Josiah said:
Here's the problem with your question and the thread..... With all DUE RESPECT to what I'm SURE you meant as a valid, direct question....
1. You use a (very loaded) term "Apocrypha" as if there is some universal understanding of what you are talking about. THERE IS NOT. Of the claimed 10,000 denominations on the planet right now, there are not even TWO that understand that term the same way, as referring to the SAME block of material. Of those who in some sense accept some books that Calvin did not accept in the 16th Century, NO TWO agree on WHICH books that includes. Before we can even begin to discuss "the Apocrypha" (and I'm not sure I'd use that very loaded, rarther negative term), you'd need to define WHAT books you are talking about.
2. You left open HOW they might "belong." As historical? As worthy to be read? As qualifying to be in the Lectionary and as sermon texts? To be used as SUPPORTIVE but not normative? To be used as the rule/canon/norma normans for faith and practice? Belong... HOW? In what capacity?
The Roman Catholic Church now accepts 7 books (a number NO OTHER DENOMINATION ON THE PLANET IN ALL WORLD HISTORY AGREES WITH) are equal to the other 66 in every sense, but it did not say so until the Council of Florence (unofficially) and the Council of Trent (officially) in the 16th Century. But I know of no denomination other than that single one that holds to that. Why? Because it itself says THEY specifically are, that's why. There is no other answer in that case. Sorry....it's not complex,there isn't more to say than that.
Calvin dismissed ALL of them. I think mostly because he felt they lacked ecumenical support and often contain problemmatic things. If you want to know why Reformed Christians (a very small minority of Protestants) don't accept them, you'd be wise to go to some Reformed/Calvinist site to discover why. But that would be CALVINIST/REFORMED reasons - and would NOT be universal or even a Protestant perspective (Calvinists being a small subgroup of Protestant).
Lutherans don't take a stance (officially, anyway) about ANY so called "Apocraphya" books. Lutherans may not forbid you to read any Christian book (even weird ones like the Left Behind books) but they might be hesitant to call such the inerrant, verbally inspired, inscripturated words of God and THEREFORE the rule/canon/norma normans for the arbitration of dogma. Lutherans would be likely to point you to the "66" for that. But the Lutheran Confessions are silent on that issue, the Lutheran Fathers holding such an official, formal declaration requires an ecumenical council not the opinion of some man (like Calvin or Smith) or some denomination (like Lutheran or Catholic or Anglican). In any case, the point seems moot. Except for ONE denomination CLAIMING one of those books teaches it's own unique new dogma of Purgatory (and it does not), no one ever points to any of those "books" (whatever "they" are) normatively. Kind of a moot point. No one uses them normatively so whether they are normative or not has never really been an issue. Now, is The Book of Mormon normative, THAT gets some attention because we DO have some pointing to THAT book normatively. But not Psalm 151.
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Simple the books of the "Apocrypha" are the ones called the "Apocrypha".. you can find them in Catholic bibles and east orthodox bibles...
[MENTION=387]Andrew[/MENTION], one of the problems in this discussion is the the Catholic "Apocrypha" is not the same as the (several different) Eastern Orthodox "Apocryphas" which are different again from the Anglican "Apocrypha" which is different again from Luther's "Apocrypha." NONE of the "Apocryphas" are the same. It's difficult to discuss this "set" of books when there is no "set" of books - every single denomination that accepts some kind of "Apocrypha" on some level in some way or some things, every single one of them has a DIFFERENT "Apocrypha." You yourself speak of "them" and "these" but never share what "them" are. We often never get past this issue....
Let's say there's a discussion about whether "these" are good colleges. The first mandated thing before we can even begin the discussion is the state EXACTLY which colleges are we discussing: THESE, NOT THESE. If we could have all those who embrace books beyond the 66 tell us EXACTLY WHAT books they ARE and are NOT embracing, then we can discuss them. But Andrew, here's the reality: No two denominations on the planet in nearly 2000 years have the same "these" NEVER has even two denominations on the planet agreed on this.
And then there's issue # 2 in the quote above.... that never gets addressed, either.
Andrew said:
Why did the Jews drop these books that lead to Christians dropping them out?
