M
Moses613
Guest
Marco, you’re still not being entirely clear. Are you assuming that the postulated, fictional Council of Jamnia was specifically convened to reject the New Testament? Traditional Jewish literature, including the Talmud, does not anywhere record to my knowledge any such formal rejection. Rather, as you so logically put it, since the canon was already closed, these books were rejected automatically.
Also see Numbers 11:16 for the first gathering of the Sanhedrin of 70 sages (really 71 so there could not be an even split).

I’ll try!I am glad to stumble on to this post. I was at another post but couldn’t get my questions answered. Perhaps I can find answers here.
They formalized the addition of all the later books to the canon. It is unclear at what point the canon was ‘closed’ as this is a matter of scholarly debate and I don’t think there’s any definitive position from a traditional Jewish point of view, except that sometime before the compilation of the Mishna/Talmud it was closed by the Great Sanhedrin, who were continuing the work of the Great Assembly.
- Did the Great Assembly closed the canon? Or did they left it open for future additions? Where is the evidence for closing the canon if any?
First of all, Malachi was actually a member of the Great Assembly, they did not predate him. The Great Assembly was a mixed group comprised of Priests (cohanim) and Sages/Judges, and was authorized to rule on the canon by the Biblical verse: (Deut. 17:10) …do not deviate from that which they will tell you, right or left.
- Is the Great Assembly authorized to determine the canon? I presume there will be Levite priests who are authorized to do it and commanded by God to do it? If there is such a commandment, why don’t we read about it? We should be able to detect such an important commandment from the time of Great Assembly to Malachi , but I haven’t chance upon it yet.
Also see Numbers 11:16 for the first gathering of the Sanhedrin of 70 sages (really 71 so there could not be an even split).
The canon defines which books are included as religiously authoritative. But how do we know which of the competing textual variants is authoritative? The canon tells us that the Book of Isaiah is included, but what if I find three scrolls with three variant spellings of the same word, or where a word is dropped in one of them? Therefore, great Jewish sages in the early Middle Ages did intense textual analysis and concluded that the Masoretic text of Ben Asher was the most accurate of all, and since then Jews have basically adopted that as the correct text. Of course, we are only talking about Hebrew texts. What should we use, the Septuagint or the Vulgate?!
- If this canon is a done thing, why should Jews rely on the Masoretic Text today? The MT couldn’t possibly obtain a higher or credible authorization.
I think you are confusing the Sadducees with the Samaritans, who only accepted 5 books. AFAIK the Sads accepted all the books but argued that the Pharisaic oral tradition was inaccurate. Orthodox Jews view themselves as continuing the authentic tradition of Oral Torah, and all other groups such as the Sadducees were breakaways who rejected previously binding rulings.
- If the canon was a done thing, why were the Sadducees and Pharisees squabbling over the Holy Scriptures during the time of Jesus? The Sadducees recognizing only the first 5 books as being inspired whereas Pharisees were more liberal.
Not sure what your point is. We say it was closed. The God of Abraham is the God of the Universe, as Abraham himself said, God Most High, Creator of Heaven and Earth. He loves all peoples who believe in Him and worship Him and conduct moral lives, not just Jews. However, He has chosen us specifically to carry out his special laws as a “kingdom of priests and a holy nation”. The reason why Christians can’t add to the word of God has nothing to do with the canon’s closure. It’s because the words they have written are not a record of God’s word. Same reason the US Declaration of Independence is not an addition to the Word of God. Has nothing to do with the canon.If the OT was never closed, critics of the NT couldn’t put forward the argument that the Christians couldn’t add on to the Word of God or that the God of Abraham is exclusively the monopoly of the Jewish people.