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Prodigal1984
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The reason is mainly, from what I understand anyways, a number of reasons. The Orthodox don’t have a formality of the Canon like the Catholic Church does. To them the deuterocanonical books are considered the longer canon. They are in their Bibles and considered inspired yet the extra books are less in authority than the books considered by all. And this goes with others as well. Actually the Orthodox have never read from Revelation in their Liturgy.Which makes me wonder, if the east & the west had the exact same books in their Bible after those early church councils, why do the Eastern Orthodox have “bigger” Bibles than Catholic Bible, and why don’t all Eastern traditions have the exact same books even within the Eastern Orthodox tradition? I wonder if this gets addressed in his book, since he devotes a whole chapter to the Eastern Orthodox Bible.
And the Councils Catholics usually cite such as Hippo and Carthage were regional Councils. There were Councils such as Trullo which the west never accepted which named three books of Maccabees.
The Orthodox actually have much of a pre Reformation Catholic view of the canon where even if a book hadn’t been named by a Council, the book nonetheless could be part of the canon, which was the case with say 1 and 2 Esdras(3 and 4 in Vulgate) and the Prayer of Manasseh which before Trent were just integrated in the Old Testament but following were in an appendix to the Vulgate of Clement Vlll. The Protestants forced the Church to kind of make a formal judgement on this once and for all.
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