Just to collect some of the various reasons I’ve mentioned why I find this a bit of stretch:I looked up the Greek word for “have” from Luke 16:29 where Jesus said “They ‘have’ Moses & the Prophets.” And it does mean “to have possession” of something.
So first of all, as a parable, it isn’t directly indicating that the Pharisees are those who have “possession”. Yes, the rich man could represent the Pharisees (based on verse 14), but there is nothing in the parable to indicate that those who “have Moses and the prophets” are Pharisees specifically.He said, ‘Then I beg you, father, send him to my father’s house, for I have five brothers, so that he may warn them, lest they too come to this place of torment.’ But Abraham replied, ‘They have Moses and the prophets. Let them listen to them.’ He said, ‘Oh no, father Abraham, but if someone from the dead goes to them, they will repent.’ Then Abraham said, ‘If they will not listen to Moses and the prophets, neither will they be persuaded if someone should rise from the dead.’
Personally, I tend to look more at apostolic succession, and that seems to be what the early Church Fathers saw as the main proof of authority. Citing Scripture passages about Church authority might work for Protestants, since it both appeals to a Sola Scriptura approach, and Sola Scriptura is already circular.Then to play devil’s advocate, how do you know the church is the pillar & support of the truth - without using the NT & without saying “because the church says it is”? IOW, don’t use the church as a defense for the church, which would be circular.
Yes, because the Bible says so. But that does not answer my question, which was how do YOU know the church is the pillar and shield of the church without using the Bible? And shouldn’t the church Jesus built have the correct canon of Scripture, both Old and New Testaments? I’m afraid your reply which wa formed in a question did not answer mine.Do you really not believe the church was established before a single word of the bible was written? You are asking me to have faith without using faith. That’s not how it works in a faith based religion.
Peace!!!
What does this have anything to do with the OP?I mention the KJV inasmuch as virtually every “Made in USA” denomination used it. The European rebellion simply opened the door for personal opinion to override revealed truth.
This is a good place to give a reference properly referenced, Because I don’t see where Jimmy said that.steve-b:![]()
But again, don’t we get to the church being the pillar & foundation of the truth from the NT? IOW, don’t we need to first know “what” the NT is before we get to defining the church? Doing otherwise, seems to be using A to prove B, and use B to prove A, which a bit subjective & circular in reasoning. Besides, it still doesn’t address some of the points in the free section on Amazon in the book, like that Jesus acknowledged the OT canon of the Pharisees, and Jimmy Akin acknowledging that the Pharisees had the same books in their OT as Protestants do today. Just out of curiosity, did you read the free online portion of the book on Amazon. It did. It’s an interesting take.All I can say, it all boils down to authority. Jesus gave His authority to His Church. The pillar and foundation of truth. People do well who follow that authority.
Parables generally identifies details and identities to the reader in the Scripture. Luke 16:14 states that the Pharisees were lovers of money and were listening to everything Jesus was saying. Jesus then goes on to tell a parable of a rich man and Lazarus. The rich man clearly refers back to the Pharisee “money lovers” several verses back. So “they” in v.29 is clearly talking about the Pharisees represented by the rich man and his brothers.So first of all, as a parable, it isn’t directly indicating that the Pharisees are those who have “possession”. Yes, the rich man could represent the Pharisees (based on verse 14), but there is nothing in the parable to indicate that those who “have Moses and the prophets” are Pharisees specifically.
But even if we say that they are, “possession” doesn’t necessarily indicate authority. We all possess the Scripture, but does that mean each of us can declare a canon? No. We possess it so that we may be made perfect (2 Timothy 3:16-17). Contextually, this is how Christ used it in His parable, so it seems like an massive stretch to assume “possession” here is anything more than how we might possess a Bible.
