p90 << If Athanasius could still remain Catholic in terms of holding a different canon until an infallible decree stated the extent of that canon, why do you criticize Martin Luther for his views on the canon? >>
Letâs get it straight first what St. Athanasius held to be the OT canon. This is a side issue from the main issue of this thread (whether Athanasius held a Catholic view on Scripture and Tradition, etc), but here it is from Schaff:
âAthansius enumerates, as âoutside the Canon, but appointed by the Fathers to be read by those who newly join us,â Wisdom, Ecclesiasticus, Esther, Judith, and Tobit, as well as what is called the Teaching of the Apostles and the Shepherd.
In practice, however, he quotes several of the latter as âScriptureâ (Wisdom repeatedly so, see index to this vol.); âThe Shepherdâ is âmost profitable,â and quoted for the Unity of the Creator (and cf. de Decr. 4), but not as âScripture;â the âDidacheâ is not used by him unless the Syntagma (vide supra, p. lix.) be his genuine work. He also quotes 1 Esdras for the praise of Truth, and 2 Esdras once, as a âprophet.â âDanielâ includes Susanna and Bel and the Dragon.â
The source for that quote is found here
Athanasius on Scripture, Tradition, and Catholic Doctrine in response to Webster/King
From my limited study of the question, there appears to be two views on the OT canon held by the early Church:
(1) the deuterocanonicals were Scripture and fully canonical
(2) the deuterocanonicals were Scripture but not fully canonical, they were read at the Liturgy and for edification purposes
Protestants (evangelicals) today hold neither of these views. Athanasius in addition held Baruch as part of Jeremiah, and the âadditionsâ to Daniel as canonical. See Athanasius Festal Letter 39:6,7 for a summary of his OT canon position: ââŠThen Isaiah, one book, then Jeremiah
with Baruch, LamentationsâŠâand 27-book NT â three divisions: canonical, those deuterocanonicals read for edification, and those Gnostic âapocryphalâ writings, the âinvention of heretics.â âŠââDanielâ
includes Susanna and Bel and the Dragon.â
But all of this is a side issue from the main thrust of the thread that Athanasius was indeed a âCatholicâ on the Scripture and Tradition issues and other essential doctrines. As pointed out by DominVobis and others
Saint Athanasius 1) recognized Papal primacy over the Church, 2) recognized the authority of Ecumenical Councils, 3) recognized the validity and authority of Church Tradition, 4) taught that Mary was Mother of God, 5) taught that Mary was ever-virgin, 6) taught the real Pressence of Christ in the Eucharist, 7) taught that one could lose salvation by commiting mortal sin, etc.
Most of these points are already thoroughly documented above. So this whole âAthanasius wasnât a member of my denominationâ nonsense of Jason Engwer is just that: nonsense. Find a new apologetics please.

You claimed Athanasius held a sola scriptura position, now prove it. I like the back and forth but it gets a little ridiculous.

How much more evidence do you need that St. Athanasius was a Catholic bishop?
Phil P