I am asking you how Jewish "apocrypha" got into the Christian bible.
Explain to me how my answer would change the point that Hebrews does not contain a book reference to 2 Maccabees?
1. State - exactly - what books are and are not "Jewish Apocrypha?" Could you quote Jewish rabbi's before 100 AD (say to 1400 BC) talking about their "Apocrypha" and exactly what books are and are not included in that?
2. State for me some Official, Formal declaration by a ruling authorative body of Judaism stating what is and is not accepted precisely as "the holy, inerrant, canonical, divinely-inspired Books of God." I'd like to see that official statement by that body. You might look at what they used in Jesus' day and the best example of that is the Dead Sea Scrolls that included books written in Hebrew, Greek and Aramaic... some books found there aren't in your Bible.... some in your OT aren't found there.... we have several copies of St. Mark Isaiah, of the Habakkuh Midrash, the Manual of Discipline, the War of the Children of Light, Book of Jubilees and several more. So, give to me the exact list of books that all Jews read, used and regarded as normative/canonical. Exactly, precisely, what was NOT "Jewish apocrypha." According to some official, formal, ruling body... that all Jews accepted/accept.
Then we can discuss your question.... Not until. You keep echoing words like "it" and "them" and "acocrypha: without stating exactly what material you mean.... and with zero evidence that everyone (or anyone) accepted or rejected "then" and "it" as The holy, inerrant, canonical, divinely-inscripturated words of God. You seem to confuse some claim that someone read or used or translated something (or didn't) with some official, universal, definitive proclamation.
Brother, the term "Bible" refers to a tome.... few existed in the early church, and when they did, they were simply books desired by that community. What was used by Christians differed from place to place, from time to time. Early Christians used Psalm 151. It was written in Hebrew centuries before Christ and quoted a LOT by Christians (and Jews) so why aren't you fighting for that? They also used books like the Gospel of Matthew, Paul's Epistle to the Romans, the Epistle of Barnabus, the Shepherd of Hermes, the Didache, the Epistles of Clement. Some accepted Second Peter, some didn't. Some accepted Hebrews, others rejected it. Some James or Second John or the Revelation of John while others flat out declared them false... there are 6 books in your NT that some Christians flat out rejected as false... but they're in your NT. The Fathers spoke of "Homoologolmena" and "Antilegomena." Brother, for over 1000 years, the Epistle to the Leodiceans often appeared in Bibles and was a part of Lectionaries - read in churches even in Luther's day. To this day, the Tradition of the Greek Orthodox Chruch is different from the Roman Catholic Church and from the Syrian Orthodox Church which is differant than the Anglican Church, which is different from the Presbyterian Church. Brother, you are throwing a lot of terms around as if such were precise.... you are using VERY sweeping terms with zero evidence such applies. LOTS of wild assumptions... with zero evidence.
But to the point here....
It's been argued that one of the several Maccabee books must be accepted as the holy, inerrant, canonical, divinely-inscripturated words of God BECAUSE it was used and read by early Christians. Well, a point evaded/ignored.... my brother....
LOTS of books were circulated throughout early Christiandom..... Some of them were SPECIFICALLY CALLED "SCRIPTURE" by several esteemed Fathers. A small sample of such are: The Epistle of Barnabas, The Shepherd of Hermas. The Didache, the Gospel of Matthew, the Gospel of James, the Apocalypse of Peter and several more. Letters from Clement and Ignatius and several others were WIDELY read and circulated all over Christiandom. So, the rubric
"If circulated, ergo the holy, inerrant, canonical, normative, divinely-inscripturated words of God (Scripture)" is valid and sound, then you need to be arguing equally for a
LOT of other books....
It's also been argued that one or more of the Maccabee books would not be known today if it were not the holy, inerrant, canonical, divinely-inscripturated words of God and universally embraced as such. That's just silly. There are many books available today older than any of the Maccabee books, available and read today.
It's also been argued that one of the Maccabees books MUST be the holy, inerrant, canonical, divinely-inscripturated words of God (Scripture) and universally embraced as such because Hebrews includes a book reference to 2 Maccabees.... it was later (finally) admitted it does not (as anyone who can read knows). Then the apologetic changed to this: if two books seem to address the same historic event, then both must ergo be the holy, inerrant, canonical, divinely inscripturated words of God and be in our Bible. But obviously, we'd then have MILLIONS of books in our Bible.
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