Could you narrow down specifically in the article? No offense, but it’s a rather long article. Although that is an assumption Jimmy Akin made about Protestants, I don’t know If he can really back that up beyond his assumption. Also, the book does have a chapter on the fourth century church councils as well as a chapter on the New Testament canon, which I assume he doesn’t just rely on those councils for the validity of the NT canon, based on his TOC.This is a good place to give a reference properly referenced, Because I don’t see where Jimmy said that.
Instead he said
. http://jimmyakin.com/defending-the-deuterocanonicals Jimmy said that Protestants appeal to the same councils to validate the NT. NOT the OT
Here is the exact quote from Jimmy Akin. It begins around the 50 second mark where he says the Pharisees and Protestants possessed the same OT canon:No mention of Pharisees or canon of the Pharisees etc in the context you present.
No mention of Pharisees or canon of the Pharisees etc in the context you present.
Why did you stop there? Jimmy qualified it, ~ 1 minute into the answer, with the reference to the Septuigint, which is NOT what Protestants accept. Therefore not supporting your statement in context about Jimmy’s point…Here is the exact quote f on Jimmy Akin. It begins around the 50 second mark where he says the Pharisees and Protestants possessed the same OT canon:
How did the Old Testament canon develop?
Because in his book in the chronology section he mentions the Septuagint was originally limited to “the Law” not the rest of the OT. Now the free section doesn’t cover “when” the rest of the OT was added to the Septuagint and translated into Greek. That part “might” be in chapter 2 which is not free. But I think I remember Trent Horn saying in a video or podcast that the first canon to be translated was the Hebrew Bible. If so, that would exclude the Deuterocanon. So, it sounds like Jimmy Akin is assuming the version of the Septuagint in Jesus’ day included the Deuterocanon too. But if Trent Horn is correct, it didn’t, just the Hebrew Bible. It would almost be worth it to get the book to read the chapter on the Septuagint just to see if it is covered there. But it doesn’t change the fact that Jimmy Akin DID say Pharisees and Protestants possessed the same books, which excluded the Deuteros, which Jesus said the Pharisees possessed the OT canon. So, Jimmy Akins assumption is most likely just an assumption.Why did you stop there? Jimmy qualified it, ~ 1 minute into the answer, with the reference to the Septuigint, which is NOT what Protestants accept. Therefore not supporting your statement in context about Jimmy’s point…
I think His explanation is clear. https://www.catholic.com/audio/cal/cal-6463 listen between 14 min —> 17.45 minutes.steve-b:![]()
Because in his book in the chronology section he mentions the Septuagint was originally limited to “the Law” not the rest of the OT. Now the free section doesn’t cover “when” the rest of the OT was added to the Septuagint and translated into Greek. That part “might” be in chapter 2 which is not free. But I think I remember Trent Horn saying in a video or podcast that the first canon to be translated was the Hebrew Bible. If so, that would exclude the Deuterocanon. So, it sounds like Jimmy Akin is assuming the version of the Septuagint in Jesus’ day included the Deuterocanon too. But if Trent Horn is correct, it didn’t, just the Hebrew Bible. It would almost be worth it to get the book to read the chapter on the Septuagint just to see if it is cover d there. But it doesn’t change the fact that Jimmy Akin DID say Pharisees and Protestants possessed the same books, which excluded the Deuteros, which Jesus said the Pharisees possessed the OT canon. So, Jimmy Akins assumption is most likely just an assumption.Why did you stop there? Jimmy qualified it, ~ 1 minute into the answer, with the reference to the Septuigint, which is NOT what Protestants accept. Therefore not supporting your statement in context about Jimmy’s point…
