got PART of it wrong?
If the early church mistakenly accepted some OT books, could they have also have have mistakenly accepted some NT books? The writings of the early church fathers show there were disputes about admitting 1st and 2nd Peter, 2nd and 3rd John, and Revelation. 2nd Peter, for example, is regarded by many scholars as not written by Peter and authored some years after the last of the apostles died.
On the flip side, could the early church have mistakenly left out some NT books that should have been included? We have writings from other hearers of apostles, like Ignatius of Antioch, Polycarp, or Clement of Rome. At least one of these letters was written while the Apostle John was still alive. 1 Clement was included alongside the NT books in an early copy of the Bible called the Codex Alexandrinus, which was compiled during the same time frame as the councils mentioned above.
Why would God wait over 1000 years before enlightening people like Martin Luther that the Church was mistaken about what is the Word of God?
Are there books or papers written by the Reformers, or later sources, explaining the criteria for declaring a book as scripture or not? Or maybe the question could be phrased as, who has the authority to make the call on what belongs in the Bible?
Thanks