Yes, the criteria for the Old Testament is correct, as verified by Jamnia, pointed out and posted by none other than yourself.
Remeber this was the criteria set for the Old Testament, not for the New Testament. They were Jews. The Messiah had not yet come. The year was 400 B.C. Put your thinking cap on here. Hebrew was their national language. There is no reason to bring Christ or the crucifixion of Him, 400 years before the event ever happened.
The Jews had their canon by 400 B.C. obviously without the Apocrypha.
DHK
Why did the RC Church add book at trent if the Canon is "closed."
Discussion in 'Free-For-All Archives' started by 7-Kids, Mar 2, 2004.
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DHK
Lets review in order for your conspiracy theory to work that the Catholic Church added books to the Bible.
The Catholic Church would of had to convince a group of 1st century Jews from Ethiopia and Alexandria to adopt a OT canon identical to the Catholic OT and keep it for 2,000 years. An amazing feat considering your claims that the Catholic Church did not make the disputed books canonical until the 16th century.
The Catholic Church would of had to convince the Orthodox Church to make the same books canonical in the 16th century and to go along with your claim of Catholic revisionism. Another amazing feat considering that these two churches broke apart in the year 1052 ad and did not have good relations.
In addition somehow Catholics convinced the authors the Jewish Encyclopedia and Encyclopedia Judaica to distort the history of their faith and to go along with what I have told you about the Council of Jamnia and the determination of the Hebrew Canon.
Wow! That an amazing conspiracy rheory it makes Roswell look tame,
DHK at some point it is just easier to admit the truth than to twist the truth beyond any recognition. The truth is Protestants tampered with scripture and deleted books from the Bible. -
During the last two years of his pontificate, Sixtus V (1585-90) rewrote the entire Latin Bible, adding phrases and sentences at whim, leaving out entire verses, changing the titles of the Psalms, and inventing his own system of chapters and verses.
In a Papal Bull Aeternus Ille (an allegedly infallible declaration on faith and morals to the entire Church), he declared by 'the fullness of Apostolical power' that this new 'translation' of the Bible
must be 'received and held as true, lawful, authentic and unquestioned in all public and private discussions, readings, preachings and explanations.' Anyone who disobeyed was to be excommunicated.
Of course, when the clergy saw the pope's astonishing handiwork, which instantly had made obsolete the Council of Trent's approved Latin Bible and all textbooks based upon it, they were horrified. Fortunately, Sixtus died a few months later and a cover-up was devised by Bellarmine.
Oh well...
In Christ,
Bob -
Cardinal Cajetan, one of Martin Luther's opponents during the Reformation, explained in his Commentary on all the Authentic Historical Books of the Old Testament, as cited in William Webster's The Church of Rome at the Bar of History (Banner of Truth, 1995):
Bob -
I don't have a conspiracy theory. You do; I believe the Bible.
I don't have to revise history to prove my position. You do; I believe the Bible.
I don't believe in a Book that had books officially added to it in the 16th century. You do; I believe the Bible (Lk.24:44).
Take your revistionist history, your consipiracy theories and do what you like with them. It will not change the truth of the Word of God.
Psalms 1:1-4 Blessed is the man that walketh not in the counsel of the ungodly, nor standeth in the way of sinners, nor sitteth in the seat of the scornful.
2 But his delight is in the law of the LORD; and in his law doth he meditate day and night.
3 And he shall be like a tree planted by the rivers of water, that bringeth forth his fruit in his season; his leaf also shall not wither; and whatsoever he doeth shall prosper.
4 The ungodly are not so: but are like the chaff which the wind driveth away. -
I sat in a cave next to the Church of the Nativity were St. Jerome wrote. I was moved by the thought of the hours, days, weeks, years the man gave to translate the Scripture into the language of his people.
His recommendation as given by Bob Ryan is excellent: The apocryphal writings were NOT canonical "for confirming matters of faith". But could be included in the canon (if a publisher so desired) "for the edification of the faithful".
There are many other good writings that are not perfect or the Word of God from which we can read and glean insights and truth. We eat the chicken and spit out the bones. -
INSPIRATION
DHK -
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I don't have a conspiracy theory. You do; I believe the Bible.
I don't have to revise history to prove my position. You do; I believe the Bible.
I don't believe in a Book that had books officially added to it in the 16th century. You do; I believe the Bible (Lk.24:44). </font>[/QUOTE]I don't believe you answered him at all. His point was the Protestants twisted history and the Bible, and all you did was deny it. And very poorly, I might add. This doesn't help anything. -
How can a Catholic claim that 14 books were part of the original Bible when:
1. The Old Testament was completed and canonized as early as 400 B.C., and all of the Apocrypha was written between 210 B.C. and 70 A.D.
2. The Old Testament was written in Hebrew; the Apocrypha was written in Greek.
3. The books (written as part of the Old Testament) were never accepted by the Jews themselves.
4. Not even Jerome accepted these books as canonical.
5. The New Testament writers quote from virtually every book of the Old Testament, but never from any of the Apocryphal books.
6. Jesus in Luke 24:44 refers to the traditional divisions of the Hebrew Bible without the Apocrypha as Scripture. There are three divisions, and the apocrypha is not one of them.