Bless you! I didn’t want to listen through the entire hour! Or even the first 14 minutes to get to the part about the Septuagint. If you listen around the 15 minute mark, Jimmy Akin even admits that the Septuagint, even in the first century, when the NT was being written had more than one version among the Jews, which the Pharisees had one such version. And according to Jimmy Akin in the YouTube video, the Pharisees canon was limited to the Greek translation of the Hebrew Bible, as Trent Horn admitted to. Plus, in the audio clip you posted, Jimmy Akin went on to say, we should just “assume” the version we have today was the version Jesus used. So, he is just assuming. Plus, didn’t Irenaeus who was an ECF in the west only include the additions of Daniel and Esther in his OT canon? If the Septuagint Jesus used included the entire Deuterocanon, why would this much later western church father exclude all but those additions? I still go back to Jesus affirming the OT canon of the Pharisees, which was that of later Protestants. That much we can know for sure without assuming, since it comes from the words of our Lord.I think His explanation is clear. https://www.catholic.com/audio/cal/cal-6463 listen between 14 min —> 17.45 minutes
You’re missing a huge point.steve-b:![]()
Bless you! I didn’t want to listen through the entire hour! Or even the first 14 minutes to get to the part about the Septuagint. If you listen around the 15 minute mark, Jimmy Akin even admits that the Septuagint, even in the first century, when the NT was being written had more than one version among the Jews, which the Pharisees had one such version. And according to Jimmy Akin in the YouTube video, the Pharisees canon was limited to the Greek translation of the Hebrew Bible, as Trent Horn admitted to. Plus, in the audio clip you posted, Jimmy Akin went on to say, we should just “assume” the version we have today was the version Jesus used. So, he is just assuming. Plus, didn’t Irenaeus who was an ECF in the west only include the additions of Daniel and Esther in his OT canon? If the Septuagint Jesus used included the entire Deuterocanon, why would the much later western church father exclude all but those additions? I still back to Jesus affirming the OT canon of the Pharisees, which was that of later Protestants. That much we can know for sure without assuming, since it comes from the words of our Lord.I think His explanation is clear. https://www.catholic.com/audio/cal/cal-6463 listen between 14 min —> 17.45 minutes
So Jesus held the Jews, particularly the Pharisees, accountable for knowing what the OT canon was (”Have you not READ?” / “As it is WRITTEN” etc) but it wasn’t until the church was established until AFTER the death of Christ that the church made a “decision” what was included in the OT??? No offense, but that doesn’t make any sense.You’re missing a huge point.
There was no inspired index of canonical books. The Church made the decision on the canon.
AND
80% + of OT quotes in the NT, came from the Septuagint. The longer version as in what we see in the Catholic bible. You have the references HERE
You’re missing a huge point.
There was no inspired index of canonical books. The Church made the decision on the canon.
AND
80% + of OT quotes in the NT, came from the Septuagint. The longer version as in what we see in the Catholic bible. You have the references HERE
The point is, The Jews had no closed canon in the 1st century… When phrases like “it is written”, are used, many of those quotes could only come from the Septuagint.So Jesus held the Jews, particularly the Pharisees, accountable for knowing what the OT canon was (”Have you not READ?” / “As it is WRITTEN” etc) but it wasn’t until the church was established until AFTER the death of Christ that the church made a “decision” what was included in the OT??? No offense, but that doesn’t make any sense.
You have the OT references that point to the Septuagint. HEREWhy only 80%? Why not 100% if the NT writers believed Jesus and His disciples used the Septuagint, which (allegedly) included the Deuterocanon, and considered it just as inspired as the Hebrew?
The NT canon wasn’t official till 382 when the canon of 27 books was decreed by Pope Damasus I, at the council of Rome. Both OT and NT books (73 books total) were listed by name.Also the list you gave would have to exclude these books in the Hebrew Bible since the NT doesn’t even allude to them, let alone quote them, nor does it prove they were in the Septuagint back then. That is why the quoting argument doesn’t work, because the NT also quotes other books found in the Septuagint that are NOT in Catholic OTs.
- There were different versions of the Septuagint in the first century among the various Jewish sects.
2). The Pharisee sect only included the books in the Hebrew Bible, not the Deuterocanon.
3). The NT did not quote Esther, Song of Songs, and some other books. So if the NT quoting OT books is criteria for inclusion in the OT canon, then why are these books in the OT and not 1 Enoch since St. Jude quotes it, and calls it “prophecy”…using your “quoting” argument?
