S
Shaolen
Guest
Thank you guys for your help. Here’s what I responded to him with.
" I will certainly add that to my “books to get list”. Now i’m affraid there are some major errors in what you’ve said above.
regarding Hebrews and Revelation: Eusebius considered to be the first church historian wrote in AD325 that hebrews and revelation (among other NT writings) were disputed.
regarding unanimity of deuterocanon: looking at early church history makes this claim quite untenable. Pope St. Damasus I’s decree in 382AD, the Council of Hippo in 393AD, Carthage ni 397AD, Pope Innocent I, Letters 7 408AD, 4th council of Carthage 419AD all point to unanimity of acceptance of the deuterocanon.
regarding the NT “acknowledges the canon of the Jews”: The Jews didn’t have a set canon until the late 1st century, at which point they had no authority to set a canon that is binding on christians.
regarding three fold sections of the OT: the clear cut threefold divisions of the OT into the law, the prophets, and the writings comes in later rabbinical judaism. there’s no concrete evidence prior to Christ to indicate a closed fixed canon that was universally accepted by the Jews. for example 200BC the author of the hebrew book of Sirach does not seem to be aware of any closure of the canon, he provides no list of books, no enumeration of books, and presents itself as giving the wisdom of God, which would indeed be odd if the canon was closed in his day so as to exclude the book of Sirach. when the book was translated into greek roughly 50 years later it was given a prologue which mentioned the Law, the prophets, but doesn’t name the third section saying something along the lines of all the following books, and it certainly doesn’t define a cap on what belongs to that section. Later still when Maccabees was written it mentions only the law and the prophets. The closest the NT gets to this is in Luke 24:44 where it mentions the law, the prophets, and the psalms. Many scholars see this as only referring to the book of Psalms but even if it were referring to other writings as well, it certainly doesn’t define what belongs to them. Even if you could establish a threefold division it wouldn’t therefore rule out the possibility that the deuterocanonicals could be included in those divisions.
regarding reference or quotes: As I mentioned before, mere reference or quotes don’t say much about the canonical status of a particular writing. St. Paul directly quoted from pagan writings but those aren’t considered part of the canon. You started out by saying the NT doesn’t directly quote the deuterocanon and I would agree. However it certainly references the deuterocanon and the way it does I think points to them being accepted by the NT authors as sacred scripture. I will go over the references and their implication later."
I’ll be busy today but later or tomorrow I’ll be able to provide the references the NT makes to the deuterocanonical and why they’re important
" I will certainly add that to my “books to get list”. Now i’m affraid there are some major errors in what you’ve said above.
regarding Hebrews and Revelation: Eusebius considered to be the first church historian wrote in AD325 that hebrews and revelation (among other NT writings) were disputed.
regarding unanimity of deuterocanon: looking at early church history makes this claim quite untenable. Pope St. Damasus I’s decree in 382AD, the Council of Hippo in 393AD, Carthage ni 397AD, Pope Innocent I, Letters 7 408AD, 4th council of Carthage 419AD all point to unanimity of acceptance of the deuterocanon.
regarding the NT “acknowledges the canon of the Jews”: The Jews didn’t have a set canon until the late 1st century, at which point they had no authority to set a canon that is binding on christians.
regarding three fold sections of the OT: the clear cut threefold divisions of the OT into the law, the prophets, and the writings comes in later rabbinical judaism. there’s no concrete evidence prior to Christ to indicate a closed fixed canon that was universally accepted by the Jews. for example 200BC the author of the hebrew book of Sirach does not seem to be aware of any closure of the canon, he provides no list of books, no enumeration of books, and presents itself as giving the wisdom of God, which would indeed be odd if the canon was closed in his day so as to exclude the book of Sirach. when the book was translated into greek roughly 50 years later it was given a prologue which mentioned the Law, the prophets, but doesn’t name the third section saying something along the lines of all the following books, and it certainly doesn’t define a cap on what belongs to that section. Later still when Maccabees was written it mentions only the law and the prophets. The closest the NT gets to this is in Luke 24:44 where it mentions the law, the prophets, and the psalms. Many scholars see this as only referring to the book of Psalms but even if it were referring to other writings as well, it certainly doesn’t define what belongs to them. Even if you could establish a threefold division it wouldn’t therefore rule out the possibility that the deuterocanonicals could be included in those divisions.
regarding reference or quotes: As I mentioned before, mere reference or quotes don’t say much about the canonical status of a particular writing. St. Paul directly quoted from pagan writings but those aren’t considered part of the canon. You started out by saying the NT doesn’t directly quote the deuterocanon and I would agree. However it certainly references the deuterocanon and the way it does I think points to them being accepted by the NT authors as sacred scripture. I will go over the references and their implication later."
I’ll be busy today but later or tomorrow I’ll be able to provide the references the NT makes to the deuterocanonical and why they’re important