In the TOC, there is a subsection that deals with 2 Maccabees & Purgatory.
I do get a chuckle out of arguments that boil down to, “X isn’t in the Bible, so it is wrong. X is in [deuterocanonical book], so [deuterocanonical book] can’t be part of the canon.” Sometimes, the two parts aren’t said together, but either way, it shows a bit of a gap in logic.
Also, not say that that’s what the author argues. You comment just reminded me of all the times I’ve encountered this.
I looked it up, and he does quote him word-for-word.
I think the concern is less whether or not he quotes Jimmy Akin and others word-for-word and more whether or not he quotes them in proper context
and doesn’t just cherry pick the occasionally weak argument.
To use Catholic sources against Catholicism is an oxymoron
Generally, speaking, if you’re going to be making an argument against something, you need to show that that something exists, lest you be accused of making a strawman. On forums, we can kind of get away with it, since anyone can ask after the fact. Books need to get it down right away.
But then you study the Septuagint and it turns out Catholics don’t even accept all of the books from it.
Unless I’m mistaken, Trent only established what is certainly canon. It didn’t declare the other books non-canonical.
Also, an inconsistent application of an argument doesn’t make the argument itself invalid. It just means that the one making the argument hasn’t fully applied it to their practice yet. The Church could still, in theory, declare the remaining books certainly canonical, but for historical reasons, just didn’t at Trent and hasn’t since.