P
Prodigal1984
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Hi all. So this topic kind of got brought up on another thread but I think it is worth bringing up here.
I was recently reading a book called Evangelicals and Roman Catholics: Agreements and Differences, by Ralph McKenzie and Norman Geisler. In it they make a claim that the Catholic Church was inconsistent and “accepted 2 Maccabees because it seems to justify prayers for the dead and purgatory (Ch 12:38-45), yet it rejected 2(4) Esdras because it seems to deny prayers for the dead (Ch 7:105).”
This has actually been something that I have wondered. The Council of Trent did not as contrary belief seems to say, accept all of the disputed books at the time of the Reformation(deuterocanonical books). Prior to Trent 3 and 4 Esdras( more commonly known today as 1 and 2 Esdras followed 1 and 2 Esdras( more commonly known today as Ezra and Nehemiah. I know, so confusing), and the Prayer of Manasseh followed 2 Chronicles. They were not in Jerome’s Vulgate but seemed to be inserted during the middle ages. They have been quite influential on Catholic liturgy. For example, the antiphon, Eternal rest grant unto them oh Lord, and let perpetual light shine upon them comes from 4 Esdras 2:34-35. It seems the Council of Trent did not receive them into the canon and Clement Vlll put them in an appendix to the Clementine Vulgate in 1592.
They seem to be present in most early Bibles including the KJV(with the rest of the Catholic deuterocanonical book) and Douay Rheims appendix until following the Challoner revision. Actually Anglicans name these three with the Catholic deuterocanonical books in the Book of Common Prayer and although the Anglicans don’t view these as authoratative they say they are good teaching for a way of life and in reality in that church 2 Maccabees and 2(4)Esdras are on the same level.
My question is, is there some sort of inconsistency here? Is the claim in the book by Geisler and McKenzie on to anything?
I was recently reading a book called Evangelicals and Roman Catholics: Agreements and Differences, by Ralph McKenzie and Norman Geisler. In it they make a claim that the Catholic Church was inconsistent and “accepted 2 Maccabees because it seems to justify prayers for the dead and purgatory (Ch 12:38-45), yet it rejected 2(4) Esdras because it seems to deny prayers for the dead (Ch 7:105).”
This has actually been something that I have wondered. The Council of Trent did not as contrary belief seems to say, accept all of the disputed books at the time of the Reformation(deuterocanonical books). Prior to Trent 3 and 4 Esdras( more commonly known today as 1 and 2 Esdras followed 1 and 2 Esdras( more commonly known today as Ezra and Nehemiah. I know, so confusing), and the Prayer of Manasseh followed 2 Chronicles. They were not in Jerome’s Vulgate but seemed to be inserted during the middle ages. They have been quite influential on Catholic liturgy. For example, the antiphon, Eternal rest grant unto them oh Lord, and let perpetual light shine upon them comes from 4 Esdras 2:34-35. It seems the Council of Trent did not receive them into the canon and Clement Vlll put them in an appendix to the Clementine Vulgate in 1592.
They seem to be present in most early Bibles including the KJV(with the rest of the Catholic deuterocanonical book) and Douay Rheims appendix until following the Challoner revision. Actually Anglicans name these three with the Catholic deuterocanonical books in the Book of Common Prayer and although the Anglicans don’t view these as authoratative they say they are good teaching for a way of life and in reality in that church 2 Maccabees and 2(4)Esdras are on the same level.
My question is, is there some sort of inconsistency here? Is the claim in the book by Geisler and McKenzie on to anything?
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