7. The books were never officially accepted by the Catholic Church until the 16th century. So if anyone has a conspiracy theory it must be the Catholic church, not the Protestants.
Read carefully the link on inspiration that I gave on a previous post. It will give you much more information to think about.
DHK -
1. There are somewher in the close range of a dozen OT books not quoted in the NT, so not virtually every other OT book is quoted.
Just a little of my own research. First, read 2 Peter 1:20-21. Second, read Wisdom 2:10-24.
I think it's self-explanatory, but if you don't understand or don't have access to Deuterocanonical books then reply and I will be more thorough in my post.
2. The 16th century Catholic Church EMPHASIZED the Deuterocanonical books, not established. -
I also read the references above. Wisdom 2 speaks of the outlook of a man who questions life hereafter. So what?
2Peter 1:20,21 destroys your case, rather than helping it:
2 Peter 1:20-21 Knowing this first, that no prophecy of the scripture is of any private interpretation.
21 For the prophecy came not in old time by the will of man: but holy men of God spake as they were moved by the Holy Ghost.
--The Bible is of no private interpretation. The Catholics, along with all other cults, have made their own private interpretation of the Bible. No one outside of their particular cult has the right to interpret it for themselves. Only the cult (in this case the cult of RCC) has the private interpretation of the Bible. The true believer has the soul liberty that God has given him to obey the Scriptures and:
Study to show himself approved,
Search the Scriptures,
Take heed to the doctrine (study it first), etc.
The Catholic Church adherents cannot do this. They are mindless robots spoonfed whatever heeretical doctrines the RCC teaches them. Private interpretation belongs only to the magesterium.
You apparently did not read the quote I gave you, so I will post it again:
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Before I respond to your message I would like to point out something to you.
From this board's TOS:
Also remember, judge not lest you be judged.
Okay, on to your post.
1. A religion or religious sect generally considered to be extremist or false, with its followers often living in an unconventional manner under the guidance of an authoritarian, charismatic leader.
2. The followers of such a religion or sect.
3. A system or community of religious worship and ritual.
4. The formal means of expressing religious reverence; religious ceremony and ritual.
5. A usually nonscientific method or regimen claimed by its originator to have exclusive or exceptional power in curing a particular disease.
6. Obsessive, especially faddish, devotion to or veneration for a person, principle, or thing.
7. The object of such devotion.
8. An exclusive group of persons sharing an esoteric, usually artistic or intellectual interest.
According to the dictionary, you are part of a cult, also. Please do not display such a looseness with this term as it can backfire easily. As I said, in debating circles, cult is usually a term reserved for those religions or sects that have appeared in the recent past.
I find it highly oxymoronic that you would say the RCC interpretation is private interpretation and the Protestant interpretation is led by the Holy Spirit. Both religions have claimed the same thing (guidance of the Holy Spirit in it's understanding of the full Scriptures) and all you have accomplished is unsubstantiated mud-slinging.
[qutoe]They are mindless robots spoonfed whatever heretical doctrines the RCC teaches them.[/quote]
Your name-calling, I assure you, has not been taken lightly. In these times of the flesh controlling your anger please try and reflect on what the Lord would do in such a situation. It is not righteous anger when we regress to such child-like behavior.
I will reply at a later time about which OT books are not quoted by NT authors. Thank you for your patience. -
[qutoe]They are mindless robots spoonfed whatever heretical doctrines the RCC teaches them.[/quote]
True. I make no apology.
DHK -
On the name-calling...Maybe you could just use a little bit more adult language. I could resort to calling Baptists names and say that's how I see it, but I ahve chosen to be more like Christ in this aspect. I encourage you to do the same. -
Things have only changed since Vatican II to my knowledge. Who never allowed Bibles? It was a common practice among the Catholic Church in general to forbid or discourage Bible reading in my day, just as it was in Tyndale's day when they burned all of his Bible's and then proceeded to burn Tyndale himself.
DHK -
Plus the illiteracy rate was through the roof, anyhow. To use the argument that it was to personally interpret the Bible to their own means is ludicrious because, last time I checked, the books that we have in common in our Bibles say the exact same thing. It would be a massive, humanly impossible undertaking to slowly change the translations over the years to accomplish identical translations between Catholics and Protestants without anyone noticing, if in fact they were purposely mistranslating them before (which is what you were going to say next). -
During the reformation there was a fear of bad translations, therefore they burned Bibles--a reference to William Tyndale. What a farce that is. Every translation today owes a great debt of gratitude to the enormous work of Tyndale. It is Tyndale's Bible that is the foundation of the KJV. The Catholics tried to destroy it; but God had other plans.
Except for the Apocrypha the Bibles say essentially the same thing, I agree. I can show you the way of salvation in a Catholic Bible just as well as I can in my KJV. That is not why Bibles were destroyed. They were destroyed to keep them out of the hands of the common person.
For the quotes, See:
William Tyndale
DHK -
There was only one part of your post I found I need to respond to as the rest only restates your first one, which i have already answered.
Also, you are misunderstanding the meaning of the word 'interpretation'. The Holy Spirit opens your mind to more clear understanding, not another interpretation.
I am a Catholic because I believe what the Catholic Church states as Truth from Christ Himself, not because the Catholic Church told me I had to become Catholic. Does that make any sense?
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