The devil’s advocate is really is not a good game to play especially when it comes to the inspired word of God. Im beginning to question the validity of this statement and your definition of the word “faith”.adf417:![]()
Then to play devil’s advocate, how do you know the church is the pillar & support of the truth - without using the NT & without saying “because the church says it is”? IOW, don’t use the church as a defense for the church, which would be circular.No! We really don’t. You continue to have it backwards!
Peace!!!
Wow, talk about circular.adf417:![]()
Yes, because the Bible says so. But that does not answer my question, which was how do YOU know the church is the pillar and shield of the church without using the Bible? And shouldn’t the church Jesus built have the correct canon of Scripture, both Old and New Testaments? I’m afraid your reply which wa formed in a question did not answer mine.Do you really not believe the church was established before a single word of the bible was written? You are asking me to have faith without using faith. That’s not how it works in a faith based religion.
Peace!!!
When did I ever say that the JEWS had a closed canon? I have consistently been saying they didn’t. My argument made from his book, and from Jimmy Akin, is that the PHARISEES had a closed canon, which is what Jesus affirmed. Even if it was the Septuagint, the version they used - that Jesus affirmed - was limited to the Hebrew Bible, but excluded the Deuterocanon. I don’t think you are understanding the argument. Otherwise, you would not have responded with “The JEWS had no closed canon in the 1st century.” We all know this.The point is, The Jews had no closed canon in the 1st century… When phrases like “it is written”, are used, many of those quotes could only come from the Septuagint.
Again, you didn’t get what I was asking. Why only 80%? Why not 100%? Jimmy Akin is implying that the NT does quote from the OT at least 20% of the time, but not from the Septuagint. Based on that explanation, do you understand they didn’t consider the Septuagint to be as inspired as the original Hebrew? If they did, they would have quoted from it 100% of the time.You have the OT references that point to the Septuagint. HERE
You won’t find those OT references without the Septuagint.
Since this topic is about the OLD Testament canon, not the New, it’s a moot point, since virtually all Christian groups (Catholic, EO, Protestant, etc) agree on the same 27 book canon. So, since they agree on the same canon, what does it reveal about the OT canon? And, again, Jesus et al didn’t need to give us a “list.” Again, the term “the Law & the Prophets” refers to the OT canon as a whole. And when Jesus was talking to the Pharisees about their OT canon, He stated “They have (have possession of) Moses & the Prophets (the OT canon).” He didn’t say this about any other Jewish sect, including the Sadducees - ONLY the Pharisees.Point being, NO BODY knows for sure, any of those 73 books in the canon, are scripture if it wasn’t for the authority of the Catholic Church. Neither Jesus nor the apostles gave any list of books as the official canon of scripture and only those books . What is YOUR assurance any letter or Gospel we have in the NT is really scripture.? Who told you those 27 books are scripture?
170 A.D.? That’s a bit late, don’t you think? Plus, it’s not part of the NT. And this isn’t about the Catholic Church. It’s about what books the NT, and specifically Jesus, supports belong in the OT canon, which were the books in the Hebrew Bible. Even when the NT quotes from the Septuagint & uses phrases like “It is written,” they only reference books from the OT with those phrases from those books originally from the Hebrew Bible, not the Deuterocanon. In fact, I noticed in the TOC of his book, once of his appendixes has a list of these terms. On Amazon.com, the back cover states there are over 300 of these terms, and ALL of them are found in the Hebrew Bible.Back in ~170 A.D. the Muratorian canon was written. Have a look. It’s a short read. See how it refers to the Catholic Church back THEN. HERE
It’s a figure of speech. Everyone uses, even devout Catholics. And you still didn’t answer my question.The devil’s advocate is really is not a good game to play especially when it comes to the inspired word of God. Im beginning to question the validity of this statement and your definition of the word “faith”.
Peace!!!