One of MANY problems with this, friend, is that books need to be IN before they can be DROPPED. (And, of course, again, you didn't tell us what "these books" are).
Here's what I learned in my class on this:
Prior to the Council of Jamnia in 90 AD, there was NEVER ANYTHING whatsoever from anything Jewish or Hebrew about what is and is not Scripture. Indeed, in Jesus' day, by PURE CUSTOM (nothing official, nothing formal, nothing binding) some Jews only accepted the first 5 books of the OT as Scripture. SOME accepted SOME of the prophetic books in our OT, SOME accepted SOME of the wisdom books - but even some of these placed them UNDER the first 5 (as DEUTEROcanonical). Bottom line: There was NO consensus in practice among the Jews and NOTHING WHATSOEVER official or binding or formal, nothing at all. It was all very loose. Now, some Christians (not Jews!!!) will point to the LXX as some kind of official declaration of some unknown Jewish authority AT THAT TIME, but there is zero evidence of that - none. It is likely these were books Jews READ (thus the translation) but NOTHING to indicate they were embraced as the inerrant, inscripturated, words of God and thus the canon/rule/norm for doctrine.... SOME unknown corpus of such may simply have been USED by SOME Jews in SOME places - much as some use various hymns on Sunday or various liturgies on a Sunday. To USE or READ something doesn't suggest such is regarded as CANONICAL (the binding norma normans for dogma, the verbally inspired and inerrant written words of God). There is absolutely NOTHING in history, from any Jewish rabbis (then or now) that remotely suggests the LXX was some sort of formal declaration of what IS and IS NOT canonical books of inscripturated words of God.
Better is to see how Jesus and the NT penmen used Scripture. And.... there is ZERO evidence any quoted any book that anyone considers today as "Apocrypha." Yup, you will find lots of websites that TRY to show this is the case with 3 or 4 Apocrypha books (only 3 or 4) BUT if you read those, you'll see NEVER is such quoted - as canonical or otherwise; they simply are saying "this statement seems a lot like that statement in a book some now consider "Apocrypha." But that's irrelevant, just because two sentences are similar doesn't mean anyone is QUOTING something and QUOTING such as canonical. The reality is, Jesus Himself quotes Scripture 50 times - but of the ones we can identify (and that's far from all), none of them are in any Apocrypha book. And of course, if we used this rubric to determine what is and is not OT CANON, we'd reject most of the 39 since most of them are never quoted in the NT (as canon or otherwise).
In any case, there was NOTHING before 90 AD. The ONLY books where we CAN say "The Jews regarded these as canonical" would be the "Books of Moses" (as the Jews called them), the first 5 Books. We CAN say that prior to 90 AD, Jews had a Bible of at least FIVE books - but even that is purely by informal tradition. We CAN say "FIVE books were in." But there's NOTHING to show any others were. LOTS of others (probably many more than are in the LXX) were used by SOME Jews in SOME way but that is irrelevant in whether they were seen by anyone as canonical/scripture.
Jamnia changed all that. By 90AD, the Jews had developed an Authoritative aspect over the religion and (for the first time) COULD declare what is Scripture in a formal, binding, universal way. It was a very controversal issue BECAUSE there was NO consensus at all on what the JEwish Scriptures were (beyond the 5 "Books of Moses"). The whole reason for this Council was BECAUSE there was no agreed upon canon, there wer4e no books "IN" (beyond the Books of Moses) in any formal and universal way. There were Jews who accepted AND rejected MANY Books, agreement only on FIVE.
It is valid to note that CHRISTIANS had no reason to abide by the Council of Jamnia (90 AD) IN FACT, there is ZERO contemporary evidence that CHRISTIANS were even aware of it (the division was begining to solidify by then). I agree.... what the Jews decided in 90 AD is largely irrelevant to us (and so I disagree with Luther on this). BUT it is unavoidable that the Council of Jamnia was huge and important BECAUSE it's the first time in history that there was anything formal concerning what is canonical among the Jews.... there was NO consensus beyond the five Books of Moses before this, SOME Jews accepted SOME books (including some NOT in the LXX) in SOME way before that but that's largely irrelevant to what is and is not canon for the Jews and entirely irrelevant for us.
- Josiah
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