Hi Jon,
Thanks for your response.
I generally stand with Pieper. Within the NT canon of 27 books, there are books that are Homologoumena and books that are Antilegomena. Luther and Lutheranism, yes, but certainly not solely. The Lutheran view reflects the ancient Church, takes into account the views of Origen and Eusebius and the like.
This is where we disagree Jon. You claim that the Homo and the Anti (H/A) reflect the views of the ancient Church, or possibly that of Origin and Eusebius (and the like). That sounds fine when stated in such a general manner, but when you look into what the ancient Church believed about the NT canon, you simply cannot justify the Lutheran group of Anti-NT books of (James, Jude, Hebrews and Revelations).
I would suggest that the primary reason that the Lutheran Anti contains those specific 4 books is because those are the exact four books that Luther ‘questioned’ and, disagreed with.
You refer us to Origen and Eusebius? According to Protestant Scholar F. F. Bruce:
“Origen (185-254) mentions the four Gospels, the Acts, the thirteen Paulines, 1 Peter, 1 John and Revelation as acknowledged by all; **he says that Hebrews, 2 Peter, 2 and 3 John, James and Jude, with the ‘Epistle of Barnabas,’ the Shepherd of Hermas, the Didache, and the ‘Gospel according to the Hebrews,’ were disputed by some. ****Eusebius (c. 265-340) **mentions as generally acknowledged all the books of our New Testament **except James, Jude, 2 Peter, 2 and 3 John, which were disputed by some, but recognized by the majority.” **Bruce, “The Canon of the New Testament” from Chapter 3 in The New Testament Documents: Are They Reliable? (5th edition; Leicester: Intervarsity Press, 1959).
Here we see both Origen and Eusebius both disputed 2 Peter, and 2 and 3 John. If Lutheranism, (or Luther for that matter) were really all that concerned with the opinions of these two early Christians, they would have included 2 Peter, and 2 and 3 John into their Anti. In fact, when you look at all of the various NT canons prior to that of the early Church, prior to that of Athanasius, you find that these books were ‘more disputed’ than James. There is no father or combination of fathers which result in a list of those 4 specific books. That Lutheranism justifies its’ placement of those four specific books into the Anti, only very generally on the basis of the early Church, is proof that there really wasn’t any specific criteria used, at least none that anyone wants to admit to today. If you know of any information that specifically indicates differently I would appreciate you posting it.
Bruce continues on:
“
Athanasius in 367 lays down the twenty-seven books of our New Testament as alone canonical; shortly afterwards Jerome and Augustine followed his example in the West. The process farther east took a little longer; it was not until c. 508 that 2 Peter, 2 and 3 John, Jude and Revelation were included in a version of the Syriac Bible in addition to the other twenty two books.”
If Luther and Lutheranism were really trying to follow some sort of early Church consensus, James would have been included in the Homo before 2 Peter and 2 and 3 John. But then those books didn’t refute the doctrine that was so crucial to Luther, Salvation by Faith Alone.
Furthermore, Luther wasn’t really following the lead of the ancient Church. Honestly, nobody in the early Church made the kinds of disrespectful comments about NT books as did Luther. Furthermore, Luther made it very clear that part of his “problem” with James is that it disagreed with his ‘version’ of Salvation. Not one early Church Father disputed the canonicity of James on the basis of their teaching on Salvation. From what I can tell, Luther was the first to do so, and as the first, was SETTING precedent rather than following it.
James the Less is the common answer, AFAIK. I have no reason to doubt modern scholars.
That is the virtually unanimous consensus, that James was written by the James the Lesser, the Apostle. As such, the issue of authenticity has been resolved, with Luther and Lutheranism being wrong in placing James in the Anti, the books from which doctrine is not determined. Given that James WAS written by an Apostle, it SHOULD be used by Lutheranism for the determination of doctrine. The same can be said of Jude and Revelations. Hebrews is in a somewhat different category in terms of this particular respect.
The fact is that Luther’s ‘judgment’ and disrespect for James especially is based on the fact that James refuted Luther’s opinion about Salvation. Luther’s calling on the questioning of the ancient Church to justify not using James for doctrine simply does not agree with the evidence. Luther’s “problem” with James being about Salvation is very well documented, as we will see.
Luther should never have disputed James, Jude and Revelations on the basis of their not being written by Apostles. Thus the Lutheran H/A is faulty, which means that the basis for Lutheran doctrine, a NT which contains only 23 books which can be used for determining doctrine, is faulty.
Obviously Jon, there is a great deal at stake here for Lutheranism. I look forward to your comments.
God Bless You Jon, Topper