P
pablope
Guest
What are you talking about? Eusebius, as far as I know, wrote about early Church history, and did not make bibles for Constantine. How could he make Bibles, there was no printing press then, and everything was copied by hand.
From AD 397, Council of Carthage: Canon 24. Besides the canonical Scriptures, nothing shall be read in church under the name of divine Scriptures. Moreover, the canonical Scriptures are these: [then follows a list of Old Testament books]. The [books of the] New Testament: the Gospels, four books; the Acts of the Apostles, one book; the Epistles of Paul, thirteen; of the same to the Hebrews; one Epistle; of Peter, two; of John, apostle, three; of James, one; of Jude, one; the Revelation of John. Concerning the confirmation of this canon, the transmarine Church shall be consulted. On the anniversaries of martyrs, their acts shall also be read.
Synod of Laodicea (~363 CE)
Canon 59. Let no private psalms nor any uncanonical books be read in the church, but only the canonical ones of the New and Old Testament.
Canon 60. [After listing the books of the Old Testament] And these are the books of the New Testament: four Gospels, according to Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John; the Acts of the Apostles, seven Catholic epistles, namely, one of James, two of Peter, three of John, one of Jude, fourteen epistles of Paul, one to the Romans, two to the Corinthians, one to the Galatians, one to the Ephesians, one to the Philippians, one to the Colossians, two to the Thessalonians, one to the Hebrews, two to Timothy, one to Titus, and one to Philemon.
Notice here that Revelation is missing.
David…this is clearly what you said: "Quite true about Luther ,but he DID include them ,and **left it to the individual and God for conviction.Luther was NOT magisterially rigid. **Again Jerome had similar opinions on Hebrew and James etc,as did other scholars of Luther’s day .Luther was a good Catholic in these academic opinions. "No, i am saying it is quite a miracle that we have the bible,.maybe only two ,yours and mine ,there are not 30000 ,at least not yet .
Seems to me you advocated individual determination of what the Bible should be, without realizing the result would be 30000 plus different Bibles. And Luther being " NOT magisterially rigid" has resulted in the your confusion, as seen by divergent beliefs of protestants. And you are a living example.
Just look at Lutheranism, because of the lack of a teaching authority, have different denoms in themselves.
And you have not answered this question, from post #841, David:
[SIGN]And if you are indeed going to follow Luther’s opinion on the DC books, then your Bible should also not have Hebrews, James, Revelations, which Luther opined should also not be in the Bible. So, why do accept these NT books in your Bible? [/SIGN]
Looks to me you are not being consistent.