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AmbroseSJ
Guest
As for Jimmy Akin, you have not quoted him in context, so you may very well be putting words in his mouth, or perhaps misinterpreting what he said.Catholic Answers senior apologist Jimmy Akin stated that the Pharisees & later Protestants shared the EXACT same OT books in their canons. Jesus affirmed the canon of the Pharisees by referring to is as “the Law & the Prophets.” He then stated that the Pharisees “They HAVE (have possession) of Moses & the Prophets (OT canon)” (Luke 16:14-16,29). St. Paul stated he was a Pharisee & also referred to the OT canon as “the Law & the Prophets.” As a Pharisee, “the Law & the Prophets” (OT canon) would be limited to the books in later Protestant OTs. So, no "mis"information, but from the very words of our Lord & St. Paul.
Not only Jesus, but most Second Temple Jews referred to the “Law and the Prophets.” However it was not an established “canon” per se. If ANYTHING was a canon with the Jews it was the Torah. The first 5 books of Moses, the Pentateuch, was absolutely Scripture. The Torah is what was translated into the Septuagint. (Later other books were added.)
The Second Temple Jews did not recognize any “prophets” after the time of Nehemias, but they also had “the writings.” So they had the Torah, the Prophets, and the writings (which included the Historical books and Wisdom books.) But it also included books that are NOT part of any Protestant or Christian canon. Depending on the type of Jew, you would have some books but not others. There was no “Jewish Canon” per se, until after Christianity was established.
Because of your own hermeneutic on Canonical Scripture (something that didn’t come into being until Christianity appeared, which prompted the Jews to likewise establish a canon,) you believe this was a “thing” even before Jesus walked the earth. But it was NOT a thing. WHY? Because the Jews, like today’s Catholics were governed by Tradition and Oral teaching from an authoritative voice. The Scriptures underscored those teachers and teachings.
The major reason early Christians established a canon was to determine which writings were Sacred and could be used in the Christian Liturgy (the Catholic Mass) and which could not.
Christianity (Catholicism) like Judaism, is governed by teachers and Tradition. There was NO such thing as a DIY religion of “My Bible and Me.” That was a sad destructive Protestant invention.